Friday, October 29, 2010

119 E. Park Ave. - "The Green Monster"

The 100 East block of Park Avenue only has six buildings and this will be the third in which I will have an active involvement in renovating. I personally renovated 115 East Park, and my clients are currently working on 105 East Park. 119 East Park, though, is a different story. In a nod to my undergraduate days in Boston, I’ve dubbed the building “The Green Monster,” after Fenway Park’s famous left-field wall. Frankly, the building has become an eyesore. It’s been in pretty much the same state since I started work on 115 East Park about four years ago, and in fact, has deteriorated due to shoddy work and some water intrusion. There’s a long, sad story behind the Green Monster, a morality tale, actually, about all that went wrong in the great real estate bubble a few years back, but for now, we are looking forward. The current owners are selling the property for pennies on the dollar, listing it for $150,000. The building is six units, about 4600 square feet, and is in a terrific location for SCAD rentals, or for anyone looking to live downtown. It’s 300 feet from Forsyth Park and projected rents are $800 per unit. It’s a project, no doubt about it, but no more so than 416 E Duffy, which my investors renovated and transformed. It’s hitting the MLS today, and I already have interested parties, but nothing is signed yet, so if you’re interested, let me know and I can share the budget. This one is going to be fun!

115 E. Park Ave - Before and After pics


Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Top 13 American Murder Houses

In the spirit of the upcoming Halloween weekend, what better way to mix real estate, Savannah, and spooky ghost tales than a story about the Top 13 American Murder Houses? Savannah is well known for its ghostly history and makes an appearance three times on the list with such Historic Downtown locations as the Mercer Williams House, the Conrad Aiken house and the famous Pirate's House Restaurant. Check out the link below to This Old House's slideshow of the 13 homes. http://www.thisoldhouse.com/toh/photos/0,,20151524,00.html?xid=hinewsletter-101026-murder

Thursday, October 21, 2010

The Foreclosure Story...Continued

The past couple weeks headlines have been filled with foreclosure, foreclosure, foreclosure. I'm sure you are aware that Bank of America, Ally Financial and JP Morgan Chase suspended foreclosures in 23 states a couple weeks ago. Since then, attorney generals in all 50 states have banded together to temporarily halt foreclosure proceedings nationwide to examine dig deeper into alleged "robo-signing" scandal. Then, as of Monday, October 18th, Bank of America has resumed foreclosure filings in 23 states.

It seems everyone has a dog in this fight...from an Illinois sheriff who says he won't enforce foreclosure evictions until he has proof those foreclosures were handled legally and properly, to a New York judge who "ordered lawyers handling foreclosures in the state for banks and servicers to sign a form verifying the procedure had been done properly" to families breaking back into their foreclosed home because they say the bank didn't have a right to evict them because they weren't behind on payments. The lawsuits are expected to takes years to be settled on the various cases, from the individual, to the large class-action suits we will certainly see against the banks.

And let's not forget that we are right in the middle of mid-term elections so the politicians are jumping on this bandwagon left and right. So who knows what's really going on these days. You cannot predict how this will all pan out, but you can be sure of this--mortgage rates are at all-time lows, prices are down, and there is available inventory. So, as I always say, if you find a house that makes sense, don't try to predict the future--make a purchase now if the payment makes sense, you like the house, and you're not planning on selling in the next year. That advice will never change, no matter where we are in the news cycle.

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

From a Maine House, A National Foreclosure Freeze

By DAVID STREITFELD
Published: October 14, 2010


DENMARK, Me. — The house that set off the national furor over faulty foreclosures is blue-gray and weathered. The porch is piled with furniture and knickknacks awaiting the next yard sale. In the driveway is a busted pickup truck. No one who lives there is going anywhere anytime soon.

Nicolle Bradbury bought this house seven years ago for $75,000, a major step up from the trailer she had been living in with her family. But she lost her job and the $474 monthly mortgage payment became difficult, then impossible.

It should have been a routine foreclosure, with Mrs. Bradbury joining the anonymous millions quietly dispossessed since the recession began. But she was savvy enough to contact a nonprofit group, Pine Tree Legal Assistance, where for once in her 38 years, she caught a break.

Her file was pulled, more or less at random, by Thomas A. Cox, a retired lawyer who volunteers at Pine Tree. He happened to know something about foreclosures because when he worked for a bank he did them all the time. Twenty years later, he had switched sides and, he says, was trying to make amends.

Suddenly, there is a frenzy over foreclosures. Every attorney general in the country is participating in an investigation into the flawed paperwork and questionable methods behind many of them. A Senate hearing is scheduled, and federal inquiries have begun. The housing market, which runs on foreclosure sales, is in turmoil. Bank stocks fell on Thursday as analysts tried to gauge the impact on lenders’ bottom lines.

All of this is largely because Mr. Cox realized almost immediately that Mrs. Bradbury’s foreclosure file did not look right. The documents from the lender, GMAC Mortgage, were approved by an employee whose title was “limited signing officer,” an indication to the lawyer that his knowledge of the case was effectively nonexistent.

Mr. Cox eventually won the right to depose the employee, who casually acknowledged that he had prepared 400 foreclosures a day for GMAC and that contrary to his sworn statements, they had not been reviewed by him or anyone else.

GMAC, the country’s fourth-largest mortgage lender, called this omission a technicality but was forced last month to halt foreclosures in the 23 states, including Maine, where they must be approved by a court. Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase and other lenders that used robo-signers — the term caught on instantly — have enacted their own freezes.

The tragedy of foreclosure is that some homeowners may be able to stay where they are if their lenders are more interested in modification than eviction. Without a job, Mrs. Bradbury is not one of them. Her family, including her 14-year-old daughter and 16-year-old son, lives on welfare and food stamps.

“A lot of people say we just want a free ride,” Mrs. Bradbury said. “That’s not it. I’ve worked since I was 14. I’m not lazy. I’m just trying to keep us together. If we lost the house, my family would have to break up.”

It has been two years since she last paid the mortgage, which surprises even her lawyers.

“Had GMAC followed the legal requirements, she would have lost her home a long time ago,” acknowledged Geoffrey S. Lewis, another lawyer handling her case.

GMAC, which began as the financing arm of General Motors, has received $17 billion from taxpayers in an effort to keep it from failing and is now majority-owned by the federal government. A spokeswoman for the lender declined to comment on Mrs. Bradbury’s case because it was still being litigated.

John J. Aromando of the firm of Pierce Atwood in Portland, Me., the lawyer for GMAC and Fannie Mae, the mortgage holding company that owns Mrs. Bradbury’s loan, did not return calls for comment on Thursday.

Fannie Mae and GMAC, which serviced the loan for Fannie, have now most likely spent more to dislodge Mrs. Bradbury than her house is worth. Yet for all their efforts, they are not only losing this case, but also potentially laying the groundwork for foreclosure challenges nationwide.

“This ammunition will be front and center in thousands of foreclosure cases,” said Don Saunders of the National Legal Aid and Defender Association.

Just a few miles from the New Hampshire border, this slice of Maine does not have much in the way of industry or, for that matter, people. Mrs. Bradbury grew up around here, married and had her children here, and married for a second time here. Her parents still live nearby.

In 2003, her brother-in-law at the time offered to sell her a house on property adjacent to his. It was across from a noisy construction supply site. But it was ringed by maple, evergreen and willow trees, and who does not want to be a homeowner, especially when GMAC Mortgage will give you a loan for the entire purchase price and then another loan to improve the property?

“I was very happy,” she remembered. “It was a new beginning.”

But Mrs. Bradbury lost her job as an employment counselor in 2006 and did part-time work after that. Her husband, Scott, was in poor health and had other problems. He could not work as a roofer. She fell behind and got a modification from GMAC. It increased her monthly payments and provided no relief.

Finally, in late 2008, she stopped paying altogether, and GMAC asked a court to approve her eviction without a trial. By the summer of 2009, this removal was well under way when Mr. Cox picked up her file.

Mr. Cox, 66, worked in the late 1980s and early 1990s for Maine National Bank, a subsidiary of the Bank of New England, which went under. His job was to call in small-business loans. The borrowers had often pledged their houses as collateral, which meant foreclosure.

“It was extraordinarily unpleasant, but it paid well,” he said. “I had a family to support.”

The work exacted its cost: his marriage ended and a serious depression began. He gave up law and found solace in building houses. By April 2008, he said, he was sufficiently recovered and started volunteering at Pine Tree Legal.

By the time Mr. Cox saw Mrs. Bradbury’s case, it was just about over. Last January, Judge Keith A. Powers of the Ninth District Court of Maine approved the foreclosure, leaving the case alive only to establish exactly how much Mrs. Bradbury owed.

Mr. Cox vowed to a colleague that he would expose GMAC’s process and its limited signing officer, Jeffrey Stephan. A lawyer in another foreclosure case had already deposed Mr. Stephan, but Mr. Cox wanted to take the questioning much further. In June, he got his chance. A few weeks later, he spelled out in a court filing what he had learned from the robo-signer:

“When Stephan says in an affidavit that he has personal knowledge of the facts stated in his affidavits, he doesn’t. When he says that he has custody and control of the loan documents, he doesn’t. When he says that he is attaching ‘a true and accurate’ copy of a note or a mortgage, he has no idea if that is so, because he does not look at the exhibits. When he makes any other statement of fact, he has no idea if it is true. When the notary says that Stephan appeared before him or her, he didn’t.”

GMAC’s reaction to the deposition was to hire two new law firms, including Mr. Aromando’s firm, among the most prominent in the state. They argued that what Mrs. Bradbury and her lawyers were doing was simply a “dodge”: she had not paid her mortgage and should be evicted.

They also said that Mr. Cox, despite working pro bono, had taken the deposition “to prejudice and influence the public” against GMAC for his own commercial benefit. They asked that the transcript be deleted from any blog that had posted it and that it be put under court seal.

In a ruling late last month, Judge Powers said that GMAC, despite its expensive legal talent and the fact that it got “a second bite of the apple” by filing amended foreclosure papers, still could not get this eviction right.

Even the amended documents did not bother to include the actual street address of the property it was trying to seize — reason enough, the judge wrote, to reject the request for immediate foreclosure without a trial.

But Judge Powers went further than that, saying that GMAC had been admonished in a Florida court for using robo-signers four years ago but had persisted. “It is well past the time for such practices to end,” he wrote, adding that GMAC had acted “in bad faith” by submitting Mr. Stephan’s material:

“Filing such a document without significant regard for its accuracy, which the court in ordinary circumstances may never be able to investigate or otherwise verify, is a serious and troubling matter.”

It was not a complete loss for GMAC — Judge Powers declined to find the lender in contempt — but nearly so. GMAC was ordered, as a penalty, to pay Mr. Cox personally what he would have been paid for his work on the deposition and related matters had he been charging Mrs. Bradbury. That, he says, is $27,000.

The court’s ruling on GMAC’s “bad faith” is already being taken up by foreclosure defense lawyers around the country. Mr. Cox “did a remarkable job of proving the lenders not only rubber-stamped these loans on the front end, but they rubber-stamped them on the back end,” said Mr. Saunders of the legal aid group.

GMAC, which this week expanded its foreclosure freeze to the entire country, is not giving up on Mrs. Bradbury. It will try for the third time to evict her when the case goes to trial this winter.

If Mrs. Bradbury is not quite victorious, she is still in her house, and for her that is the only thing that counts. If she can get her pickup fixed, she will go back to looking for a job.

“I am not leaving,” she said this week, standing out on her front lawn, the autumn splendor spread all around her. “We have nowhere to go.”

Original article: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/15/business/15maine.html?_r=1&emc=eta1

Friday, October 15, 2010

New Construction Victorian District Update

Those of you keeping your eye on the new home at 414 E. Duffy Street will be happy to know that the exterior color has been selected by the purchaser and the painters have done the first coat. In case you were curious, the color is Sherwin Williams' "Cocoon." I'm including again the picture of what the property and its neighbor looked like about a year ago -- just a little different. They're working on tile inside and by next week I should have some new photos of the interior.

Before:
















After:





















Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Big Ideas for Small Baths

I'm still "thinking small." Small is just easier on so many different levels, so here are some tips from This Old House Magazine for working with small bathrooms.

13 Inspirational Small Bathrooms

By: Tabitha Sukhai, This Old House online

A few things all old house lovers are familiar with: Drafty windows, less-than-perfect plumbing, squeaky floors—and small bathrooms. While new home baths have nearly doubled in size over the past 30 years, old home bathrooms average about 5- by 8-feet.

Not to worry, though: You can combat the claustrophobia by scaling down to physically save space. (Pedestal sink, anyone?) And, with the right colors and lighting, you can create the illusion of a roomy bath.

Here, we dig into the National Kitchen & Bath Association (NKBA) Design Competition archives to deliver great ideas from Certified Kitchen Designers that you can use in your next remodel.

View the entire slideshow at http://www.thisoldhouse.com/toh/photos/0,,20431881,00.html?xid=kbnewsletter-101014-nkba-small-bath

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

Friday, October 8, 2010

Welcome to Smallville

Once again, on the subject of small houses, some good stuff from The New York Times. One of the common themes of the modern smaller house seems to be lots of windows and open space to make the home feel larger.

Lately the American Dream has been looking a lot smaller. Wallets, of course, have shrunk, and so have cars. Now houses, the very symbol of that dream, are shrinking too.

A survey by the American Institute of Architects reveals that 57 percent of architecture firms reported a decrease in the square footage of their residential projects in 2010 compared with 13 percent back in 2005, when size was still a virtue and a McMansion was considered a good investment. And according to the National Association of Homebuilders, the average house size dropped last year to 2,438 square feet, down more than 100 square feet from 2007.

“We went through a sort of baroque period, with an obsession for moreness,” said Alan Koch, a principal at Taalman Koch Architecture in Los Angeles. “I think the hysteria of ‘more is better’ is really cooling off.”

Replacing this moreness is the cult of small. Books like “Tiny Houses” (Rizzoli, 2009), the new edition of “Little House on a Small Planet” (Lyons Press, 2009) and “Small Eco Houses: Living Green in Style” (Universe, 2010) celebrate the beauty of smallness; in magazines, the microhouse has become a standard typology.

Koch and his partner, Linda Taalman, in particular have made a cottage industry out of smallness. Their firm is currently working on more than 10 of its prefabricated itHouses around California (average living space size: about 1,000 square feet). The houses are built using recycled materials and feature solar panels, but their most earth-friendly aspect is the footprint, which sets limits on construction materials and energy use. (Koch and Taalman’s own itHouse, near Joshua Tree, cost about $265,000 to build.) And according to Koch, the intimate scale helps to bring owners closer to nature — if not to one another — and forces them to pare down to the essentials.

“It gives you a chance to make a new start,” said Koch, who also sees a new focus on the quality rather than the size of spaces. Another of his projects, for the artist Uta Barth in the Mar Vista neighborhood of Los Angeles, started out as an addition to Barth’s 1,200-square-foot house but was trimmed down to just a renovation. “We kept paring it back, saying, ‘Why do we need that? Does this really need to be there?’ We thought, Instead of spending money on square footage, why don’t we just spend money on a nicer floor?”

Dirk Denison, a Chicago architect who specializes in large luxury houses, recently worked on the renovation of a 2,200-square-foot-house in Carmel, Calif. The owners, Kathy and Gary Bang, had downsized from four houses — including a 5,000-square-foot dwelling near Asheville, N.C., with a 1,100-square-foot guesthouse — to just one, which Denison reimagined with a large central courtyard and spaces that flow into one another. Now every room is used on a regular basis (rarely the case with their previous houses). “It’s very freeing to live with a lot less stuff,” said Kathy, who still can’t seem to believe that she owns only one set of flatware.

In cities where real estate is scarce, “less is more” is the only way to go. In the California cities of Manhattan Beach and Hermosa Beach, for example, ultrasmall lots pose a challenge to even the most creative architects. Houses of between 1,600 and 1,800 feet by architects like Dean Nota, Make Architects, LeanArch and XTen Architecture all feature multi-use living spaces on the top floors, large windows and wide balconies to maximize views, direct sunlight and the illusion of space.

Indeed, Duo Dickinson, a Connecticut architect who has written several books on small houses and designs them as well, said the best small houses share the same basic ingredients: interconnecting axes and vistas, high ceilings, a connection between inside and out, and density of storage. A case in point: the 1,300-square-foot renovation and addition by the San Francisco firm Apparatus in that city’s Glen Park neighborhood, on a corner lot that is only 13.5 feet wide. In order to make the best use of the space, the architects left the interior roof exposed and created rooms that serve multiple functions: the kitchen and dining room double as hallways, and the master bathroom also serves as a laundry room.

The Portland, Ore., architects Brian White and Michel Weenick of Architecture W recently built a 1,500-square-foot house in Nagoya, Japan, where multi-use rooms are the cultural norm. The kitchen functions as a dining room, and the living room is designed with sliding doors that can close off a guest bedroom with a Murphy bed. There is also a 650-square-foot apartment below for the in-laws.

Stuart Hills, the principal architect at Apparatus, sees his clients going smaller not just to save money but also to save face. “In the ’90s all my clients were driving Land Rovers, and now they all have Priuses,” he said. “They don’t want to be at the carpool line at their school with what’s perceived as a gas guzzler. It’s the same with houses.” But size, of course, is relative. Two thousand square feet seems modest until you compare it to Path Architecture’s prototype for an off-the-grid prefab house called the Roho, which at about 200 square feet is smaller than your average garage. A glass wall and double-height ceiling make the living space feel larger than it is.

A new development outside of Austin, Tex., called Agave has enlisted several local architecture firms to create what is billed as “the largest collection of modern designed homes in the nation.” (So far 130 houses have been built; plans call for 460 more.) Here, the average house size is about 1,600 square feet; the smallest is around 1,200. Open-plan designs put a premium on public spaces, and bedrooms are often smaller because “people really tend to just sleep in bedrooms,” said the project coordinator Chris Czichos, echoing the wisdom of Frank Lloyd Wright, whose Usonian houses allotted minimal space to bedrooms and bathrooms. Rick and Cindy Black, who have 12 houses in Agave, set a precedent back in 2005 with the design of their own 1,100-square-foot home, a series of lofty cubes near the University of Texas. The house, Rick said, “generated some buzz because it was pretty exceptional in Texas at the time.” Still, he sees the return to smaller living spaces as nothing new: “In the ’50s, four people lived in a 1,000-square-foot home pretty often. Standards have changed. We’ve got more stuff now.”

View original article: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/03/t-magazine/03remix-lubell-t.html?_r=2&emc=eta1

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Speaking of the 9-Tsubo House...


Speaking of the 9-Tsubo house, here’s a timely article about living in small spaces:


RISMEDIA, October 6, 2010--(MCT)--It's a constant battle: Small versus big. Less or more? There are arguments to support both sides.

Having just downsized to the smallest apartment I have ever lived in, I was intrigued by the idea of small being the new big. The challenge of storage and saving space is usually the No. 1 problem for most small-home dwellers. Organization is key, as is making the space work for your lifestyle.

I have been racking my brain for months over how to make my new 656-square-foot apartment work best for me. I have found some great new ideas to integrate with some of my old tricks of the trade.

Creative use of furniture is essential in small spaces or even in larger spaces that might need to be multifunctional. Take, for instance, a guest bedroom that doubles as an office. Instead of crowding the room on a daily basis with a bed that only gets used a few times a year, why not use a sleeper sofa or a chair and a half with a twin sleeper sofa? This will free so much space for day-to-day activities in the office.

A daybed is another good-looking piece of furniture that multitasks. A daybed is a great way to divide a large space, but in a small space, if positioned against the wall, it doubles as a sofa with pillows across the back and an extra sleeping spot when the pillows are removed.

Lots of furniture pieces are known for their great multipurpose and space-saving qualities. The ever-popular pouf, for example, can double as an ottoman, become a small table for books, computers and drinks to rest upon or even turn into extra seating.

Nesting tables also provide options for tiny spaces because they are small and easily moved. Storage ottomans are an obvious choice for doubling as a bench or coffee table that can house toys, blankets and extra bedding.

In dining room/eating areas, a custom-built bench/banquette with storage underneath is a great option for tight spaces. If your budget does not allow for custom, then good-looking storage boxes fit nicely under most pre-made banquettes. If you are not looking for more storage but are just short on space, a breakfast nook can be created with a small table and stools that can tuck underneath when not in use.

Simply by pushing a dining table against a wall or window you can save at least three feet. All you have to do is pull the table out for dinner parties. And don't forget, an old or unattractive table can always be put to use and instantly jazzed up with a custom table skirt in a fabulous fabric. Voila, another spot for hidden storage!

One of my recent favorite small-space solutions is installing built-in top-to-bottom mirrors on the inset of closet doors. How brilliant! No longer are you taking up precious wall space in the room with a floor-length mirror.

As for the actual layout and decoration of a small space, conflicting theories abound. Some say not to fill a small room with over-scaled furniture, as it eats up the space and feels cramped. Others say big furniture makes a small room seem grander.

I gravitate toward the middle. In general, I stay away from large, overstuffed furniture and do find that too many small pieces can feel cluttered. But I need enough seating for entertaining and recently purchased a set of Lucite folding chairs (clear furniture is another small-space trick) that can be stowed when not in use.

I have never subscribed to pure minimalism, although I admire those who can. I find it almost impossible to not surround myself with lovely items that I find along my travels, antiquing or shopping. The key is rigorous editing. I have seen many small, successful spaces that have a plethora of mementos or objets d'art.

But once you get to a certain point, it becomes necessary to do the practice of one thing in, one thing out. After all, no matter what size your space is, you need the room to enjoy it.
By Jaclyn Banash
(c) 2010, The Kansas City Star.
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

414 E. Duffy Street - Skinny House

Speaking of the skinny house on 414 E Duffy, as it should be painted by the end of the week, let’s have a quick review before I post the “almost-complete” pictures. It started life as a 25-foot wide vacant lot.











It was framed...













...and sided...














roughed-in with plumbing and electric , was drywalled and trimmed













...had a kitchen rendering done by my trusty assistant, Laura,










and is in the process of being painted. Cabinets might be in by the end of the week as well. Should look a lot different very shortly. The buyer is a Blackhawk pilot who will be returning very shortly, from a nine-month deployment. He’s never seen the place in person!

Skinny House Savannah Style

Well, my investors are in the process of acquiring land for 3 more skinny infill houses in the Victorian District of Historic Downtown Savannah. They will be versions of the house at 414 E Duffy, which should be painted by the end of the week, so keep your eyes open for new photographs. The lots we work with are anywhere from 21 to 30 feet wide and about 100 feet deep. But there is a boxy little lot that is currently available and it got me thinking once again of the 9 Tsubo House (see earlier post). I’d really love to do a 9 Tsubo House on that lot. Any takers? Here’s a refresher on the minimalist Japanese-designed house: http://www.spoon-tamago.com/2010/06/02/9-tsubo-house/



http://www.smallhousestyle.com/2008/12/21/small-house-living-is-in-in-japan/

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

The Foreclosure Story

There’s a new wrinkle in the foreclosure story (you know, that story about how it seems half the houses on the market are foreclosures, and how buyers are dragging their heels, waiting for more, and possibly better foreclosures, even while the 30-year mortgage rate hovers at 4% interest). Now a couple of the major banks have suspended foreclosure proceedings because it turns out some of the foreclosures may have been filed incorrectly, mostly due to the overwhelming volume of paperwork required to file the foreclosure. So if you have a stack of 100 papers and there’s a paragraph buried in there that technically shouldn’t be, the homeowner could go to court to contest the foreclosure. So, this will slow the tide of foreclosures. BUT, there is already what’s referred to as a “shadow inventory” of foreclosures, which are homes the banks have taken back but haven’t put on the market yet, so as not to flood the market with even more foreclosures and depress property values even further. Add the foreclosures that the banks are now suspending, to make certain the I’s are dotted and T’s are crossed, and who knows how many will eventually show up. On the other hand, maybe by the time they do hit the market, housing will be in a turnaround phase and those foreclosed homes hitting the market will be worth more. At this point, it’s anybody’s guess. For more background, see the three posts below.

Ritholtz: Slowing the Runaway Foreclosure Train

“Defective documentation has created millions of blighted titles that will plague the nation for the next decade"... Richard Kessler, an attorney in Sarasota, Florida, who conducted a study that found errors in about three-fourths of court filings related to home repossessions. The out of control foreclosure machinery has officially been brought into the shop for repairs.

The real estate financing industry appears to have brought the same technical expertise that allowed automated underwriting of mortgages to an automated foreclosure process: Structurally flawed, rife with errors, guaranteed to fail — and in need if an immediate overhaul.

As we have seen, homeowners without mortgages have lost their home to foreclosure.

That this legal impossibility actually occurred reveals the foreclosure process, especially in Florida (but other states as well)as little more than a legal conveyor belt, bereft of oversight, manned by parasitic law firms and overwhelmed bankers.

It is Lucy on the chocolate factory line, only with homes being repossessed instead of bon bons slipping by unwrapped.

This more than merely “flawed paperwork” — the entire process is problematic. It has reached such depths that numerous banks have voluntarily stopped foreclosures while they review their internal processes, and the methods used by local law firms they hire. Called Foreclosure mills, many of these firms employ illegal methods to their legal practices. They use robo-signers instead of reviewing documents reviewed by lawyers; they hire process servers with histories of fraud and criminality. In the pursuit of foreclosure profits, they have tried to turn the practice of law into a clerical act of foreclosure, repossession, and resale — consequences be damned.

We have continually argued all of the HAMP and foreclosure abatement programs are ultimately counter-productive, and benefit the banks, not the home owners. I have called for allowing the process to proceed naturally, letting prices fall to where they will. Further, We have never opposed the foreclosure process as a price discovery mechanism.

But what is going on in Florida and elsewhere is a national embarrassment. What is required here is a full blown investigation from the US Attorney’s office.

Published: Monday, 4 Oct 2010 | 4:03 PM ET
By: Barry Ritholtz
CEO, Director of Equity Research of Fusion IQ

View original article: http://www.cnbc.com/id/39506421

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

Bank of America suspends foreclosures

America's largest servicer, Bank of America, has suspended foreclosures cases in 23 states in order to amend any faulty affidavits, Richard Simon, a spokesman for the country's largest lender told HousingWire.

It is the third bank to officially suspend foreclosures and admit to signing affidavits without a knowledge of the documents or a notary present. The personnel who signed these documents quickly are now referred to as "robo-signers." Ally Financial, formerly GMAC Mortgage and JPMorgan Chase are believed to have already suspended foreclosures for similar reasons.

"We have been assessing our existing processes. To be certain affidavits have followed the correct procedures, Bank of America will delay the process in order to amend all affidavits in foreclosure cases that have not yet gone to judgment in the 23 states where courts have jurisdiction over foreclosures," Simon said.

Regulators and state attorneys general offices have demanded meetings, reviews and even moratoriums on foreclosures from both Ally Financial and JPMorgan Chase. The same reaction can be expected for Bank of America.

As of March, BofA's servicing portfolio totaled 13.7 million mortgages for an unpaid principal balance of roughly of $2.1 trillion, according to Moody's Investors Service.

An executive at a third-party mortgage company told HousingWire that the threat of these faulty affidavits would go beyond foreclosures and even the disqualification of the homebuyer tax credit for some, according to a HousingWire report earlier. The entire recovery in the housing market could be at risk. The unnamed source requested not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the issue.

"The entire economy will be hurt by these extensions. I can understand that they appear to be in the best interest of the consumer, but we continue to delay the impact of the financial restabilizing or the finanicial rebalancing of our economy. We're putting borrowers in homes without making mortgage payments, and at the end of the day the taxpayers are the ones picking up the tabs for this stuff," the executive said.

Neither Wells Fargo or Citigroup have confirmed a foreclosure suspension as they review their documents.


Friday, October 1st, 2010, 4:09 pm
by JON PRIOR

View original article: http://www.housingwire.com/2010/10/01/bank-of-america-to-delay-foreclosures

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

Zillow: 30-year FRMs hit record low at 4.16%

by CHRISTINE RICCIARDI
The 30-year, fixed-mortgage rate decreased from a week earlier, setting a new record low at 4.16%, according to the Zillow Mortgage Marketplace weekly update.

The national average ticked up slightly throughout September after 11 consecutive weeks of decline. Zillow said the current 15-year, fixed average rate is 3.67% and the rate for a 5-1 adjustable rate mortgage is 3.01%. That type of mortgage maintains a steady rate for five years and then is adjusted annually thereafter.

Regionally, 30-year rates vary, but the majority of states witnessed a deflation. Rates in Florida fell to 4.09% from 4.23% the previous week, New York's average rate was 4.04% last week, down from 4.17%, California's rate decreased to 4.18% from 4.21%, and Texas saw its average rate disintegrate to 4.15% from 4.22%.

Meanwhile Pennsylvania's current rate of 4.17% is up from 4.16% last week. Massachusetts' average rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage grew to 4.22% from 4.19% at Sept. 27.

Washington's 30-year FRM remained constant at 4.16%.

Zillow bases its averages on real-time mortgage quotes from lenders registered with the company. The national average comes from thousands of daily quotes by anonymous borrowers through the Seattle-based company's website.

View original article: http://www.housingwire.com/2010/10/05/zillow-30-year-frms-hit-record-low-at-4-16

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Student Housing Offers Some Stability For Real Estate Investors

One thing we do have in Historic Downtown Savannah is plenty of student housing. Let me know if you or anyone you know is looking, because there are some good deals for units with solid rental history.

RISMEDIA, October 1, 2010--(MCT)--The housing market is still in the tank and doesn't seem likely to emerge anytime soon, but there are investment opportunities in one segment: student housing.

It's not a risk-free proposition, and it's far more management-intensive than conventional multifamily properties. But student housing has a long history of growth and stability and promises to repeat the pattern as college enrollment stays on its upward trajectory.

"Demand and supply conditions for housing are bad," said David Stiff, chief economist with Fiserv, which publishes the Case-Shiller Home Price Index. "But in college towns, demand conditions are slightly better. There's a stable source of new demand every year."

There are at least three paths to investment in college towns: individually; in a partnership, or as a shareholder in one of two publicly traded real estate investment trusts, American Campus Communities Inc. and Education Realty Trust Inc.

An initial public offering is on deck for a third, Campus Crest Communities Inc., which expects to list on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol "CCG."

REITs focused on student housing have become investment magnets for large pension funds. Some bigger syndicates have partnerships with larger funds. Campus Advantage Inc., one of the nation's largest private student-housing companies, is managing and helping to develop properties for the California Public Employees Retirement System.

"Comparable to other similar product-type investment opportunities, student housing is a really good investment," said Michael Orsak, vice president at Campus Advantage, which manages and owns 50 properties across the U.S., mostly in the Southeast, Midwest and Texas. The industry measures its size based on beds. For Campus Advantage, that translates into 30,000 beds.

"These investments return pretty stable cash-on-cash yields going in and should continue to hold up in the long term vs. other similar product types that might have larger peaks and troughs in occupancy and rental-rate growth," he said.

Orsak said most institutions can expect a cash-on-cash yield in the first year at 8 percent to 9 percent. "I don't know where a pension fund can find that today in the stock market or bonds," he said.

Though markets differ by campus — large public universities have steady enrollment; smaller schools are growing exponentially — the national statistics on enrollment are strong.

In 2010, a record 19.1 million students were enrolled in two-year and four-year colleges and universities, a 25 percent jump since 2000, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. That underscores a consistent uptick in enrollment that is expected to continue — albeit at a slower pace — until at least 2018, as the last of the baby boomers' children reach college age.

Coupled with the recession, which has prompted many to go back to school for second and advanced degrees, enrollment in post-secondary schools has rarely been so robust.

Moreover, today's students aren't living in the kind of housing their parents once inhabited. Many are leaving a home where they had their own bedroom and bathroom, a separate family or media room and amenities either at home or nearby. They expect the same when they leave campus — and parents appear willing to pay for it.

Campus Crest, which owns and manages 27 properties, or 13,580 beds, boasts of its amenities in its initial public offering prospectus. All of its properties — which, like Campus Advantage and ACC, are considered Class A — offer what Campus Crest calls "bed-bath parity," or a private bathroom for each student.

The Campus Crest properties all have Internet access, a full kitchen with up-to-date appliances, washers and dryers inside each unit, ample parking and a broad array of other on-site amenities, such as "resort-style swimming pools, tanning booths, basketball and volleyball courts, game rooms, coffee bars and community clubhouses with regularly planned social activities." Plus they're all fully furnished.

"We strive to offer not just an apartment but an entire lifestyle and community experience designed to appeal to the modern-day college student," according to the IPO documents.

Education Realty Trust takes a similar, resort-like approach to its owned and managed properties, which consist of more than 37,800 beds in 22 states, with a high concentration in Florida and Georgia.

All of these perks cost money, of course, and the monthly price on a student apartment is generally about 10 percent to 20 percent higher than a traditional apartment.

"The tenants are not constrained by real-life economics because, of course, they're not footing the bill," said Joung Park, an analyst who covers ACC for investment researcher Morningstar Inc. "Typically the parents are back-stopping the lease too, so there are fewer defaults."

The key difference for student-housing landlords is that they charge by the bed, not by the unit, Park said. "That allows them to get a little more on rents because they can put multiple beds in one unit."

In many cases, charging higher rent is the only way for an owner to turn a profit. Student housing can be a management nightmare, and costs considerably more to operate than conventional multi-family housing. The expense ratio on conventional apartments will run anywhere from 35 percent to 38 percent of revenues, according to Orsak. Student-housing sites have expenses that are at least 45 percent of revenues.

Utility costs are usually higher, as are maintenance costs. A property can get banged up pretty quickly. Holes in the walls need frequent repair, drains are often clogged, landscaping is rarely maintained, and the overall cleanliness of the place is often questionable.

"These are young adults who have newfound freedom," said David Arthur of Varsity Capital Advisors LLC, which has 1,000 beds split between the campuses at the University of New Hampshire in Durham and Marshall University in Huntington, W. Va. "We constantly have to remind them that they are now young adults and not children in various ways."

Varsity Capital's portfolios consist of B-grade property, which are more traditional apartments with four beds that share a bathroom. The locations are close to campus and tend to be anywhere from $50 to $175 a month per bed cheaper than Class A sites.

Occupancy averages about 98 percent, Arthur said, and rents have seen a steady increase of 3 percent to 5 percent over the last four years. Varsity Capital's biggest competitors are the REITS or larger privately owned groups, he noted.

Accordingly, he advised a smaller syndicate or an individual player to focus on properties around larger public universities.

"We pick state schools because they have a hard time finding funding for new housing," he said. "They tend to spend more money on their plants and their labs vs. trying to pay for new dorms."

Smaller schools tend to have more private money available for student housing and could build a dorm and require all students to live in it. At larger state schools like the University of Wisconsin-Madison, roughly 25 percent of the student population lives on campus.

On the other hand, Miami University of Ohio, which has around one-third the student population of UW-Madison, owns all of its dorms and requires both freshmen and sophomores to live on campus.

Orsak of Campus Advantage said investors should shy away from states where budgets are strained, like in California and Florida. He also advised avoiding schools in rural areas or in states with plenty of open land, like Michigan.

Multi-family housing real estate investment trusts have struggled during the recession while their student-housing peers have done well, according to Morningstar. American Campus Communities' stock, for example, produced a 44 percent return in 2009 and year-to-date is up almost 9 percent. It has outperformed its REIT peers since 2007 and the S&P 500 in three of the past four years.

Still, Morningstar analyst Park warns that valuations may have peaked. American Campus Communities stock, for example, is near the top of its 52-week high.

"The business conditions and the whole industry dynamic of student housing is healthier than your run-of-the-mill REIT," Park said. "But you also have to look at valuations. These guys have had a good run, and we have them now fairly valued." By Morningstar's definition, that's neither a buy nor a sell.

By Campus Advantage's reckoning, the window for growth is still wide open.

"Right now is probably the most intense time in student housing acquisitions," Orsak said, noting that there's about $41.3 billion in student-housing properties actively on the market. "I've never seen that large of an available pipeline. This is an exciting time to be in student housing."

By Jennifer Waters
(c) 2010, MarketWatch.com Inc.
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Foreclosures Sell at 26%

More foreclosure news from CNNMoney.com this morning. Georgia, not mentioned in the article, has a 41% foreclosure savings and has the 7th-highest number of foreclosures nationally, with about 1 in every 246 households receiving a foreclosure filing in August, 2010.
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Homes lost to foreclosure now make up a quarter of the real estate market -- and they're selling at big bargains.

Nearly 250,000 residential properties in some stage of foreclosure changed hands during the second quarter, RealtyTrac reported Thursday, September 30. They sold for about 26% less than non-foreclosed homes, compared to 35% less in the first quarter.

A little more than half of these deals were of properties repossessed by banks, the remainder came from the ranks of short sales -- where banks allow homeowners to sell for less than they owe on the mortgage.

There was much regional variation in the foreclosure sales data. Rust Belt states such as Ohio and Michigan had moderately or high levels of foreclosure sales, but the former bubble states is where foreclosures continue to dominate.

In Nevada, they accounted for 56% of all transactions, the highest percentage in the nation. Arizona (47%) and California (43%) also had very high levels.

Foreclosure sales were much rarer in Iowa (4.4%), the District of Columbia (5.6%), Montana (6.4%) and New York (7.5%).

The sharpest foreclosure deals were to be found in Ohio, where foreclosure properties sold for 43% less than non-foreclosed homes. Kentucky's discount was 41%, and California's 39%.

Original Article: http://money.cnn.com/2010/09/30/real_estate/foreclosure_sales_grow/index.htm

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.

America's Smartest Cities


Not sure where Savannah places on this list...

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Ever wonder what happened to your high school valedictorian? He or she might just have wound up in Washington, D.C. That metro area has the nation's highest percentage of residents with college degrees.

Call it America's brainiest place to live.

In the District and surrounding suburbs, 47.3% of people 25 years or older have bachelor's, master's, professional school or doctorate degrees, according to new Census Bureau data released Tuesday. The national average barely tips 25%.

The figures don't surprise John Schmidt, senior economist with the Center for Economic and Policy Research in D.C. The city is built on jobs that require degrees.

"There's a very high share of federal government employees here," he said, "and people dealing with the federal government, including defense contractors, lobbyists, businesses that want to influence the regulatory process; there's lots of lawyers."

"Clearly, the biggest factor is still the presence of federal government jobs," he added. "But a lot of people in the 20s and 30s come here interested in public policy. There's an excitement about being in Washington, especially among young people who want to make a difference in the world."

In second-place San Francisco, 43.5% of residents have college degrees or better; San Jose, Calif., the hub of Silicon Valley, ranked third at 43.2%; and Raleigh, N.C., one of the points in that state's "Research Triangle," came in fourth at 42.2%.

Boston, where so many great universities are located, also boasts 42.2% of its population having a degree.

Of course, salaries in those towns are also higher than the national average. That's because a highly educated population is a key to growth and prosperity. Washington, D.C., for example, has the highest median household income of any metro area of more than 1 million residents.

"There's a very high correlation between earnings and educational attainment," said Todd Gabe, an economics professor at the University of Maine. .

Cities also tend to specialize in the kinds of educated residents they attract. San Jose, for example, has a high percentage of residents whose degrees are in computer science or information technology.

That works great for those cities where degrees lead to high-paying jobs. But other areas may have just as many college-educated but salaries can be lower than you'd expect because the degrees are in lower paying fields like teaching or journalism.

"Some types of knowledge are much more highly compensated than others," said Gabe.

Many other "creative class" types -- the artists, web designers, innovative business entrepreneurs and other thinkers -- also tend to coalesce around cities with an educated population.

Places like New York, where 35.6% of over-25 population have degrees, exemplify that kind of city, as does Los Angeles (30.2%) and San Diego (30.6%).

The metro areas with the lowest levels of educational attainment tend to be the "Building or Comforting Regions," as coined by a Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto study.

Comforting Regions include resorts areas such as Las Vegas, which cater to vacationers, and where the percentage of residents with degrees is only 21.5%.

One good example of a Building city is Riverside, Calif., where only 19.2% of the population has degrees. When residential development was in full flower, there were good paying jobs available to construction workers and others without degrees.

Since the bust, however, the unemployment rate there has jumped to nearly 15% and income has declined. The median household income dropped more than 6% in 2009 to $53,815.

Other less educated populations are in Memphis, Tenn. (24.2%), Tampa, Fla. (24.6%), and San Antonio (24.8%).

View original article: http://money.cnn.com/2010/10/01/pf/college/Americas_brainiest_cities/index.htm?hpt=T2

Blogger Matthew Allan is a specialist in Savannah Real Estate, focusing on Savannah's downtown historic districts, including the Landmark Historic District, Victorian Historic District, Thomas Square Historic District, Starland Historic District, Baldwin Park, and Ardsley Park Historic District.