A Nerd's Eye View

Yet More Foreclosures in the Pipeline



I got a chance to chat with Joseph Galascione, the real estate broker who was mentioned in the San Diego Daily Transcript a couple weeks back as having authored what appeared to be an interesting study on local foreclosures.

It turns out that the study in question is freely available at the website of Galascione's brokerage, ERA® Metro Realty, and that it is very informative after all.

Galascione and his colleagues analyzed county deeds of trust to see how many San Diego home mortgages were going to reset between January and June of 2008. For each of these mortgages, they determined the likely increase or decrease in mortgage payment upon reset. They also calculated the loan-to-value ratio (LTV) at purchase time, this just being the amount of the loan (or loans) on a home divided by the home's value when the loan was taken out.

Those loans for which the payment was expected to increase by $500 or more and the LTV was greater than 80 percent were categorized as being at "high risk for foreclosure." (20 percent equity may seem like a lot, remember that these figures represent the LTV at the time of purchase or refinance, and prices have gone down substantially since many of these loans were taken out). If the loans had reset amounts of $500 or more but LTVs between 60 percent and 79 percent, they were at medium risk for foreclosure. All other loans were deemed to be low-risk.

What they found was that of the 8,052 San Diego loans scheduled to adjust in the first half of 2008, 3,561 (44 percent) were high risk and a further 842 loans (10 percent) were medium risk. The peak months for high- or medium-risk resets during this period will be April and May. The study suggests that, because of the delay between the first missed payment and the actual home foreclosure, any foreclosures resulting from resets during these two peak months will hit the market around November and December of 2008.

The study's authors are most concerned about North County, where Oceanside, Vista, San Marcos, Escondido, and Carlsbad are singled out as being home to many resetting high-risk loans. Conversely, the more mature markets -- Del Mar, Bonita, Coronado, San Diego, and La Mesa are noted in specific -- will experience fewer high-risk resets because homeowners in these markets are more likely to have owned their homes longer and thus to have more equity.

All in all, while the situation will differ from one area to the next, it looks like the prevalence of foreclosed homes in the San Diego market will be with us for at least another year.

-- RICH TOSCANO



Rich Toscano is a financial advisor with Pacific Capital Associates*;
he also writes about San Diego real estate at Piggington's Econo-Almanac. Contact him at rtoscano@pcasd.com.

    Recent Nerd's Eye View Posts

Yet More Foreclosures in the Pipeline

A Big Price Decline in November

BailoutWatch: Lower Rates for Everyone!

Questioning the Employment Data

Credit Default Swap Problems

Boosterism and December Foreclosures

December Housing Supply and Demand

December Home Prices

It Depends What You Mean by Bottom

*Investment advisory services and securities offered through Girard Securities, Inc., member SIPC/FINRA.

The Chaparralian:

 

High Country News digs into activist's views on fire, shrubs.

Friday, February 1 -- 3:40 pm

Why Forcing High-Tech (Usually) Doesn't Work:

 

Digitizing the classroom is better done by example than mandate, experts say.

Friday, February 1 -- 3:27 pm

Another Tax Rebel:

 

Wesley Snipes is acquitted of his most serious tax felony charges.

Friday, February 1 -- 3:25 pm


Sponsored By

MOST POPULAR STORIES:

SURVIVAL IN SAN DIEGO

What Is a Recession, San Diego-Style? :

 

Isn't a recession just a recession? Alan Gin adds to his definition.

Friday, February 1 -- 10:34 am

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Limitations :

 

We are capable of producing an infinite number of people, but we cannot produce an infinite amount of water.

Thursday, January 31 -- 6:33 pm

CAFÉ SAN DIEGO

Worst of '07 in Rights :

 

And now, ladies and gentlemen, for the bad news.

Friday, February 1 -- 1:45 pm

COMMENTARY: SLOP

Keep Working 10th Ave., Don't Mind the Stadium:

 

The developer of a landfill in North County has a big plan for Tenth Avenue Marine Terminal and a team in place to get it done.

Friday, February 1 -- 4:57 pm

COMMENTARY: RICH TOSCANO

Yet More Foreclosures in the Pipeline :

 

A local real estate broker digs through the mortgage data to find that plentiful foreclosures will be with us throughout 2008.

Saturday, February 2 -- 3:14 pm

Sponsored by

Principal Reinstated After Outcry:

 

San Diego school board and superintendent decide against the controversial switch.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008 -- 3:25 pm

The Mayor Wants Answers:

 

Sanders asks SEDC for details on unsupervised bonuses to top officials.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008 -- 2:48 pm

Mayor to SEDC: Explain:

 

The Mayor's Office responds to our story today.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008 -- 2:04 pm

Sponsored By

SURVIVAL IN SAN DIEGO

Survival Gone Fishin' -- Really:

 

My dad caught some salmon, my sister's getting hitched and the Great White North beckons.

Friday, June 27, 2008 -- 5:42 pm

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Here We Go Again:

 

City’s 'oily' alter ego has resurfaced thanks to recent conduct at SEDC.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008 -- 7:54 pm

CAFÉ SAN DIEGO

The People's Reporters:

 

Two voiceofsandiego.org reporters field your questions about their investigative reporting into San Diego redevelopment.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008 -- 7:26 pm

COMMENTARY: SLOP

And Now, the Port:

 

The agency joins a long list of San Diego governments willing to spend the public's money telling them how to vote.

Sunday, July 6, 2008 -- 6:57 pm

COMMENTARY: RICH TOSCANO

Silent Spring:

 

The spring selling season has come and gone with no hint of the the typical seasonal rally in home prices.

Friday, July 4, 2008 -- 1:35 pm

MOST POPULAR STORIES:

Sponsored by


Home About Us Contact Us Copyright Privacy Policy Site Sponsorship
Copyright © 2008 voiceofsandiego.org. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use Privacy Statement