'Boomerang'
home buyers bounce back from foreclosure
By Jennifer Robison Las Vegas
Review-Journal San Jose Mercury News
|
LAS VEGAS -- Greg Bailey got an
amazing deal on a home in Las Vegas' Summerlin community.
Bailey, a local real estate agent,
snagged the 2,470-square-foot beauty with city views in a September short sale
for $230,000 -- less than half of its $730,000 peak value.
But this isn't your typical story
about a moneyed investor swooping in with fistfuls of cash to snatch homes from
the clutches of distressed homeowners.
You see, Bailey, too, got caught
up in the market's animal spirits, and is barely two years out of foreclosure
himself.
Bailey is at the leading edge of a
growing demographic: boomerang buyers, or locals who lost their home to
foreclosure or short sale, but are jumping back into the market just two to
three years after default.
Their numbers are small now; real
estate agents and home builders say boomerang buyers don't yet make up a big
share of their clients. There's evidence, though, that their ranks are set to
rise noticeably, and that could have implications for local home sales and
neighborhood vitality.
"It is definitely something
people in the business are talking about," Dennis Smith, president and CEO
of local analysis firm Home Builders Research, told the Las Vegas
Review-Journal (http://bit.ly/TuLE56). "It is happening. These people are coming
back, especially because it's cheaper to own than to rent in a lot of
cases."
If numbers are any indication,
they're a substantial, untapped source of prospective buyers.
The Las Vegas Valley's
homeownership rate was 64 percent in 2000, and jumped to a high of 68.8 percent
as housing boomed in 2006. By March, homeownership had slid to 48 percent.
It's tough to say how many of
those homeowners-turned-renters lost property to foreclosure or short sale, but
Brian Gordon, a principal in local research firm Applied Analysis, said
defaults were "probably a significant contributor" to the rental
surge.
About 130,000 local households
have lost a home to foreclosure or short sale in the downturn so far. And
because the city's population hasn't fallen, it's likely that many locals who
defaulted are still here.
Those former homeowners are
finding their way into offices of local mortgage companies and builders.
ANOTHER
CHANCE
Rick Piette, owner of Premier
Mortgage Lending in Las Vegas, said his company has funded nearly 200 loans in
the last year through its Another Chance program for recently foreclosed
buyers. That's up from 10 or 12 Another Chance loans in the prior 12 months.
But wait a minute -- don't major
financial crises stay on your credit report for up to 10 years? Well, yes. If
you're willing and able to pay a price, though, and you have few other risk factors
in your borrowing history, you can get back into the market relatively quickly.
Typically, if you're buying within
two years of foreclosure or short sale, you'll need 20 percent down, and you
may be looking at a mortgage interest rate of 6.99 percent, about double
today's going rate of 3.5 percent. And forget about the loose paperwork
standards of the boom. Lenders want full documentation, with verified income
statements.
It also helps if foreclosed buyers
were employed through the recession, Piette said. If borrowers have good
payment histories outside of foreclosure, that's in their favor, as well.
"If they were poor payers
before (default), then they don't fit our programs," he said.
Bailey, who didn't borrow through
Premier Mortgage, said he was surprised when he realized he could buy again
just 24 months after he lost his home.
"I really thought that my
life was over financially," he said.
CAUGHT
OFF GUARD
Bailey's problems began soon after
he bought his home.
Bailey said he knew the market
couldn't keep appreciating at its breakneck, boom-era speed, but he -- like
many others -- didn't see housing's cliff-dive coming. For Bailey, the market's
free fall was a "double whammy." Not only did he buy a home at the
peak, but his and his family's income came from housing. Revenue from the
family's real estate brokerage plummeted to "absolute zero," and the
company burned through $200,000 in reserves. Bailey ran up credit card debt
trying to pay expenses and keep the business open.
At home, things were just as
tough. The 1,200-square-foot Summerlin house Bailey had purchased for $260,000
in 2006 was worth $115,000 by 2009. With no income and burgeoning credit card
bills, he had no way to make payments.
"But it was at the beginning
(of the crash), and getting the bank to talk was impossible," he said.
"I couldn't talk to anybody who had any kind of answer, so I ended up
asking them to take back the property."
Bailey's home was formally
foreclosed on in July 2010. He became a renter, and stayed one until September,
when he closed on his new home.
To make the deal happen, Bailey
put down 20 percent and is paying a little more than 6 percent interest. He
also had to pay 3 percent of his mortgage's value in loan-origination fees,
compared with 1 percent to 2 percent for the average buyer.
The cost was worth it for him.
"I just wanted to be a
homeowner again," he says. "I wanted to do my own flooring and
landscaping and have that pride of ownership. I wanted to have an asset."
Observers say more and more locals
want the same thing.
WHY
GAMBLE AGAIN?
Locals who have lived here five
years or more have heard that refrain before: We'd better jump in now before
we're priced out! That panic drove people into a frothy market and set up the
epic collapse.
Is it a good idea to follow that
logic again, especially with potential buyers who have such a big, recent black
mark on their record?
It is for two reasons, experts
say.
First, today's lending climate is
so strict that truly risky borrowers still can't get a break.
Second, getting the market close
to where it was before boom and bust depends on giving lower-risk buyers a
second chance, said Bailey, who folded his family's brokerage into Coldwell
Banker Premier Realty, where he now works.
"Anything that normalizes the
market is good," he said. "You should have a certain percentage of
owner-occupiers, and a certain percentage of investors and tenants. Once that
becomes normal, the whole system will work."
How normal the system might be,
and how well it might work, are questions still up for debate.
Increasing numbers of local buyers
who went through default won't necessarily help solve one of the market's big
problems: vast tracts of abandoned homes. More than 85,000 of the Las Vegas
Valley's 771,000 houses, condos and apartments were empty in the second
quarter, for a vacancy rate of 11.1 percent, according to the Center for
Business and Economic Research at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
Empty housing stock won't fall if
more locals buy, because those buyers are simply vacating a rental to move into
their new place.
What would help is if boomerang
buyers from California and other states begin moving here in larger numbers to
buy and live in a home, Gordon said.
Even if boomerang buyers don't
dent the housing inventory, they could have an effect on communities across the
valley.
"There are positives when you
think about pride of ownership, which can positively impact
neighborhoods," Gordon said. "As the dynamic shifts, we may see
increased investments in landscaping and other improvements that will have
properties holding their value better or gaining ground."
It's also important to have local
buyers in place when investors stop buying more than half of the city's
listings, the way they are today, Piette said.
"People ask me if I think I'm
making things worse" with second-chance loans, he said. "My response
is, 'I don't think things can be any worse.' We have to stop looking backward
and start looking forward, and part of that is getting Nevadans back into
houses."
Greg Bailey said getting back into
a house was an end to a trial-by-fire that eventually made it possible for him
to begin a new life.
"Now, I sit on my porch and
look at my view of the city, and I feel like it just had to be," Bailey
said. "There was a light at the end of the tunnel."
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