Getting Graphic is a semi-sort-of-irregular collection of our favorite BIG real estate-related chart(s).

Here’s a smorgasborg of mortgage related charts:

Investors are betting that the Fed will cut rates in September which likely won’t influence mortgage rates to fall, but could help stabilize the mortgage markets, eventually tempering non-conforming rate increases…

Source: Cleveland Fed

As credit tightens…

Source: PIMCO

And debt grows…

Source: Federal Reserve Board

And ARMs reset…

Source: Credit Suisse

Next March is going to get interesting…
update: (Chart shows dollar value, in billions, of the adjustable mortgage resets)

Source: Seeking Alpha

(This chart is all over the Internet but I was unable to find the source or credit)

9 Comments

  1. Anonymous August 21, 2007 at 12:20 pm

    sorry…. i could use a header on that last chart. what does it mean?

  2. WT Economist August 21, 2007 at 12:28 pm

    Interesting indeed.

    It seems that note holders have been buying back houses for the mortgage amount at foreclosure auctions to keep from having to write down the loans. But at some point they will have to dump them before taxes, deterioration and other costs eliminate whatever value is there. They certainly don’t want to dump them in the current mortgage environment.

    Perhaps in the spring, they’ll see prices aren’t rising and dump them for what they could get. With an FHA type program for insured low downpayments, there could be lots of “affordable housing” out there for responsible bona fide homeowners.

  3. Jonathan J. Miller August 21, 2007 at 12:28 pm

    just added – sorry about that!

  4. Mortgage Discussion Blog » Late breaking news August 22, 2007 at 4:14 am

    […] [Getting Graphic] Resetting Perspective On <b>Mortgages</b> […]

  5. donkeyman August 22, 2007 at 4:40 pm

    what it means, is that if you think things are bad now, wait til march. if interest rates are increasing, and loans that are subprime/alta mortgages are adjusting, people that bought homes with lower mortgage rates will either NOT be able to get a new mortgage, or the adjusted rate they pay on their home will be so high they will not be able to afford it.

    here’s some quick math. take a home for $230k which wouldn’t buy you a condo in NYC but is the average home price. if the borrower had a 5 year arm at 5.25% they would be paying $1,270. if the loan adjusts to libor plus margin (2.75 lets say their margin and libor is 5.25) that’s 8%. that makes their monthly payment $1,7875 ~ 500 bucks more. the people that are buying a home for 230k CANNOT afford 500 more bucks a month….

  6. L'Emmerdeur August 23, 2007 at 3:46 pm

    I’m a bit confused. Isn’t the bar chart (“Exhibit 42”) a graphic representation of the table of from Seeking Alpha? how could those numbers be so different?

    According to the bar chart, March08 (counting about 15 months from January 2007, as per the chart’s legend) shows a value of about $35-40 billion.

  7. Logan Barker August 23, 2007 at 4:33 pm

    Interesting,

    I’d just like to know what will happen to interest rates when there are all the adjustments. How much will they really reset and go up? Or will the difference be only minimal? Are most of these pay option arm loans with minimim payment and reverse amoritization, or just simple 3-year, 5 year fully amortized arms?

  8. Logan Barker August 23, 2007 at 4:35 pm

    Does anybody know what the average increased monthly payment will be on these resetting arms? Is it really crisis figures, or just a few hundred dollars per person?

  9. Mr Logan Utah September 12, 2007 at 9:42 pm

    Where can I find information on the percentage of home owners with ARMS in a given area?

Comments are closed.