Posted On: September 29, 2007

Subprime Lending Woes: A Needed Correction in Real Estate Lending Practices?


The recent media attention to the problems in the subprime mortgage market, both in Texas and nationally, may hide the fact that subprime mortgage loans serve a valuable purpose: they are loans to low-credit households that could not previously afford to own a home.

First, it is important to put this situation in perspective. Subprimes make up 13% of all Texas residential mortgages, and only 4.3% of those mortgages were in default by the end of 2006. Nationally, subprime loans make up only 14% of all mortgages, and the national foreclosure rate on subprime mortgages at the end of 2006 was approximately 14.3%. (Statistics courtesy of Texas A&M Real Estate Center). Market Pulse reports in its June 2007 issue that nationally the subprime foreclosure rate as of June 2007 is 10.11%.

Despite the issues with subprimes, real estate markets are generally healthy throughout the country. For example, U.S. office vacancy rates are declining and commercial real estate investment reached record levels in 2006, according to the National Association of Realtors. Commercial rents nationally for the first half of 2007 recorded their largest increase in six years, according to a recent report by CNNMoney.com. Delinquencies among commercial borrowers continue to fall, according to Fitch Ratings U.S. CMBS loan delinquency index. According to Housing Intelligence, new home sales remain healthy, even though they may be down from the feverish pace of 2002 to 2006. Finally, the Mortgage Bankers Association reports that, while residential foreclosures are up, national residential delinquency and foreclosure rates are being driven by what is happening in four states: California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona. If the rates in these states were not considered, national residential delinquencies and foreclosures would be down.

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The issues in the subprime mortgage market are serious, of course. The National Real Estate Investor estimates that hedge fund investors could lose up to $125 million, that there could be almost 12,000 layoffs due to bankruptcies of subprime lenders, and indicates that by August, 2007, there was a backlog of $35.2 billion in unsold commercial mortgage-backed securities. These statistics, however, should not cause us to lose sight of the importance of subprime mortgage lending.

Dr. James Gaines, a research economist with the Texas A&M Real Estate Center, tackles this issue head-on in a recent issue of Tierra Grande. He notes that "(t)here is no reason to overreact and kill something that has served, and could continue to serve, a useful purpose". Dr. Gaines goes on to say that "(t)he private sector found a way to make loans to low credit, previously unfinanceable, households so that they could own homes. While this effort was spurred by profit, not altruism, the effect on home ownership throughout the country was nevertheless profound".

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Posted On: September 20, 2007

Real Estate in Central Texas Gets a "Mammoth" Boost?


Congress may soon get a chance to approve the creation of a new national park in the Waco, Texas, area. This development may prove a real boon to the local real estate market. A new park will generate the need for tourist related facilities, such as gas stations, motels and restaurants. Expect an increase in land prices in the area surrounding the proposed five acre national park. Local attorneys who practice real estate and construction law may find themselves in the midst of some interesting negotiations between the big city gas station and motel franchisors and the local landowners.

The possible new park centers on the discovery and excavation of the bones of 25 Columbian mammoths. The Columbian mammoth is a warm weather cousin to the woolly mammoth, with which some of us are more familiar.

Baylor University
and the City of Waco are preparing to allow the public to have their first look at the "Waco Mammoth Site", after several decades of clandestine work uncovering the remains. The National Park Service has indicated that the site meets its criteria for a national park, although the final decision will be made by Congress, and funding for a park may be hard to find.

Mammoth%20Site%2017_JPG.jpg It is hard to overestimate the significance of this site. The Waco Mammoth Site, along the Bosque River, was first discovered in 1978, but has been kept quiet until now due to fears of theft or vandalism. The site is believed to be the largest known concentration of prehistoric mammoths perishing from a single event. It appears that the animals may have been caught in a flash flood and then a mudslide that killed them all at one time. The first fifteen mammoths uncovered were grouped in a circle, facing outward, protecting young mammoths in the center. Two adults were found with juvenile mammoths in their tusks, as if they were trying to raise the youngsters above the mud.

Baylor University, the City of Waco and the Waco Mammoth Site Foundation are working hard to raise the funds to build a visitor's center, roads, and a climate-controlled pavilion for display of the bones. As Jim Vaughn, the president of the Greater Waco Chamber of Commerce has pointed out, this will be a unique draw for the Waco area, and is likely to attract many visitors because it is so accessible. Ellie Caston, director of the Mayborn Museum in Waco, estimates that tourists to the site could number between 50,000 to 300,000 a year.

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