NBN Online for the week of March 20, 2006

(Plain Text Version) for full graphical version, click here.

In This Issue:

Front Page
Green Building Barrels Into the Mainstream Market
NAHB Resources Available After Disasters in West, Midwest
Employees Wanted: NAHB Launches Online Career Center
Reader Survey: Tell Us What's Important to You
Coast to Coast
Real Estate Rates Could Hit 7% by Summer
Politics & Government
NAHB Pushes in Senate for Association Health Plans
NAHB Fights for Property Owners in Flood Insurance Bill
NAHB Members to Carry Concerns to Lawmakers on May 10
Economics & Finance
Housing Production Cools in February
Builder Confidence in Market Inches Down in March
2005 Permits Look Good in Atlanta, Phoenix and Houston
NAFTA Panel Finds No Grounds for Lumber Tariffs
Tips
Builder's Tip: A Jig for Router-Made Moldings
Business Management
Production Builders: NAHB Has a Web Resource Page for You
Marketing Automation — Selling More Without Spending More
50Plus Housing
Baby Boomers Ready to Rejuvenate 50+ Housing Market
Learn How to Market and Sell to the 50+ Home Buyer
Multifamily
Attend Upcoming Multifamily Conference in Scottsdale, Ariz.
Remodelers
Directories Provide Remodeler Listings for Consumers
Design
Enter the Best in American Living Awards Competition
Education
Designations Should Be the 'Norm' for Our Industry
Education Calendar
Green Building
Twelve NAHB Green Building Award Winners Announced
Environment
Roadside Ditch Regulation Sparks Builder Lawsuit
Katrina Recovery
Large Numbers in Gulf Coast Not Paying Mortgages
Codes and Standards
Builders Invited to Accessibility Workshops
Deadline Nears for Code Change Proposals
Workforce housing
Development in Irvine a Neighborhood With ‘HEART’
Labor
Florida Job Corps Students Earning College Credit
Building Products
Insulation Protects Unvented Attics From Hurricane Rains
Builder's Engineer
This Column Is in the Toilet
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on HGTV & DIY This Week
Endowment
KB Home Spreads TLC Throughout San Antonio
Endowment to Fund ‘State of the Nation’s Housing’ Report
Association News
NAHB Spring Board Meeting May 9-13
Florida Middle Schoolers Building Homes of Their Own
Spokesperson Training Still Available for 2006 Spring Board
Associate Member BUILD-PAC Drive Launched
GM $500 Exclusive Offer for NAHB Members
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

Large Numbers in Gulf Coast Not Paying Mortgages

Significant numbers of home owners in areas of the Gulf Coast devastated by Hurricane Katrina last year have yet to be able to resume making their regular mortgage payments, according to the latest National Delinquency Survey released last Thursday by the Mortgage Bankers Association.

Almost 76,000 home owners in Louisiana and Mississippi were seriously delinquent on their mortgages at the end of December, the survey found. These are loans that are 90 days or more past due or in the process of foreclosure, and they normally would be considered to be in default at this stage, but many borrowers have been taking advantage of forbearance programs offered by their lenders.

In the immediate aftermath of Katrina at the end of last September, 24.6% of all mortgages in Louisiana and 17.4% in Mississippi were delinquent, or 30 days past due. By the end of 2005, those percentages had declined to 20.8% and 16.9%, respectively. As expected, a majority of the loans that were only 30 days delinquent in September have now fallen into the 90 days or more seriously delinquent category.

As a result of the mortgage industry’s forbearance programs, the mortgage bankers reported, new foreclosures have actually dropped, to only 0.16% in Louisiana and 0.26% in Mississippi at the end of December, compared to 0.67% and 0.78% respectively during the same period a year earlier.

The national average for foreclosures started stands at 0.42%.

“The fact that we have almost 76,000 people who have not been able to resume making their mortgage payments, most as a direct result of Hurricane Katrina, points to the need to get a housing and economic development program funded and under way in Louisiana, and build support for the initiatives already undertaken in Mississippi,” said Jay Brinkmann, vice president of research and economics at MBA.

“It is also important to realize that a number of home owners continue to meet their financial obligations despite not being able to occupy their homes or being temporarily relocated for other reasons,” he said. “These people are putting their faith and money into their expectations of a recovery along the Gulf Coast and those expectations must be met.”

In Louisiana, 16.1% of prime loans were delinquent, 33.9% of subprime loans and 31.8% of FHA loans. In Mississippi, 11.8% of prime loans were delinquent, 31.1% of subprime loans and 24.9% of FHA loans.

For seriously delinquent loans past due for 90 days or more or in foreclosure, in Mississippi the percentage of prime loans was 9.7%, 24.3% for subprime and 21.1% for FHA. In Mississippi, the percentages were 6.3%, 19.8% and 13.5%, respectively.


 

Sponsored by
Freddie Mac

 
 
> Montana State Representative Bob Lake Cautions Against Extensive GSE Reform
> Freddie Mac CEO Syron Dissects GSE and Tax Reform Proposals in Speech to Home Builders
 
 

Sponsored by
McGraw Hill
Construction

 
 
> Visit the all new McGraw-Hill Construction Network for Products...
 
 

Sponsored by
NAHB

 
 
> Building for Boomers & Beyond: 50+ Housing Symposium 2006
> NAHB Multifamily Pillars of the Industry Conference and Gala
> Construction Forecast Conference - Spring 2006