Surprise, surprise, the press is noticing that foreclosures are no longer just some sort of phenomenon effecting poor people who got subprime loans:
Chuck Dayton put down a quarter of the $950,000 purchase price when he bought his house in Newport Beach, Calif., in 2004. He was making $500,000 a year with his drywall company and he expected home values to keep rising.
Then the mortgage market collapsed, new construction stopped and builders no longer needed his services. Dayton, 43, went into default four months ago because he couldn’t afford payments on the three-bedroom home, located within a block of the Pacific Ocean. He hopes his lender will agree to sell the seven-year-old house for less than he owes to avoid a foreclosure.
This is then followed by a a number of refis to take out equity, and a negative amortization loan.
A bubble market, with toxic products feeding the frenzy. No wonder Zillow dot com just completed a survey showing that ¼ of home owners are under water.
Even those who followed the old rules, 20% down and 30 year fixed, ended up buying into the appreciation story, with refinancing and exotic mortgages creeping into their home values.
And while fear fear has temporarily put a halt to the worst excesses, the declining job market, continues to mean that these people will stay under water.
The most recent reports, private ones from payroll check processor ADP, and the rather Dickensianly named outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas, don’t show a turnaround, though in a classic bit of journamalism, the fact that private sector employment fell by 491,000 is somehow good news.
Meanwhile in currency, the dollar weakened slightly, largely on uncertainty about both what the ECB will do the Euro rate, and the results of the banking stress test (more on that later).
In energy, both oil and natural gas were up, oil to a 5 month high, and the largest single day increase for natural gas in 2 months.