Archive for the ‘FHA’ Category

Great bargains in local foreclosures, if you can find them

Thursday, March 1st, 2012
Foreclosure

Philadelphia real estate bargain hunters, rejoice: you can save a bundle if you buy a bank-owned property in this region. Assuming you find one you like, that is.

According to the foreclosure site RealtyTrac, bank owned homes in the Philadelphia-Wilmington-Camden real estate market sell at an average of 52.5 percent below current market values as of the fourth quarter of 2011. That’s good enough to rank Philly second among all U.S. metros in the size of the discount a foreclosure buyer can expect. Only Milwaukee-Waukesha-West Allis, Wis., where foreclosures sold at an average 57.9% discount, offered bigger housing bargains.

Those bargains, however, will be a little harder to find than in real estate foreclosure hot spots like California, Nevada and Florida. In the last quarter of 2011, foreclosed properties accounted for 7 percent of all real estate sales in the Philadelphia metropolitan region, according to RealtyTrac. That share of the Philadelphia real estate market is up about 8 percent from the preceding quarter, but it’s also half as large as foreclosures’ share of all sales nationwide.

For the year as a whole, sales of foreclosed properties accounted for just over 6 percent of all greater Philadelphia real estate sales transactions, a drop in market share of 10 percent from the previous year. Nationwide, foreclosures accounted for about one in every four home sales in 2011, RealtyTrac CEO Brandon Moore told The Philadelphia Inquirer.

According to the Inquirer, changes in bank policies designed to get foreclosed homes into the hands of buyers faster explain most of the rise in sales activity in the last quarter.

But even though the foreclosure bargains are quite good indeed, the fact that there are so few of them relative to the market as a whole indicates that the greater Philadelphia real estate market remains in better shape than most across the country.

–By Sandy Smith

Philadelphia real estate market: First quarter trends

Thursday, February 16th, 2012

Philadelphia Real EstateEven though the real estate market has been tumultuous for many recently, Philadelphia somehow seems to be doing much better compared to most other parts of the country. The local market has some activity, as in housing is being purchased and seeing increases. Additionally, construction of new single-family homes continues to go up, especially in the suburbs.

One point of prosperity in the Philly real estate market lies in the increase in existing home sales into December. December 2011 took in about five more percent of existing sales than December 2010 did. Sales from the end of last year thus far have been positive. This is something the housing market needs momentously. Thus far in 2012, there hasn’t been a significant increase in homes purchased but there is certainly a growing interest in property expected to take place. 

On the seller’s side, there is hope that rising apartment rental rates could drive some potential buyers back into the fold in 2012. The average rental rate for all Philadelphia apartments has gone up nearly eight percent in the last year alone. This equals an increase of nearly $80 in the past year alone. The thought is that those individuals or couples on the fence about renting and buying could take a more serious look at buying, especially with today’s mortgage rates.

Reports have shown that mortgage rates have been hitting record lows throughout the country, as well as here in Philadelphia, which is certainly inviting for potential buyers. Right now, a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage is coming with 4.007 APR. With mortgage rates being this low and rentals continuing to increase in price, there is hope that some buyers will begin to see the benefits of buying in early 2012.

Right now, Philadelphia’s top selling areas have remained the northwestern and western areas of Center City. However, other parts of Philadelphia have retained their value attracting buyers and keeping the market going.

Right now, the big issue the city faces is sale prices, specifically for sellers. It is important to note that even though sales prices have dropped in this area, they have not plummeted as much as other cities across the country.

 

Rittenhouse Square

Rittenhouse Square, in western Center City, continues to show strength

In the coming months, there is reason to be optimistic that these prices can get a small pickup. Median prices were down about six percent in December from the previous year, but this could have been expected. The months of November and December are generally regarded as slow months for real estate anyway, but the numbers shouldn’t have too heavy an impact on the rest of the first quarter of 2012.

A glance at the early trends in 2012 Philadelphia real estate is truly a mixed bag right now. Coming off the month of December is usually not pretty for any market; however, the Philly market has looked rather stable in the early part of the year. Regardless, it should remain to be seen if factors such as mortgage rates, rising rental rates and an increase in existing home sales can positively influence the market for both buyers and sellers throughout the first half of 2012. 

–By Emma Crawford, special to PhillyLiving.com

Mortgage Market News Roundup, Week of Nov. 4

Friday, November 4th, 2011

Home loansThe saga of the euro zone bailout resembled an old “Perils of Pauline” movie this week as fear and relief traded places regularly. First, investors worried that the euro zone member nations would be unable to reach a deal to avert a Greek default and stabilize the euro. Then, after a deal was announced to general relief, Greece’s prime minister announnced he would put the matter up to a popular vote, sending the markets back into a tizzy. Now, the referendum has been called off and markets are breathing another sigh of relief. The net result, however, was good news for those in the market for real estate in Philadelphia and elsewhere.

That’s because the turmoil caused investors to pour money into U.S. debt securities, causing mortgage interest rates to plummet, except on the Mortgage Bankers Association’s Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey, which is a trailing survey that measures activity in the calendar week preceding its release. On the two current-week surveys, the drop was pronounced.

Here are the national average mortgage rates on this week’s weekly surveys. Unless otherwise noted, rates are for 80% loan-to-value ratio mortgages and assume good credit.

Mortgage Bankers Association – Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey, week ending Oct. 28

30-year fixed-rate conforming loan: 4.31%, -2 points, with 0.49 points, +0.02 point

30-year fixed-rate jumbo loan: 4.69%, +1 point, with 0.45 points, +0.03 point

30-year fixed-rate FHA-guaranteed loan: 4.09%, -2 points, with 0.51 points, -0.1 point

15-year fixed-rate loan: 3.63%, +1 point, with 0.45 points, unchanged

5/1 adjustable-rate loan: 3.09%, -2 points, with 0.5 points, unchanged

Bankrate.com: Week ending Nov. 2

30-year fixed-rate loan: 4.23%, -10 points

15-year fixed-rate loan: 3.48%, -9 points

5-year ARM: 3.18%, -4 points

Loans this week averaged 0.38 points.

Freddie Mac: Primary Mortgage Market Survey®, week ending Nov. 3

30-year fixed-rate loan: 4%, -10 points, with 0.7 points

15-year fixed-rate loan: 3.31%, -7 points, with 0.7 points

5-year ARM: 2.96%, -12 points, with 0.6 points

1-year ARM: 2.88%, -2 points, with 0.6 points

One basis point equals one hundredth of one percent. One discount point represents one percent of the total value of the mortgage, paid as interest up front.

Mortgage applications rose slightly in the previous week, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association survey, with new purchase loan applications accounting for all of the total rise. Refinance applications fell, losing overall market share for the fourth week in a row. With rates headed back down, this trend could reverse in next week’s report, but at present, it indicates that buyers who can qualify for loans remain interested in homes on the market and are ready to take advantage of very attractive interest rates.

 

Mortgage Market News Roundup, Week of Oct. 28

Friday, October 28th, 2011

Mortgage ratesAs mortgage rates remained becalmed this week, both families seeking to purchase new homes in Philadelphia and elsewhere and home owners moved to take advantage of steady low rates. Both new purchase loan applications and refinancings rose in the week ended Oct. 21, according to this week’s Weekly Mortgage Application Survey from the Mortgage Bankers Association. Total application volume rose 4.9% on a seasonally adjusted basis. New purchase loan applications climbed a seasonally adjusted 6.4%, and refinancings rose 4.4%.

While refinancings still account for the lion’s share of all mortgage applications, as they have for at least a year, they did lose a bit of market share this past week. The drop, though, was insignificant – 0.3 percentage point. Conditions remain highly favorable, however, for those in the market to buy homes, as mortgage rates remain near their all-time record lows set last month. If you are in the market for a loan, you are still likely to find attractive rates, and an experienced mortgage broker can make the application process easier.

Here are the national average mortgage rates on this week’s weekly surveys. Unless otherwise noted, rates are for 80% loan-to-value ratio mortgages and assume good credit.

Mortgage Bankers Association – Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey, week ending Oct. 21

30-year fixed-rate conforming loan: 4.33%, unchanged, with 0.47 points, -0.01 point

30-year fixed-rate jumbo loan: 4.68%, +4 points, with 0.42 points, -0.03 point

30-year fixed-rate FHA-guaranteed loan: 4.11%, -1 point, with 0.61 points, +0.08 point

15-year fixed-rate loan: 3.62%, +1 point, with 0.45 points, +0.02 point

5/1 adjustable-rate loan: 3.11%, +3 points, with 0.5 points, +0.02 point

Bankrate.com: Week ending Oct. 27

30-year fixed-rate loan: 4.33%, -5 points

15-year fixed-rate loan: 3.57%, -1 point

5-year ARM: 3.22%, -2 points

Loans this week averaged 0.42 points.

Freddie Mac: Primary Mortgage Market Survey®, week ending Oct. 20

30-year fixed-rate loan: 4.10%, -1 point, with 0.8 points

15-year fixed-rate loan: 3.38%, unchanged, with 0.7 points

5-year ARM: 3.08%, +7 points, with 0.5 points

1-year ARM: 2.9%, -4 points, with 0.6 points

One basis point equals one hundredth of one percent. One discount point represents one percent of the total value of the mortgage, paid as interest up front.

The announcement this week of a bailout plan to shore up the euro by European finance ministers may ultimately lead to a rise in mortgage rates as the removal of uncertainty sends investors back into the euro bond markets and away from U.S. government debt. Any upward pressure from Europe, however, is likely to be tempered by the Federal Reserve’s ongoing program of purchasing long-term Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities in order to drive down long-term interest rates.

Mortgage Market News Roundup, Week of Oct. 21

Friday, October 21st, 2011

For those of you interested in buying Philadelphia real estate, if you have been waiting to time the mortgage market in order to save an eighth of a percentage point on your mortgage interest, here’s a word of advice: Stop.

After a dramatic two-month fall to lows never seen in anyone’s living memory, followed by a sharp jump upward last week, mortgage rates this week halted to catch their breath. Average fixed mortgage rates on the current national weekly surveys essentially held steady, moving only one basis point either way. With much uncertainty in the air over the European debt crisis and a possible expansion of a government refinance support program, lenders and investors appear to be holding their breath and waiting for a shoe to drop somewhere.

For those interested in buying a home in Philadelphia or elsewhere, rates remain extremely affordable, and the expert consensus is that they are not likely to post either dramatic gains or more dramatic losses in the near term. Because this is the case, it is highly unlikely that borrowers will gain significant advantage by holding out for even a slight fall in rates. If you are in the market for a loan, you are likely to find attractive rates whether you use a comparison site or work directly with an experienced mortgage broker.

Here are the national average mortgage rates on this week’s weekly surveys. Unless otherwise noted, rates are for 80% loan-to-value ratio mortgages and assume good credit.

Mortgage Bankers Association – Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey, week ending Oct. 14

30-year fixed-rate conforming loan: 4.33%, +8 basis points, with 0.48 points, +0.01 point

30-year fixed-rate jumbo loan: 4.64%, +5 points, with 0.45 points, -0.04 point

30-year fixed-rate FHA-guaranteed loan: 4.12%, +6 points, with 0.53 points, -0.05 point

15-year fixed-rate loan: 3.61%, +8 points, with 0.43 points, -0.02 point

5/1 adjustable-rate loan: 3.08%, +5 points, with 0.48 points, -0.06 point

Bankrate.com: Week ending Oct. 20

30-year fixed-rate loan: 4.38%, +1 point

15-year fixed-rate loan: 3.58%, -1 point

5-year ARM: 3.24%, -2 points

Loans this week averaged 0.38 points.

Freddie Mac: Primary Mortgage Market Survey®, week ending Oct. 20

30-year fixed-rate loan: 4.11%, -1 point, with 0.8 points

15-year fixed-rate loan: 3.38%, +1 point, with 0.8 points

5-year ARM: 3.01%, -5 points, with 0.6 points

1-year ARM: 2.94%, +4 points, with 0.6 points

One basis point equals one hundredth of one percent. One discount point represents one percent of the total value of the mortgage, paid as interest up front.

In related news, the U.S. Senate yesterday voted to reinstate a higher conforming loan limit that expired at the end of September. The measure would once again allow the government to buy and insure mortgages on more expensive properties selling between $625,500 and $729,500, giving buyers of higher-end properties and homes in costlier markets the mortgage rate relief they enjoyed before the old limit expired. Senators supporting the measure voiced concern that the lower limit would stunt housing sales and further weaken the housing market. The bill reinstating the old limit will be incorporated into an overall spending bill set for consideration later this fall.

Mortgage Market News Roundup, Week of Oct. 14

Friday, October 14th, 2011

interest ratesWhat goes down must come up, eventually – it’s the way market cycles work, whether we’re talking widgets, Philadelphia real estate, or the costs of the mortgages that let folks buy homes in Philadelphia and elsewhere.

And so it was this week, when mortgage rates, which had only last week sunk to lows never before seen in anyone’s living memory, went back up.

The rise was sharp and swift, with mortgage rates on the two major national surveys that measure current-week activity climbing by 10 or more basis points. On the third survey, which is released earlier in the week and covers the previous week, rates also rose, but more modestly, giving an indication of what was to come.

Here are the national average mortgage rates on this week’s weekly surveys. New record lows are marked with an asterisk; ties are indicated with (T):

Mortgage Bankers Association – Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey, week ending Oct. 7. Rates are for 80% loan-to-value ratio mortgages.

30-year fixed-rate conforming loan: 4.25%, +7 basis points, with 0.47 points, +0.03 point

30-year fixed-rate jumbo loan: 4.59%, +10 points, with 0.49 points, +0.08 point

30-year fixed-rate FHA-guaranteed loan: 4.06%, +1 point, with 0.58 points, -0.11 point

15-year fixed-rate loan: 3.53%, +4 points, with 0.45 points, unchanged

5/1 adjustable-rate loan: 3.03%, +1 point, with 0.54 points, +0.09 point

Bankrate.com: Week ending Oct. 13

30-year fixed-rate loan: 4.37%, +16 points

15-year fixed-rate loan: 3.59%, +13 points

5-year ARM: 3.26%, +15 points

Loans this week averaged 0.4 points.

Freddie Mac: Primary Mortgage Market Survey®, week ending Oct. 13

30-year fixed-rate loan: 4.12%, +18 points, with 0.8 points

15-year fixed-rate loan: 3.37%, +11 points, with 0.8 points

5-year ARM: 3.06%, +10 points, with 0.6 points

1-year ARM: 2.90%, -5 points, with 0.6 points

Analysts and experts quoted in the weekly reports attributed the sudden rise to bursts of encouraging news on both sides of the Atlantic that sent bond prices lower, and hence yields higher. In Europe, progress is being made towards another expansion of the credit facility created to help stabilize the finances of the euro zone’s more debt-ridden members and stave off a Greek default. In the United States, the employment numbers for September were better than expected, and those for July and August were both revised upward, calming fears that the economy may be headed for another recession.

Those looking to purchase homes in Philadelphia and those looking to refinance their existing mortgages should not lose sleep over having missed out on record low interest rates, though. Most observers do not expect rates to keep rising for long – 55% of the lenders surveyed for Bankrate’s weekly Rate Trend Index, in fact, predicted they would fall again in the coming week – and while recesssion fears may have subsided, economic growth is projected to remain weak for most of the next 12 months.

Also remember that mortgage rates vary from region to region and among lenders within a region. You may be able to obtain better rates than those given here depending on your own circumstances and the lender you work with.

Mortgage Market News Roundup, Week of Oct. 7

Friday, October 7th, 2011

Mortgage ratesThe news is exceptionally good for those looking to buy a new home in Philadelphia this week. Mortgage rates, which have been riding a down escalator almost continuously since early August, have sunk to levels not seen in anyone’s living memory. For the first time since the major national surveys of mortgage rates began, the national average rate for a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage has dropped below 4%.

That milestone occurred on the Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey® for the week ending Oct. 6. The average 30-year fixed mortgage rate on that survey fell to 3.94%. The national average for a 15-year fixed-rate mortgage, increasingly popular with home owners seeking to refinance, also set a new record low. Rates for fixed-rate mortgages also set record lows on the two other major national weekly mortgage rate surveys.

Here are the national average mortgage rates on this week’s weekly surveys. New record lows are marked with an asterisk; ties are indicated with (T):

Mortgage Bankers Association – Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey, week ending Sept. 30. Rates are for 80% loan-to-value ratio mortgages.

30-year fixed-rate conforming loan: 4.18%*, -7 basis points, with 0.44 points, +0.09 point

30-year fixed-rate jumbo loan: 4.49%*, -2 points, with 0.41 points, +0.03 point

30-year fixed-rate FHA-guaranteed loan: 4.05%*, -1 point, with 0.69 points, +0.27 point

15-year fixed-rate loan: 3.49%, +3 points, with 0.45 points, -0.03 point

5/1 adjustable-rate loan: 3.02%, +7 points, with 0.45 points, -0.03 point

Bankrate.com: Week ending Oct. 6

30-year fixed-rate loan: 4.21%*, -9 points

15-year fixed-rate loan: 3.46%, -1 point

5-year ARM: 3.11%, -2 points

Loans this week averaged 0.43 points.

Freddie Mac: Primary Mortgage Market Survey, week ending Oct. 6

30-year fixed-rate loan: 3.94%*, -7 points, with 0.8 points

15-year fixed-rate loan: 3.26%*, -2 points, with 0.7 points

5-year ARM: 2.96%*, -6 points, with 0.6 points

1-year ARM: 2.95%, +12 points, with 0.5 points

Freddie Mac Vice President and Chief Economist Frank Nothaft attributed the changes to the effects of the Federal Reserve’s recently implemented shift from buying short-term Treasury notes to buying longer-term T-bills and mortgage-backed securities in an effort to boost the economy by driving down long-term interest rates.

As the theory goes, these lower rates should drive businesses to invest in adding productive capacity – and households to jump-start the housing recovery by buying new and existing homes. According to the most recent monthly data from the National Association of Realtors®, sales of both new and existing homes have softened since July but remain above their levels of one year ago.

In its weekly report, Bankrate.com noted that one possible reason buyers aren’t flocking to sign on the dotted line is because  lenders in their areas aren’t offering those super-low rates. Not only do mortgage rates vary by locality, but some lenders are holding rates higher than they would otherwise be on purpose in order to keep their staffs from drowning in a tide of applications. Many lenders laid off scores of back-office staff in the wake of the 2008 housing bust and have yet to hire many back, leaving those who remain overwhelmed by increased demand for mortgages, largely driven by refinancings.

5 Ways to Get That Down Payment on Your New Home

Thursday, October 6th, 2011

Chances are that if you are not yet a homeowner, you still haven’t given up on the American Dream. The most recent American Dream Survey, conducted by Harris Interactive for Trulia.com, shows that buying a home remains a key piece of that dream for 70% of all respondents. Even the young still embrace homeownership: 65% of 18- to 34-year-olds surveyed said that it was part of their personal American Dream.

But  younger renters wishing to purchase homes in Philadelphia and elsewhere do face some high hurdles to homeownership. According to the survey, the highest hurdle is the down payment: 51% of all renters who want to become homeowners now, and 62% of those between 18 and 34 years old, said that saving enough for a down payment was the biggest obstacle in the way of achieving their goal.

The recommended down payment of 20% towards the purchase of a new home represents a major chunk of change. Even saving up $30,000 to put down on a modest $150,000 condo or starter home can prove difficult for younger people. Here are five tips for making that task easier – or even cutting that down payment down to something more manageable.

1. Pay yourself first. This is the oldest and still the best advice for anyone wishing to save for a major goal. Figure out how much you need to save in order to have the money you want in a reasonable amount of time, then set that amount aside every time you get paid. Your bank can most likely put this process on autopilot through automatic transfers from your checking account to a savings account. If you find that figure more than you think you can afford, look at your monthly expenses – there’s likely room to trim some nonessential ones in order to save more.

2. Make your savings work harder for you. Those automatic transfers may make saving painless, but they are also likely to make it less fruitful in today’s low-interest environment. With savings and money market accounts yielding 0.5% annually on average, it may seem that shoving your money under a mattress would produce just as high a return. Still, you can shop around for banks that offer accounts that pay more. Sites like Bankrate.com make this process easier by letting you compare accounts both locally and nationally. Credit unions also tend to offer higher rates. You can compare credit unions on Bankrate.com or find one near you at iBelong.org.

3. Borrow from your future. Especially if you are younger, borrowing from your retirement savings can be a good way to get money for the down payment. Some 401(k) and 403(b) plans allow participants to borrow from their savings in order to purchase a new home, and Internal Revenue Service rules permit early distributions from IRA accounts for first-time home purchases without a tax penalty. (You will still have to pay regular income tax on the amount distributed, however.)

4. Talk to Uncle Sam – or your state government. Programs sponsored by the Federal Housing Administration and the Department of Veterans Affairs help low- to moderate-income buyers obtain guaranteed mortgages with a much lower down payment – even no money down in some cases. A number of state and local governments also run programs that help individuals and families purchase their first home.

5. Get by with a little help from family and friends. For those who can do so, turning to relatives and friends for assistance with a home purchase may prove advantageous. But be careful: entangling family ties and personal finances can produce some unintended consequences.

And even if these steps do not result in your either amassing the recommended 20% down payment for that new home in Philadelphia or reducing the amount you need to chip in, you may still qualify for a mortgage on the home of your dreams. You will just need to add the cost of private mortgage insurance into your monthly payments until you have accumulated 20% equity in your home.

Mortgage Market News Roundup, Week of Sept. 30

Monday, October 3rd, 2011

Philly LivingThere are some signs this week that mortgage rates may have reached a bottom, at least for the time being, but rates for borrowers shopping for Philadelphia real estate remain extremely affordable. While fixed-rate mortgage rates set yet another new all-time low on the Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey®, the eight-week-long slide in mortgage rates on the Bankrate.com weekly national survey of large lenders came to an end with a slight uptick in mortgage rates this past week, and on the national overnight rate surveys, both day-to-day and week-to-week changes in mortgage rates have turned almost solidly upward.

Here are this week’s nationwide average mortgage rates as reported on the surveys, with changes from the previous week New record lows are indicated with an asterisk and ties with a T:

Mortgage Bankers Association – Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey, week ending Sept. 23. Rates are for 80% loan-to-value ratio mortgages.

30-year fixed-rate conforming loan: 4.25%*, -4 basis points, with 0.35 points, -0.06 point

30-year fixed-rate jumbo loan: 4.51%,* -4 points, with 0.38 points, -0.08 point

30-year fixed-rate FHA-guaranteed loan: 4.05%,* -2 points, with 0.39 points, -0.12 point

15-year fixed-rate loan: 3.47%, +1 point, with 0.45 points, unchanged

5/1 adjustable-rate loan: 2.95%, -1 point, with 0.48 points, -0.01 point

Bankrate.com: Week ending Sept. 29

30-year fixed-rate loan: 4.3%, +1 point

15-year fixed-rate loan: 3.47%, +5 points

5-year ARM: 3.13%, +8 points

Loans this week averaged 0.37 points.

Freddie Mac: Primary Mortgage Market Survey®, week ending Sept. 29

30-year fixed-rate loan: 4.01%*, -8 points, with 0.7 points

15-year fixed-rate loan: 3.28%*, -1 point, with 0.7 points

5-year ARM: 3.02%, unchanged, with 0.6 points

1-year ARM: 2.83%, +1 point, with 0.6 points

Events in Europe may affect these trends in the week ahead. News reports this morning state that there is a possibility that Greece may not qualify for the latest installment of its bailout package because the government’s austerity measures have fallen short of agreed upon deficit reduction targets. Continued turmoil in Europe arising from this could lead to a renewed “flight to quality” U.S. Treasury buying spree, which in turn would add downward pressure on U.S. interest rates.

Sellers of homes in Philadelphia may be able to take heart in national data that show housing prices continuing to rise. Although Philadelphia is not one of the 20 cities tracked monthly by the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices, the S&P/Case-Shiller 20-city composite survey is considered a good indicator of overall home price trends across the country, and the composite index rose 0.9 in July. Data from the Federal Housing Finance Agency and CoreLogic also showed home price gains in July, continuing a trend that has lasted through the summer.

Big Money Gets Into Landlord Game

Friday, August 12th, 2011

By: Robbie Whelan

For: The Wall Street Journal

VALLEJO, Calif.—Agustin Gutierrez, a construction worker from this town in the hills northeast of San Francisco Bay, lost his job in 2009, then, 10 months later, he lost ownership of his home.

Now, the husband and father of four rents the same five-bedroom ranch from McKinley Capital Partners, an investment company that’s at the forefront of a new breed of big-money landlords.

McKinley, which has acquired more than 300 foreclosed singlefamily homes in the Bay Area over the past two years, recently teamed up with Och-Ziff Capital Management Group LLC, a New York hedge fund, with plans to buy at least 500 more foreclosed homes in the next year. Those homes, too, will be rented to people like the Gutierrez family.

Buying foreclosed homes as investment properties has long been dominated by mom-and-pop investors. But now hedge funds, private-equity firms, pension funds and university endowments are dipping into that market. The attraction is double-digit returns at a time when most bonds and other income investments yield very little.

The most popular strategy is for a big investor to team up with a local company that scouts out houses and finds the renters. The hope is to flip the homes in the future when prices recover.

“It’s kind of the Wall Street meets Main Street phenomenon,” says John Burns, an Irvine, Calif.-based real-estate consultant who has discussed investing in single-family rentals with hedge funds. “The Main Street guys need the capital, and Wall Street needs the expertise.”

At the end of May, 3.5 million loans were at least 90 days delinquent or in foreclosure, according to investment bank Barclays Capital. At the same time, the country’s home ownership rate has fallen, to 65.9% in the second quarter of 2011 from its peak of 69.2% in 2004, according to figures released by the U.S. Census Bureau last month. That drop has produced millions of new renters and helped push the vacancy rate for rental housing down by about two percentage points, to 9.2%.

“The single-family rental market is actually quite large,” said Dennis McGill, director of research at Zelman & Associates, a research firm that follows the housing market. “The average American says, ‘If I’ve got two kids and a dog, I can’t live in a one-bedroom apartment.’”

Zelman recently issued a report saying that in Arizona, Florida and Nevada, states hard-hit by the foreclosure crisis, the number of families renting a single-family home increased 48% from 2005 to 2010.

Large institutional investors could eventually help stabilize the market by soaking up the huge overhang of foreclosures, which could allow housing to begin healing. However, the number of single-family homes being bought by institutional investors is still small compared to the millions of distressed properties. The biggest players in the market are deploying hundreds of millions of dollars, not the billions necessary to make a major dent.

The federal government has a large role as well. The Obama administration is currently considering ways of selling foreclosed homes to investors who agree to rent them out. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the Federal Housing Administration own more than half of all unsold foreclosed homes.

Being a landlord can be a costly hassle for large investors. Unlike apartment complexes, which concentrate hundreds of rental units in one place, investors must buy hundreds of singlefamily houses that are miles apart, each with separate maintenance problems. Tenants can be troublesome.

“You could have a bad tenant who doesn’t want to pay their rent, or maintain the pool,” says Guy Johnson, an investor who buys foreclosed properties in Nevada, Arizona and California and rents some of them out. “A hedge fund manager doesn’t want to have to be their own plumber or electrician.”

Buying foreclosed properties isn’t easy either. Investors sometimes have to pay thousands of dollars in “cash for keys” payments to the previous homeowners in order to entice them to leave the property, and foreclosed homeowners often damage their homes before they are evicted.

Private-equity giant Carlyle Group LLC tried its luck with the singlefamily home market two years ago but abandoned the strategy late last year after concluding that the returns weren’t large enough. Carlyle’s strategy was different. The company formed partnerships with local asset managers in California that bought and flipped homes, rather than renting them.

For now, more investors are plunging into the single-family rental market. McKinley, the Oakland, Calif., company that owns Mr. Gutierrez’s house, has already begun to use Och-Ziff money to purchase houses. Its model is to buy homes at an average price of about $100,000 apiece, put between $10,000 and $25,000 in renovations into them, and set the rental rate of the house so that it produces a return of 8% to 12% annually. This often works out to a rent of roughly $1,200 per month.

McKinley and Och-Ziff could see additional returns from selling the houses at a higher price after a few years, once the market has improved. “Two years ago no one thought you could scale this business or that it could be institutionalized,” said Gregor Watson, a principal with McKinley. “Now, you can get very good yields. It’s a very good long-term strategy.” He declined to comment on the Och-Ziff investment. Och-Ziff also declined to comment.

Other large investors have formed rental-housing partnerships.

G8 Capital, a private-equity fund based in Ladera Ranch, Calif., has bought 3,000 homes across the country since 2008, mostly to flip them. It decided last year to begin pursuing a hold-and-rent strategy. It has since bought 250 foreclosed homes as rentals. Carrington Property Services LLC, a Santa Ana, Calif.-based property investment company that manages about 4,500 homes nationally, is in talks with investors to raise funds for a real-estate investment trust, to be called Residential National Trust, which would acquire foreclosed homes for rental. The company plans to buy as many as 5,000 more rental homes in markets including Chicago, Miami, Phoenix and Las Vegas.

Waypoint Real Estate Group, an Oakland, Calif.-based company, has bought 700 homes in the past two years as rental properties. Doug Brien, a former place kicker for the New York Jets who is now managing director of Waypoint, says that his company has approached pension funds, university endowments and large private investment groups about investing in his fund. In July, he says he closed on a financing deal from an Ivy League university endowment, but declined to name the university.

“At some point, there will be a shortage of housing,” Mr. Brien said. “Everyone is realizing that single-family buy-and-hold is the way to go.”

In November, hedge fund manager William Ackman’s Pershing Square Capital Management LP released a report arguing that single-family rental properties are an “under-owned asset class” that would make “an intelligent investment for institutional investors.” Pershing Square predicted that investing in single-family homes and holding them as rentals for 10 years could produce double-digit investment returns, even if U.S. home prices only improved marginally.

All the activity is fueling a renewed debate over whether investors are good or bad for the housing market. In the early days of the housing bust, some community groups discouraged banks from selling foreclosed homes to investors for fear they wouldn’t take proper care of the properties. Some communities riddled with foreclosed homes became slums.

Alan Mallach, a senior fellow with the Brookings Institution in Washington, argues that instead of running from investors, local governments should provide subsidies to investors who buy, rent out and are good landlords for foreclosed properties. “If a neighborhood has a high rate of home ownership, that’s obviously better,” he said. “But in some markets, there was so much inventory coming on the market that the sheer number of properties was destabilizing those markets.”

Mr. Gutierrez, the Vallejo construction worker, now pays $1,800 a month in rent, compared to the $2,500 per month he was paying to cover the cost of his mortgage when he owned the house. He says it bothers him that he no longer owns his home, but is happy to pay less and says his new landlords are good property managers.

He bought the house in 2003 for $340,000 using a $322,700 loan. He refinanced the home five times, driving up the total amount of debt on the house to $400,000. He lost the house to foreclosure in 2009. McKinley paid about $155,000 for the house that year.

“It’s confusing, because sometimes I think it’s my house, but I have to remind myself that it’s not,” said Mr. Gutierrez, who says he doesn’t plan to try to repurchase the house. “It’s sad, but it’s what happened to a lot of people.”

Nick Timiraos contributed to this article.

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