Results 1 to 3 of 3

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

  1. #1
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Mexifornia
    Posts
    2,174

    Insight Into Shadow (Foreclosure) Inventory

    Insight into Shadow Inventory

    Edit: In my haste to publish, I failed to include the following footnote that belongs with each table:

    Source: Realtytrac, Housingtracker, Deutsche Bank

    Note: Foreclosure inventory includes pre-foreclosures, auctions and REO. 2/3 of pre-foreclosures are assumed to become foreclosures.
    I'm not sure if they reduced the pre-foreclosure number by 1/3 before the calculation was made. that'll teach me not to read the fine print. Thanks CR!


    Nishu Sood, a Research Analyst with Deutsche Bank focusing on home builders, regularly publishes research on wide-ranging issues affecting the industry, including how the resale market impacts builder prospects. Now that REO is dominating housing sales in many markets, including Sacramento, his team at Deutsche is focusing on ways to measure the backlog. Nishu kindly gave me permission to excerpt some of their recently published (subscription-only) findings, which I hope you will find illuminating:



    Distressed inventory not captured in resale inventories



    The foreclosure wave is arguably the most important phenomenon currently affecting the resale market, dominating transactions in many markets, depressing pricing and creating substantial inventory that competes with builders and individual existing home sellers. The pricing effect of foreclosures is evident in the various home prices indexes, which are showing historic declines. The transaction effect is evident as well, with bubble markets showing a dramatic spike in volumes in recent months. The inventory effect, however, is not as evident. In this section we analyze the extent of the foreclosure wave's impact on resale inventories.


    A hidden source of resale inventory, or "shadow inventory"


    Foreclosures add a substantial and toxic form of inventory to the market, one that is not fully apparent from traditional inventory metrics used to evaluate the resale market. When bank-owned homes are sold, they do predominantly show up in resale transaction volumes. Thus, 40%+ of transactions in bubble markets have been reported to be distressed homes and more than 1 in 4 nationwide. In terms of inventory however, bank-owned homes frequently do not show up in resale inventory, or MLS listings. The extent to which bank-owned homes do not appear in MLS listings is difficult to quantify because it depends on each bank or servicer's timeline and approach in handling foreclosed properties. In order to provide some sense of the extent to which MLS listings ignore distressed inventories we do a simple comparison analysis below.


    MLS listings are missing large amounts of distressed inventory


    The foreclosure wave has added another way in which MLS listings are not accurately reflecting true resale inventory conditions. Based on our analysis, MLS based listing inventory is significantly understating the extent of foreclosure inventory in many markets. In Figure 19 below, we compare distressed inventory vs. MLS listings in major metro areas across the US. A certain portion of distressed inventory is included in MLS listings – if it were all included we would expect MLS listings to be higher than distressed inventory…



    City
    MLS Listings
    Foreclosure Inventory
    % of Listings

    Sacramento
    14,913
    31,219
    209%

    San Francisco
    18,647
    35,402
    190%

    Inland Empire
    45,490
    82,114
    181%

    San Diego
    18,771
    31,168
    166%

    Los Angeles
    62,379
    88,843
    142%



    Figure 19: Local MLS listings vs. distressed inventory (Edited to show only the top 5 markets in the U.S. – Max)


    In terms of the scale of distressed inventory vs. MLS listings, the bubble markets top the list, with all five of the top markets in California…


    Analyzing distressed inventory at a local level


    Foreclosure inventory includes 1.8% of households. Since MLS listings are a poor proxy for true resale inventories (see above section), in this section we compare distressed inventory to other more reliable housing metrics in order to gauge how substantial it is. In Figure 20 below, we compare foreclosure inventories to the number of housing units in each metro. Overall, foreclosure inventory represents 1.8% of homes in the 33 markets we analyze. This list is headed more by the metro areas that experienced the fastest growth in terms of new construction during the recent housing boom, including Inland Empire, Ft. Myers, Las Vegas, Sacramento and Phoenix. In the top three markets, more than 5% of housing stock is distressed inventory. In the bottom 10 markets, less than 1% of housing stock is distressed inventory.


    As a reference point, we also include the rate of growth in housing stock in the far right column. This column shows what percent of current (2006) housing stock was added from 2000 through 2006. The top five markets where distressed inventory is the highest as a percentage of housing stock added the most housing units during the boom, with 20% current housing stock added from 2000-2006. This compares with 8% for the bottom five and 10% overall.



    City
    Foreclosure Inventory
    Housing Units (2006)
    % Housing Units
    Housing Units Added (2000-06)

    Inland Empire
    82,114
    1,400,825
    5.9%
    15%

    Ft Myers
    17,914
    341,150
    5.3%
    27%

    Las Vegas
    39,278
    756,161
    5.2%
    25%

    Sacramento
    31,219
    837,102
    3.7%
    14%

    Phoenix
    59,982
    1,622,977
    3.7%
    17%



    Figure 20: Distressed Inventory as a % of Housing Units (Edited to show only the top 5 markets in the U.S. – Max)






    http://sacrealstats.blogspot.com/2008/0 ... atrick.net

  2. #2
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    NC
    Posts
    11,242
    What state is the city of Inland Empire in?
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  3. #3
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Mexifornia
    Posts
    2,174
    Quote Originally Posted by vortex
    What state is the city of Inland Empire in?
    It's San Bernardino County, CA.....about 50 miles from L.A.

    (primarily hispanic population...jillions of foreclosures...lots of gangs, too ).

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •