California Mortgage Applicants: Don’t Give Up On San Diego County
That’s what the North County Times urges.
When the San Diego housing market was hot, there was hyperventilation that blew up the bubble. When it started deflating, people despaired. As of right now, things aren’t as good as they once were, but at the same time, they’re not half bad.
FORECLOSURE
Perhaps no word unnerves middle-class Americans more than “foreclosure.” The loss of a home is a financial and personal tragedy for the owner.
We’ve heard much in recent months about the record number of foreclosures in the county. But put those numbers in perspective.
Earlier this month, foreclosure filings on properties in San Diego County climbed by 49 percent from February to March to 2,551.
That figure represents one in every 408 households.
Scary as they seem at first glance, those California mortgage loan numbers don’t look so bad upon closer inspection. Of those 2,551 filings, 1,998 were in default and 415 had been notified that the property would be sold for repayment.
That leaves only 138 properties that were actually foreclosed on that month - or a little less than 0.025 percent of San Diego County’s 600,000 single-family homes, condos and duplexes.
BAD CREDIT HOME LOANS
Some analysts have also speculated that the collapse of the subprime (bad credit mortgage) lending market threatens the overall health of the real estate market.
While there are many people nationwide who are suffering now for taking out those California home loan products, the subprime market itself has contracted dramatically - and that’s a good thing.
Homeowners began turning to subprime loans in earnest in 2005. Nearly 75 percent of all San Diego mortgage loans that year were of the adjustable-rate mortgage variety, which are often associated with the subprime lending market.
By December of that year, however, the Federal Reserve Board and other financial gatekeepers were warning lenders about questionable lending practices. At about the same time, news reports began to surface about mortgage defaults.
Since that 2005 watershed, at least 25 subprime home loan lenders have gone belly up, put out a for sale sign or posted significant losses.
That may shrink the pool of potential buyers in the short term, but it seems to be a much-needed correction that will lead to long-term stability.
HOME PRICES
Of course, for most homeowners, the only figure that counts is the resale price of their home. In North County, at least, there’s good news as well.
At $640,000, the median price of a single-family home in North County is up 2.4 percent from March 2006. That’s only $10,000 off the all-time high set in June 2006.
Coastal communities are doing particularly well.
Two standouts are Carlsbad, with year over year median price increases of 13 percent, and Encinitas, with increases of 34 percent in the same period.
High-end home prices, usually a benchmark of market health, are climbing in places like Rancho Santa Fe, where the median price for a home rose 12.5 percent.
So the housing market seems to be doing better. Interest rates remain low. As a result, at-risk homeowners won’t have to worry as much when their adjustable-rate mortgages go up.
The fact that their houses are likely increasing in value will probably allow them to receive mortgage refinancing their loans, giving them a little breathing room.
Despite the tightening of credit caused by the subprime collapse, housing prices in North County are holding up. That suggests that demand here remains relatively strong.
No one has a crystal ball, but the signs are clear. North County’s housing market may not be as strong as it was, but it appears to be on the rebound.
SOURCE: North County Times

