Sabbaticals for Sacramento Homebuilders
From the Sacramento Bee:
When times get tough, the tough ... take a sabbatical. That's the philosophy of developer Martin Tuttle, who is temporarily leaving his VP post with Sacramento builder New Faze Development.From Reuters:
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Tuttle says his wife's job offer came at the right time – just as the tough housing market forced New Faze to reduce its staff by about one-third, through layoffs and attrition.
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"I don't really think we have much choice," he [New Faze boss Allen Warren] says of the firm's decision to downsize and wait out the current downturn...And what if there's no quick turnaround? "Maybe when Marty comes back, I'll take a sabbatical," Warren says.
The fires that scorched California may be out, but a bigger man-made disaster, the housing market, burns away, threatening the U.S. economy and holders of billions of dollars of debt backed by homes...[W]ith some analysts predicting top to bottom falls in prices of as much as 40 percent, California looks headed for a recession.From the Stockton Record [updated]:
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"We are heading into a state recession and that will take an already horrendous mortgage problem and take it over the top," said Christopher Thornberg, of Beacon Economics in Los Angeles. "Prime loans will be in trouble too. We've got a giant mess on our hands."
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Market rates have gone up, lending criteria have gotten tighter and a bunch of borrowers have handed the keys back to the lenders, who then try and sell into a plunging market. In Sacramento County in September, 27 percent of all sales were by lenders who had repossessed homes, according to DataQuick.
When Consuelo Magat bought a Mossdale Landing home in Lathrop three years ago, she had no idea she was buying into an area that would emerge as one of the hotbeds of foreclosure activity in California. Magat, who now lives in Vallejo, said she bought the Lathrop house for $636,000 as a residence but then had to buy a home in another area when it turned out that a daughter was unable to get into a nearby Catholic school.Here's what the Stockton Record reported back on April 1, 2007:
Magat rented out the Lathrop house in April, she said, but was in mortgage trouble by June because she became unable to carry the monthly payments on two houses. Her lender was unsympathetic to her plight and declined to refinance because there was no equity in the house and its valuation was less than the loan balance, Magat said. She wanted to sell the Lathrop house, she said, but in this slow market, "nobody wants to buy it."
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[F]ormal foreclosure proceedings hit record levels both in California and in San Joaquin County...Nearly 3,000 households in San Joaquin County received a notice of default in the third quarter, DataQuick reported. That was up nearly 230 percent from 898 notices issued in the third quarter of last year.
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Dave Harmon, a Coldwell Banker Grupe real-estate agent with foreclosures now accounting for 80 percent of his listings, said that over the past six months, the number of foreclosures quadrupled and then doubled again. Foreclosure activity has been quickening in the past couple of weeks, and he expects the pace to continue picking up over the next six to 12 months.
The market is showing signs of picking up, said David DiDio, mortgage broker and real-estate agent at Greene Dream Homes and Loans in Stockton. If buyers indeed are moving into the market, foreclosure homes could be bought up by fall.