L.A. Land

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Category: L.A. Times

Brokers critique mortgage mini-boom story

September 28, 2009 |  2:42 pm
Reader reaction was generally favorable to a front-page Times story Friday on home loan applications increasing as average interest rates for 30-year mortgages fell below 5%. But a couple of brokers complained that the article omitted some crucial points.

The story quoted a Mortgage Bankers Assn. report that the national average for a 30-year fixed-rate home loan had dropped to 4.97% for the week that ended Sept. 18. Loan applications had jumped 13% from the previous week and were up 50% from late June, the trade group said.

Mike Gianelli, a  veteran mortgage broker in Torrance, said such broad averages are meaningless without additional details, especially how many "points" borrowers paid to get the loans. (Points are upfront fees charged by lenders, with each representing 1% of the loan value. By paying more points, borrowers can "buy down" the rate on a loan.)

"If you really want to get some buzz with your next column, why don't you write that rates dip below 4%?" Gianelli  wrote. "That's available too -- if you pay a ton of points, put 20% down, accept an impound account and have FICO [credit] scores above 780."

Fair enough. So here, for the record, are more details on the average loan the mortgage bankers' group was describing: The borrowers put 20% down and typically paid 1.12 points, including the origination fee.

Laguna Niguel loan broker Jeff Lazerson said his company had been doing sub-5% mortgages for months -- for the fortunate few who can even get a loan these days. He said it was a "gaping hole" for the story not to have mentioned the fact that the mortgage system "is still completely dysfunctional."

"If you have fair or poor credit, there is nothing for you, regardless of income and asset qualifying," Lazerson said.

"Perhaps 30% of homes are upside down. Unemployment is, what, 12% in California? Applications may be up, but the lenders are still minimalist when it comes to loan fundings. Their thinking is, today's fundings are tomorrow's foreclosures."

So much for trying to detect rays of hope on the mortgage front, eh?

-- E. Scott Reckard

Southern California Home Buyer's Fair this weekend

April 17, 2009 | 11:58 am

Need help figuring out how to buy a home? The Southern California Home Buyer's Fair -- sponsored by the real estate industry and the L.A. Times -- might offer some tips.

Realtors, economists and other professionals will be on hand to break down the process of home buying, finding and buying foreclosures, monitoring and fixing credit, finding and qualifying for home loans and other topics in more than 50 how-to seminars and 75 exhibit booths.

Admission is free; the first 200 people who show up each day get free movie tickets. 

The second annual conference is sponsored by the California Assn. of Realtors and the Los Angeles Times and will be held at the Los Angeles Convention Center on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Representatives from the Realtors association will also be on hand to discuss their Mortgage Protection Program, which offers qualifying first-time home buyers who are laid off as much as $1,500 a month to help make their mortgage payments.

For more information on the fair, check out http://www.homebuyersfair.com/.

-- Nathan Olivarez-Giles


New York brokers get nod to market L.A. Times building

July 29, 2008 |  3:35 pm

Tribune Co. has picked two New York commercial real estate brokerages to market the Los Angeles Tms_3Times building downtown and Tribune Tower in Chicago to investors, the company said today.

Cushman & Wakefield will look for buyers for The Times' historic headquarters at 1st and Spring streets in Los Angeles, and Eastdil Secured will attempt to sell the landmark Tribune building overlooking the Chicago River, said Stephanie Pater, director of real estate for Tribune.

Prices for the properties have not been set, Pater said, but The Times' headquarters was valued at about $150 million, and Tribune Tower might garner around $230 Trib_3million, according to industry trade publication Real Estate Alert.

Tribune announced in June it would sell the buildings to help pay down debt.

-- Roger Vincent

Photos: Getty Images

Questions? Comments? E-mail roger.vincent@latimes.com.


'A Good Steady Market'

July 27, 2008 |  6:07 am

LaurenIn case you missed the announcement today in Real Estate, because of reductions in staff and space, the Sunday Real Estate section has printed its final edition.

Real estate coverage will continue to appear online throughout the week. Hot Property, Neighborly Advice and the occasional Pardon Our Dust remodeling tale will appear in print as part of the new Saturday Home section. Home of the Week, Southland home-price charts and other features will appear in Sunday Business. Real estate articles will appear in both sections.

There's a journalism term for finishing an edition's work: You put the section to bed. When I started as a part-timer in this department 28 1/2 years ago under then-editor Dick Turpin, I never dreamed that one day I'd be putting the section to bed for good.

It has been an honor and a joy to serve readers for the last eight years as editor of a section that started in 1901, according to The Times official chronology. Under the headline, "A Good Steady Market," the tone then was optimistic:

"While there is nothing that could even by courtesy be called a boom in real estate just now, yet 10 years ago we should certainly have characterized the present condition of the market by that name."

Ah, for a good, steady market.

If you'd like to share your views, contact readers.rep@latimes.com; call (877) 554-4000 or fax (213) 237-3535.

-- Lauren Beale, Real Estate editor

Photo: Real Estate editor Dick Turpin oversees fledgling reporter Lauren Beale, the current Times Real Estate editor, in 1982. At right, the late Lou Desser, news and makeup editor.



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