GETTING OUT FROM UNDER YOUR MORTGAGE –THE CASE FOR EFFICIENT BREACH

If you were one of the many who bought your home at or near the top of the market in 2006 (and even in the 2 years prior), and still find yourself making that monthly payment, but questioning your financial sanity for continuing to do so, you may be a candidate for efficient breach.

WHAT IS EFFICIENT BREACH?

Efficient breach is really a time-honored principle in contract law where one or the other party to a contract determines that it is no longer in his/her interest to continue to honor the terms of a deal previously struck with the other party.  The analysis of the contract breach then moves to what remedy is available to the non-breaching party; and, the defenses available to the party who has breached.  In the context of stopping payment on your home mortgage to the bank, some commentators have termed this strategy ‘strategic default.’  However, that really is a misnomer, since, ‘default,’ interpreted literally in this context, occurs when one misses that first payment to the bank.  ‘Efficient breach,’ on the other hand, embodies the notion and recognition that a comprehensive, and unalterable change will take place between the positions of the parties as to that prior contractual relationship.

WHAT DO THE NUMBERS TELL YOU?

It’s clear if you haven’t the money in the first instance, i.e. you aren’t paying other bills or are limiting your expenditures in every other area of your life—food, clothing, car, credit cards, health insurance, etc.,  in order to make that next monthly payment, that you are hemorrhaging to death.  The only question is: when do you bleed out?  But, what if you aren’t in those dire straits, and, you simply are not able to save and get ahead,  inasmuch as the banker’s position is intractable, i.e. ‘No loan modification for you; we are happy to continue taking your monthly payments on time,’ as has been the case.  And so, why would the lender modify the terms of your loan, given your good pay history?  Here is the formula for you to work through to determine if it makes more sense to rent rather than own a home:

Costs to own:  [Costs of mortgage(s) monthly, to include monthly impounds for property ins. & property taxes + HOA dues (not deductible)] X 12] – [annual tax benefit to own = your combined state & federal tax rate X (allowed itemized deductions of annual mortgage interest & annual property taxes)]

Costs to rent: Annual cost to rent a comparable property + personal property insurance reduced by (1- your combined federal and state tax rate) X (itemized deductions of annual mortgage interest & annual property taxes–which is the out of pocket $ you spend on mortgage interest and taxes which you can’t deduct, which stays in your pocket] reduced further only, if you are contemplating buying, by the opportunity cost of alternatively investing any required down payment [here, this could range conservatively on the low end, from that principal amount X a  market rate of interest on some cash-bearing instrument, to an expected capital appreciation component (“G”) + dividend (“D”) on an investment of that same down payment in a mutual,  or index fund or a particular stock of some company. (And surely, there can be tax implications here, current, deferred, or none (assuming a Roth IRA is the investment vehicle used); but, this goes beyond the scope of this article.)].

Do the hard numbers analysis– no throwing darts here anymore.  If we assume, conservatively, that property prices can only simply go sideways and not down any further (and that is a big assumption—see below), one is likely to be better off renting, rather than buying.  Only in an environment where one is assured of rising property values over the long term, is one better off owning.

WHAT ARE THE PROSPECTS FOR FUTURE PROPERTY APPRECIATION– WILL YOUR HOUSE EVER GET BACK TO YOUR ORIGINAL PURCHASE PRICE?

In that regard, there was an article written by Peter Hong—LA Times, 09/27/09, which I would commend to you to read (http://articles.latimes.com/2009/sep/27/business/fi-cover-housing27), which also depicts by way of a price chart, the multi-generational bubble in RE prices, adjusted for inflation, we have experienced going back to pre-WWII.  The last leg of the move constituted an unsustainable parabolic progression; and hence, the ultimate expected crash in RE prices.  For example, in the 5 yrs. leading up to the top in RE prices in Southern California, houses appreciated at a 19.8% compounded rate of growth.  That took a $1 and turned it into $2.47.  So, if a house had a base price of $225,000 in 2002, by the end of 2006, it was ‘worth’ $555,222.

Of course, reality has since set in; and, prices have dropped nationally on average 30% from the top and as much as 60% + in some markets.  To further emphasize this multi-generational price spike, I would refer you to an article written by analyst Henry Blodgett—Business Insider, ‘The Housing Chart That’s Worth a Thousand Words,’ 02/21/09, (http://www.businessinsider.com/the-housing-chart-thats-worth-1000-words-2009-2), wherein he cites to the Case-Shiller Home Price index, which goes back to 1890, with that initial benchmark year represented at 100 on the chart. The reference numbers on the chart are inflation-adjusted.

What you see is that we have, and are, experiencing a return back to earth of that rocket trajectory— a regression or reversion of home prices back to the mean or average rate of growth [regression to the mean --a well-grounded mathematical concept].  Moreover, RE prices may very well overshoot that line of progression/the average rate of appreciation, as markets often do.  Why? Credit has been damaged across the board–people can’t buy even if they wanted to— even if it made sense financially.  And mortgage lenders have “toughen[ed] their standards for Federal Housing Administration-insured loans beyond what the agency itself requires.  Mortgage lenders including Wells Fargo & Co. and Bank of America Corp., the two largest, have raised the minimum credit score on FHA-insured loans that they will buy to 640 from 620…The higher hurdles for FHA loans, used in about a fifth of U.S. home purchases, add to challenges for a housing market already struggling with record-low sales and surging foreclosures.” (http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-11-17/home-ownership-gets-harder-for-americans-as-lenders-restrict-fha-mortgages.html)

Additionally, what no one has written about is the baby-boomer phenomenon–the effect boomers had on rising real estate prices on the way up; and, the effect they will have on prices on the way down. [For an in depth analysis: http://rjzlaw2.com/the-baby-boomer-effect-on-real-estate-prices-going-forward/] On the whole though, generally, they owned their homes — no fancy interest-only, no-doc, stated-income, or neg-am loans. So, they have not been compelled to sell in this crash.  But historically, at that age, people retire and then sell to move into smaller homes or apartments; move back to where they grew up; go into retirement homes, etc.  That wave of selling has yet to hit the RE market.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the baby boomer generation consists of people born between 1946 and 1964. Thus, the first baby boomers will turn 65 starting in 2011.  As of 2010, the estimated number of Americans 65 and older is approximately 40.2 million; and, the size of that population demographic is projected to increase to 88.5 million over the next four decades. [“The Next Four Decades--The Older Population in the United States: 2010 to 2050-- Population Estimates and Projections” (May 2010), authored by Grayson K. Vincent and Victoria A. Velkoff.] (http://www.census.gov/prod/2010pubs/p25-1138.pdf)

THE HISTORICAL RATE OF HOME APPRECIATION

And so, what have houses appreciated, adjusted for inflation, and what is that average rate of appreciation going all the way back to 1890? “Using data compiled by Shiller (2005), the real rise in home values between 1890 and 2005 has been 86.3%, with roughly 75 percentage points of the increase occurring [just] since 1995. Over the 115 years, this [constituted] an annual real appreciation rate of 0.54%, or approximately 3.25% per year nominally.” (Emphasis added.)  Freddie Mac Working Paper #05-02, ‘Reversion to the Mean…etc.’, fn. 5, Amy Crews Cutts, Frank E. Nothaft, Nov. 2005. (http://www.freddiemac.com/news/pdf/fmwp_0511_housingpricegrowth.pdf)

Thus, rather than looking through a ‘stand of only 5 trees in the forest’ – the 5 yrs. preceding the once in a lifetime run-up of real estate prices between 2002-2006, the principle of regression to the mean tells us ‘from up in a plane or helicopter looking over the whole forest’ – and going back 115 years, one can expect RE prices over the long term to appreciate at a real rate of about 1/2% per year, after taking inflation into account.  That does not bode well for anyone who bought anywhere near the highs between 2004-2006.  In other words, the chances of your home price getting back to where you bought it are slim and none.  That is the stark reality—with 115 years of data behind it.

WHY LOAN MODIFICATIONS, EVEN IF CONSIDERED, CONSTITUTE NOTHING MORE THAN THE USED CAR SALESMAN’S PITCH, ‘WHAT KIND OF MONTHLY PAYMENT WERE YOU LOOKING TO MAKE?’

As you may already know, loan modifications are not being extended on the whole by the banks.  And even if they are being considered, banks are not reducing principal balances on anyone’s mortgage.  Why? They have capital reserve requirements. And if the bankers were to reduce the principal owed on your loan, they would have to take an equal hit to the owner’s equity section of their balance sheet.  [Never mind that your loan was acquired for pennies on the dollar, or even paper (stock for stock), from Countrywide, Washington Mutual, Wachovia, or Bear Stearns, as they each washed out, with their respective shareholders taking the hit to their stock holdings before the fact of the takeover, by the survivors, Bank of America, JP Morgan Chase, and Wells Fargo.  But I digress.]

Your mortgage, while a liability on your personal balance sheet, is an asset on the bank’s. Recently, the Committee on Banking Supervision, central bankers from around the world, met to decide on changes in regulations governing how much capital should be held by banks on their balance sheets. They set the minimum amount of ‘high quality’ capital that a bank has to have on its books for every dollar of loans that is in risk of not being paid back.  High quality capital is defined to include the amount of money a bank has collected from selling common stock, plus lifetime net earnings, less the cumulative amounts the bank has paid out in dividends.  Under previous accords, banks had to have $2 of high quality capital for every $100 in risky loans and assets.  LA Times 09/11/10 (http://articles.latimes.com/2010/sep/11/business/la-fi-bank-capital-20100911) “Now, the mandatory reserve known as Tier 1 capital would rise from 4 percent to 4.5 percent by 2013 and reach 6 percent in 2019.   In addition, banks would be required to keep an emergency reserve, or “conservation buffer,” of 2.5 percent.   In total, the amount of rock-solid reserves each bank is expected to have will be 8.5 percent of its balance sheet [by] the end of the decade.”  LA Times 09/13/10 (http://www.latimes.com/sns-ap-eu-central-banks-basel-rules,0,6695307.story?page=1)  So, that’s $8.50 of these assets for every $100 in loans.  Thus, you can see how the banks have no interest in reducing principal on your loan, no matter how much they paid for it from one of the failed predecessor entities.  Bottom line: the banks aren’t going to reduce principal on your loan.

And so, what they, and you, are left to tinker with, is massaging the interest rate on your mortgage; hence, the ‘What kind of payment can you afford’ metaphor.  And maybe they even extend the term of years to pay-off on the loan, as well.  But this doesn’t take into account the market value of the ‘car.’ That is not how one should buy a ‘car;’ nor, seek to ostensibly re-fi a house.

WHAT ARE THE TAX IMPLICATIONS FOR WALKING AWAY FROM YOUR MORTGAGE?

Normally, debts that are forgiven constitute taxable income, reportable to the IRS vis a vis a 1099 as ‘income.’  Not now, with regard to mortgage debt relative to your principal residence.  “[U]nder the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007, enacted Dec. 20, taxpayers may exclude debt forgiven on their principal residence if the balance of their loan was $2 million or less. The limit is $1 million for a married person filing a separate return…The new law applies to debt forgiven in 2007, 2008, or 2009. Debt reduced through mortgage restructuring, as well as mortgage debt forgiven in connection with a foreclosure, may qualify for this relief… Note: Legislation enacted in October 2008 extended this relief through 2012. Thus this relief now applies to debt forgiven in calendar years 2007 through 2012.” (http://www.irs.gov/irs/article/0,,id=179073,00.html)

WHAT CAN I DO FOR YOU?

My objective, as an attorney, is to apply maximum leverage to the lender(s), which you cannot do on your own, to get you out from under the legal obligation on your promissory note(s), without filing bankruptcy, without undergoing a foreclosure; and, while minimizing damage to your credit.  At the same time, should you decide to stay in the house, to change your status to one of renter with the lender, and recognize immediate savings for you on the differential between that fair rate and the mortgage payment you currently pay.

© 2010 Riordan J. Zavala, Esq.  All rights reserved.

Posted in The Case For Efficient Breach | Leave a comment

THE BABY BOOMER EFFECT ON REAL ESTATE PRICES GOING FORWARD

According to the U.S. Census Bureau (http://www.census.gov/prod/2010pubs/p25-1138.pdf), the baby boomer generation consists of people born between 1946 and 1964. Thus, the first baby boomers will turn 65 starting in 2011.  As of 2010, the estimated number of Americans 65 and older is approximately 40.2 million; and, the size of that population demographic is projected to increase to 88.5 million over the next four decades. [“The Next Four Decades--The Older Population in the United States: 2010 to 2050-- Population Estimates and Projections” (May 2010), authored by Grayson K. Vincent and Victoria A. Velkoff.]

So, the question arises, what is the buying/selling behavior of people in this stage of their lives? Will they serve to bring to the real estate market a whole new wave of prospective inventory i.e. beyond those who were unfortunate enough to have bought in at the top of the market in ’05 and ’06, and who, have already unwittingly contributed to the excess inventory of homes on the market, as they have been, or are, currently getting washed out by way of the foreclosure process?

In an article by Charles Hugh Smith, entitled, “Housing Headwinds and Baby Boom Demographics” (04/13/10) (http://www.oftwominds.com/blogapr10/housing-demographics04-10.html), the author attributes “an[ ] extremely high rate[ ] of household formation…[to the] 78 million Baby Boomers [who] went out and bought houses.”  By the Census Bureau definition then, these millions of home owners would currently range in age between 47 and 64.

And Vincent and Velkoff conclude in their report, “The population in the United States is projected to grow older over the next several decades. Much of this aging is due to the baby boom generation [this group between the ages of 47 and 64] moving into the ranks of the 65 and older population.”

The effect of the Boomers’ demand for housing and their effect on price is quite evident when one looks at the data.  If we assume on average they started their ownership at say, 25 years of age, that would put the initial purchases for the oldest of the group at 1971, and the ‘wave’ of purchasing would have continued for the youngest of the Boomers through 1993.  When one cross-references this time period with a chart of U.S. House Prices between 1890-2007, as provided in the aforementioned Smith article, the average nominal price for a house goes from approximately $25,000 to $87,000 from 1971 to 1993.  Based on the above entry points, it is safe to assume that the Boomers, in the aggregate, had plenty of equity in their homes, as the nominal price crossed through $100,000, in 1998, and then as the slope/progression of the nominal price line literally went vertical, to just under $225,000, at the top of the market in 2006.

When these prices are adjusted for inflation, as reflected in that same chart, the average inflation-adjusted price of a home was $125,000.  That number had remained pretty much static, going all the way back to 1953, and forward to 1998– a period of 45 years.  So, even after taking into account inflation, Boomers had acquired a certain amount of wealth.  Thirty year fixed mortgages for the first Boomers would have been paid off by 2001; and for the last, they would have had 17 years remaining for complete pay-off at the top of the market in ’06, and only 12 years remaining in 2011, when the first Boomers turn 65.  And the point is, Boomers were not, and have not, been compelled to ‘feed’ their homes into the supply side of the price equation for homes, as we have seen those prices deteriorate from the top in 2006.  Boomers, in the aggregate, did not have subprime loans; option ARM loans; or interest only loans with teaser rates scheduled for reset.  However, what they have seen, is the nominal value of their homes increase dramatically, followed by the dramatic decline that has taken place since the top in 2006.

That decline is reflected in a more recent chart covering the much shorter time period between 1970-2010.  It can be found at http://mysite.verizon.net/vzeqrguz/housingbubble/.  And, while it reflects slightly differing numbers of $245,000 nominal, and $262,000, inflation-adjusted, at the top of the market in 2006, it also now reflects the deflation that has taken place in the average price for a home since the housing bubble burst, down to $175,000.  That same chart also shows that the inflation-adjusted average price of a home between 1979 and 1999, a period of 20 years, has oscillated around $150,000.  So, the question arises, do we see regression to the mean price, for that latter 20 year period, down to $150,000, inflation-adjusted, or to the former 45 year average in the former chart of $125,000?

What happens when the ‘wave’ of net selling by the Boomers commences, as they try to recoup some of the lost profits they had slip through their fingers as they saw the value of their homes go up and then back down as the housing bubble burst?  What happens to the average inflation-adjusted price of a home when the Boomers collectively sell to downsize from a bigger house to a much smaller, more manageable one; or into an apartment; or into a retirement facility; or, move in to their grown children’s home to conserve cash?

The upcoming Boomer-related supply ‘wave’ will not bode well for any future upside in housing prices for multiple years to come.  Moreover, the further reality is that credit has been damaged across the board in this great recession, and bank lending standards increased, such that they constitute barriers to entry to home ownership in the first instance, by those who otherwise would hope to own, despite the fact that they are likely financially better off renting.  This new reality will be fatal to the demand side of the price equation for homes.  Accordingly, all these factors will combine to create a virtual Sisyphean task for home price appreciation going forward.

© 2010   Riordan J. Zavala, Esq.  All rights reserved.

Posted in State of the Housing Market | Leave a comment

THE DECLINE IN MORTGAGE APPLICATIONS IN THE FACE OF RECORD LOW INTEREST RATES SUGGESTS LITTLE TO NO APPRECIATION IN HOUSING PRICES GOING FORWARD

An article published today in Bloomberg News (http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-09-29/u-s-mortgage-applications-index-falls-even-as-rates-decline-to-record-low.html ) confirms a continued decline in the rate of mortgage applications “led by a drop in refinancing even as mortgage rates declined to the lowest on record.”  And refinancing constitutes in excess of 80% of the current total pool of mortgage applicants. (http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/quote?ticker=MBAVREFM:IND )

As for rates, the average 30 year fixed rate mortgage has fallen to 4.38% from a rate of 4.94%, a year ago, when home prices were close to a perceived bottom as ‘savvy’ investors and speculators rushed in to buy up bank-owned foreclosed properties.  The average 15 year fixed, over the same time frame, has fallen from 3.88 to 3.77%.   Both rates represent the lowest on record going back to 1990, some 20 years ago.

At the same time, “reports last week showed sales of existing homes in August were the second-lowest in more than a decade; and, those of new homes were the second-lowest in records going back to 1963.”

So, what does this tell us from a macroeconomic/aggregate point of view? By and large ‘demand’ is not there for the prospective sale of your home.  And so,  if you have been waiting and hoping for some rebound in home prices to get you out from under your mortgage at a price anywhere near where you may have purchased at or near the top in 2005-2006, it is simply not going to happen; and the above data confirms that salient fact. And the further reality is that we are seeing home price appreciation regress to the historical mean/average.  As this writer previously noted in “Getting Out From Under Your Mortgage—The Case for Efficient Breach” (09/20/10):

“And so, what have houses appreciated, adjusted for inflation, and what is that average rate of appreciation going all the way back to 1890? “Using data compiled by Shiller (2005), the real rise in home values between 1890 and 2005 has been 86.3%, with roughly 75 percentage points of the increase occurring [just] since 1995. Over the 115 years, this [constitutes] an annual real appreciation rate of 0.54%, or approximately 3.25% per year nominally.” (Emphasis added.)  Freddie Mac Working Paper #05-02, ‘Reversion to the Mean…etc.’, fn. 5, Amy Crews Cutts, Frank E. Nothaft, Nov. 2005. (http://www.freddiemac.com/news/pdf/fmwp_0511_housingpricegrowth.pdf)

The S&P/Case Shiller report released yesterday, 09/28/10, has confirmed home prices have only appreciated 3.18% over the past year. (http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/quote?ticker=SPCS20Y%25:IND)

© 2010   Riordan J. Zavala, Esq.  All rights reserved.

Posted in Avoid Foreclosure, Efficient Breach, State of the Housing Market, Strategic Default | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

THE DECLINE IN MORTGAGE APPLICATIONS IN THE FACE OF RECORD LOW INTEREST RATES SUGGESTS LITTLE TO NO APPRECIATION IN HOUSING PRICES GOING FORWARD

An article published today in Bloomberg News (http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-09-29/u-s-mortgage-applications-index-falls-even-as-rates-decline-to-record-low.html ) confirms a continued decline in the rate of mortgage applications “led by a drop in refinancing even as mortgage rates declined to the lowest on record.”  And refinancing constitutes in excess of 80% of the current total pool of mortgage applicants. (http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/quote?ticker=MBAVREFM:IND )

As for rates, the average 30 year fixed rate mortgage has fallen to 4.38% from a rate of 4.94%, a year ago, when home prices were close to a perceived bottom as ‘savvy’ investors and speculators rushed in to buy up bank-owned foreclosed properties.  The average 15 year fixed, over the same time frame, has fallen from 3.88 to 3.77%.   Both rates represent the lowest on record going back to 1990, some 20 years ago.

At the same time, “reports last week showed sales of existing homes in August were the second-lowest in more than a decade; and, those of new homes were the second-lowest in records going back to 1963.”

So, what does this tell us from a macroeconomic/aggregate point of view? By and large ‘demand’ is not there for the prospective sale of your home.  And so,  if you have been waiting and hoping for some rebound in home prices to get you out from under your mortgage at a price anywhere near where you may have purchased at or near the top in 2005-2006, it is simply not going to happen; and the above data confirms that salient fact. And the further reality is that we are seeing home price appreciation regress to the historical mean/average.  As this writer previously noted in “Getting Out From Under Your Mortgage—The Case for Efficient Breach” (09/20/10):

“And so, what have houses appreciated, adjusted for inflation, and what is that average rate of appreciation going all the way back to 1890? “Using data compiled by Shiller (2005), the real rise in home values between 1890 and 2005 has been 86.3%, with roughly 75 percentage points of the increase occurring [just] since 1995. Over the 115 years, this [constitutes] an annual real appreciation rate of 0.54%, or approximately 3.25% per year nominally.” (Emphasis added.)  Freddie Mac Working Paper #05-02, ‘Reversion to the Mean…etc.’, fn. 5, Amy Crews Cutts, Frank E. Nothaft, Nov. 2005. (http://www.freddiemac.com/news/pdf/fmwp_0511_housingpricegrowth.pdf)

The S&P/Case Shiller report released yesterday, 09/28/10, has confirmed home prices have only appreciated 3.18% over the past year. (http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/quote?ticker=SPCS20Y%25:IND)

© 2010   Riordan J. Zavala, Esq.  All rights reserved.

Posted in Avoid Foreclosure, Efficient Breach, State of the Housing Market, Strategic Default | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

THE DECLINE IN MORTGAGE APPLICATIONS IN THE FACE OF RECORD LOW INTEREST RATES SUGGESTS LITTLE TO NO APPRECIATION IN HOUSING PRICES GOING FORWARD

An article published today in Bloomberg News (http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-09-29/u-s-mortgage-applications-index-falls-even-as-rates-decline-to-record-low.html ) confirms a continued decline in the rate of mortgage applications “led by a drop in refinancing even as mortgage rates declined to the lowest on record.”  And refinancing constitutes in excess of 80% of the current total pool of mortgage applicants. (http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/quote?ticker=MBAVREFM:IND )

As for rates, the average 30 year fixed rate mortgage has fallen to 4.38% from a rate of 4.94%, a year ago, when home prices were close to a perceived bottom as ‘savvy’ investors and speculators rushed in to buy up bank-owned foreclosed properties.  The average 15 year fixed, over the same time frame, has fallen from 3.88 to 3.77%.   Both rates represent the lowest on record going back to 1990, some 20 years ago.

At the same time, “reports last week showed sales of existing homes in August were the second-lowest in more than a decade; and, those of new homes were the second-lowest in records going back to 1963.”

So, what does this tell us from a macroeconomic/aggregate point of view? By and large ‘demand’ is not there for the prospective sale of your home.  And so,  if you have been waiting and hoping for some rebound in home prices to get you out from under your mortgage at a price anywhere near where you may have purchased at or near the top in 2005-2006, it is simply not going to happen; and the above data confirms that salient fact. And the further reality is that we are seeing home price appreciation regress to the historical mean/average.  As this writer previously noted in “Getting Out From Under Your Mortgage—The Case for Efficient Breach” (09/20/10):

“And so, what have houses appreciated, adjusted for inflation, and what is that average rate of appreciation going all the way back to 1890? “Using data compiled by Shiller (2005), the real rise in home values between 1890 and 2005 has been 86.3%, with roughly 75 percentage points of the increase occurring [just] since 1995. Over the 115 years, this [constitutes] an annual real appreciation rate of 0.54%, or approximately 3.25% per year nominally.” (Emphasis added.)  Freddie Mac Working Paper #05-02, ‘Reversion to the Mean…etc.’, fn. 5, Amy Crews Cutts, Frank E. Nothaft, Nov. 2005. (http://www.freddiemac.com/news/pdf/fmwp_0511_housingpricegrowth.pdf)

The S&P/Case Shiller report released yesterday, 09/28/10, has confirmed home prices have only appreciated 3.18% over the past year. (http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/quote?ticker=SPCS20Y%25:IND)

© 2010   Riordan J. Zavala, Esq.  All rights reserved.

Posted in Avoid Foreclosure, Efficient Breach, State of the Housing Market, Strategic Default | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment