
Housing Crash to Resume on 7 Million Foreclosures, Amherst
Says By Jody Shenn Sept. 23 (Bloomberg) -- The crash in U.S. home
prices will probably resume because about 7 million properties that
are likely to be seized by lenders have yet to hit the market,
Amherst Securities Group LP analysts said. The “huge shadow
inventory,” reflecting mortgages already being foreclosed upon or
now delinquent and likely to be, compares with 1.27 million in
2005, the analysts led by Laurie Goodman wrote today in a report.
Assuming no other homes are on the market, it would take 1.35 years
to sell the properties based on the current pace of existing-home
sales, they said. Helping to stoke speculation the housing slump
has ended, an S&P/Case-Shiller index for 20 U.S. metropolitan
areas showed the first month-over-month increases in values since
2006 in May and June, reducing the drop from the peak to 31
percent. Echoing other mortgage-bond analysts including those at
Barclays Capital Inc., Amherst cautioned that a change in the mix
of foreclosure and traditional sales over different parts of the
year lifted prices in the period, as the distressed share shrank.
“The favorable seasonals will disappear over the coming months, and
the reality of a 7 million-unit housing overhang is likely to set
in,” they said. The amount of pending foreclosed-home supply has
been boosted by more borrowers going into default, fewer being able
to catch up once they do, and longer time periods to seize
properties because of issues such as loan-modification efforts and
changes to state laws, the New York-based analysts wrote. A Limited
Aid Accounting for efforts to have more loans reworked to avert
foreclosure makes “not much” of a difference in the shadow
inventory, with optimistic assumptions leading to a 1 million
reduction in the amount, they said. “And many of these borrowers
would default later, if they remain in a negative equity position,”
they added. Goodman is the former head of fixed-income research at
UBS Securities LLC whose team there was top-ranked for non-agency
mortgage debt in a 2008 poll of investors by Institutional Investor
magazine. Amherst is a securities firm specializing in trading and
advising investors on home-loan debt. The analysts didn’t forecast
home prices. The Barclays analysts including Glenn Boyd, who
earlier this year wrote that once it starts, the housing recovery
will be dulled by a “pent- up supply” of homes from owners who have
put off sales during the slump, this month predicted 8 percent
further depreciation. That’s better than the New York-based
Barclays analysts’ previous forecast of 13 percent because of their
view that recent data show that the end of the crash is “decidedly
under way,” they wrote in a Sept. 11 report. Foreclosed-home
“supply should sap the strength of the recovery in all but the most
optimistic of scenarios,” they added.
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