February 4, 2010 6:02 PM

Housing Crisis Getting Uglier in 2010

By
Ben Tracy
(CBS)  In its "Where America Stands" series, CBS News is looking at a broad spectrum of issues facing this country in the new decade.

CBS News correspondent Ben Tracy report the American Dream is now a nightmare for many of the 75 million Americans who own a home.

The housing report card is ugly. In the past two years, the housing market has lost an estimated $4.9 trillion dollars, as 59 million homes have declined in value.

Nearly 1 in 4 homeowners -- 10.7 million households nationwide -- are underwater on their mortgages. They owe more than their home is now worth.

Tell Us What You Think Send us an e-mail.

The housing market is so bad in California, that a bank demolished 16 nearly completed homes - because it was cheaper to knock them down, than to finish them.

Home building across the country is almost non-existent. In 2005, 2 million housing units were built in this country. Last year, that number dropped to nearly a quarter of that.

That's left former boom towns like Las Vegas with a lot of roads to nowhere, as builders ran out of money and buyers for the homes they once planned to build here.

Then, there's foreclosure. Nationwide, nearly 6 million households have been taken back by the bank in just the past three years - pushing down home values, and leaving some neighborhoods looking like warzones.

CBS Reports: Where America Stands

The Problem

People are still losing their homes, preventing a housing market recovery.

"Disaster is not too strong a word and crisis is not too strong a word," said Michelle Johnson of Consumer Credit Counseling Services.

All of those risky loans that banks gave to homeowners are still wreaking havoc.

More Housing Links
Home Affordable Modification Program
Green Street Development
Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America
RealtyTrac
Trulia: Real Estate Search

Jessica and Aaron Jenkins got in way over their heads when they bought their 5-bedroom dream home in Corona, California for over $700,000. They paid $2,800 dollars a month on their interest-only loan -- never touching the principal.

"It's cheaper than a 30-year fixed," Aaron said. "We can afford it so that's why we did it."

But this year, their loan would reset, adding $1,100 dollars to their monthly payment. In the next two years, nearly 361,000 loans will reset nationwide - increasing mortgage payments by an average of $1,000 per month.

That's why a record 3 million more foreclosures are expected in 2010.

Where America Stands Links
Mapping Cancer Genes to Find a Cure
Where America Stands: Terrorism
Alzheimer's Disease, Where America Stands
America's Dwindling Water Supply
Battling Obesity in America

"Today, the number one cause of foreclosure is unemployment," said Pete Flint of Trulia.com.

Fifteen million Americans are now out of work.

Poll: Most Say Worst Over for Housing Market

Twenty-seven-year old C.J. Mueller bought a house in Phoenix for $210,000. But then he lost his job. He tried to get his bank to modify his loan. Instead, he just got his foreclosure notice.

"It came to a point where I didn't really care," he said.

President Obama's mortgage modification program is supposed to permanently modify 3-4 million loans by 2012. So far, they've fixed 66,000. They want banks to speed up the process.

"Unfortunately it's been lip service and little action," Flint said. "Until the administration gets tough on lenders, we're still going to see huge amounts of foreclosures."

Banks say they are simply overwhelmed and some people are beyond help.

"I gave up. I don't care anymore," Mueller said. "Take the house."

The Solution

The solution for many is to just walk away. Some experts say it may be better to cut your losses and ruin your credit in the short term, than to pour more money back into a bad investment.

"I paid $210,000 for the house. The house is worth $90,000," Mueller said. "Would you keep the house?"

To keep homeowners from walking away, credit counselor Michelle Johnson said banks should permanently convert all those risky loans into 30-year fixed mortgages for anyone who can afford the payments. "It needs to be a long-term fix. It can't be a band aid which is what many of these modification programs seem to be."

Some mortgage firms and a few banks are going further -- actually reducing the principle on loans.

"To date, it's allowed us to save about 15 percent more homes than if we had not used it," said William Erbey, CEO of Ocwen Financial Corporation.

Fixing Sub-Prime Mortgages

However, the housing market also needs buyers to start moving in. Jontue and Diana Junior just bought a 4-bedroom home in Las Vegas - thanks to the $8,000 federal tax credit for first time homebuyers.

"We knew that once we got into the house -- with $8,000 -- if we managed our money right, we shouldn't lose the house," Jontue said.

That incentive has juiced the housing market. Home sales are up nearly five percent in the past year. The tax credit expires in April, and experts say shell shocked banks need to start lending again so the market has more buyers.

"Until we have that, we really can't have a full fledged housing market recovery," said Rich Sharga, VP of RealtyTrac.

Yet homebuyers are much more focused on cost -- heeding the warning to never spend more than 31 percent of pre-tax pay on housing. For a family making $75,000 a year, than means not spending more than $1,900 per month.

Builders are responding with smaller and more affordable homes. Pulte homes scrapped their 3-story, 3,300-square-foot home. Now, they sell a 2-story, 2,000-square-foot home - chopping the price in half from $400,000 to $200,000.

"The larger homes and the price points and the square footages we were selling at just weren't selling like they used to," said Scott Wright of Pulte Homes.

In Phoenix, Philip Beere is buying up foreclosed homes, and giving them a major facelift and energy savings upgrade to make them more affordable. In one home, he lowered the annual utility bill from $2,000 to just $400.

As for the Jenkins family, they'll keep their home thanks to a loan modification, but their investment will likely never may off.

"What I've learned from this is that you don't need it," Jessica Jenkins said. "It wasn't worth it."

That's a feeling shared by millions of Americans now living with regret.

More From USA Today
Has USA hit the Final Frontier in Human Space Exploration?
Outlook for job market remains grim
Recession scars will linger long after economy heals
A closer look at the U.S. in the next decade
In America's next decade, change and challenges
Couric Blog

Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 184 Comments
by franklouis2 March 14, 2010 8:32 PM EDT
Listen to the Frank Louis Show Monday mornings at 9:30 on WNRI 1380 Radio. He wants to know why the following things are not happening:
Banks need to institute ?Short Keeps? where people keep their property for around the same amount that the bank would foreclose or short sell it. If there is a reason why this can?t be done, come on his program and tell him why. Do this and the housing decline will stop the next day. Don?t and all of America?s wealth will be gone.
Why are no realtors, mortgage brokers, appraisers, etc going to jail for the housing fraud that created this problem? Why are no professional associations of realtors demanding that the ?rotten eggs? in their business be punished? Why are none of these same people who wrote the bad loans and sold the bad deals at least giving their commissions back?
There are only a handful of reporters checking into the fraud that realtors and mortgage brokers pulled off. Why are not more news reporters exposing this, the true cause of the crisis?
What are people who lost their life savings in this real estate Ponzi scheme supposed to do? If there are 10 million upside homes there are perhaps 40 million people in these families who have been robbed. The number will grow. Think about it. Your property (investment property of residence) is not worth anything and it is most likely NOT because of anything you did. Demand this stops. Listen to Frank Louis.
Reply to this comment
by libbcbs February 20, 2010 11:34 PM EST
You may recall that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac own 90% of the mortgages.

You may also recall that late last year Congress passed legislation granting both agencies unlimited funds to cover losses.

So, the banks, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have no skin in the game because what ever a home sells for they are guaranteed not to incur a loss by your tax dollars!! In other words the American taxpayer is paying the difference between the selling price and the mortgage remainder which is well above the selling price. So, called "under water" mortgages.

Congress has done nothing to fix the Barney Frank, Obama "affordable housing crap".

What is even worse is that it is going to get worse.

Fannie may is offering the buyers of these Reo homes a mortgage with little credit requirements and ONLY 3% DOWN. This means that every single house that Fannie Mae has sold with these "Home Path" loans in the last year are already "underwater." Heck, they are underwater if they were sold last week.

Here is one other thing you should know. Fannie Mae is giving 8% to realtors to sell the properties. This is plain nuts and a waste of taxpayer money
Reply to this comment
by HHalifax February 19, 2010 1:50 PM EST
Run, don't walk away, from your underwater mortgaged home.

let the bank shareholders take the loss while you rebuild.
Reply to this comment
by JavMD February 19, 2010 1:07 PM EST
"Today, the number one cause of foreclosure is unemployment," said Pete Flint of Trulia.com.

Fifteen million Americans are now out of work

===========================================================

So the only way to HELP, is get PEOPLE back to WORK !

But the jobs... are GONE... READ other places, This will be a RECOVERY without ADDING JOBS...

How does 10% unemployment affect the economy and the rest of the 90% of workers?

I'm on reduced work hours and in Northeast OHIO...electric rates just skyrocketed, interest rates on Credit Cards has skyrocketed..

NOW is NOT the time to lecture kids on buying a house, NOW is the time to assist the ECONOMY, its the economy stupid"

WHERE IS OUR CONGRESS-SENATE AND PRESIDENT> GET BACK To work on RELEASING THE EXISTING STIMULUS MONEY !

SENATOR REID>> you're an idiot ! PRESIDENT OBAMA gives money to an electric company to build more NUCLEAR PLANTS... (nuclear waste) and Yucca Mountain is NEEDED !

WE need to ADAPT the CHINA way for incompetence, take them out back and shoot them
Reply to this comment
by Jhudson001 February 17, 2010 8:10 PM EST
The only thing we can do now is take mortgages we can afford and teach our children to do the same, so this doesn?t happen to their generation. My husband and I bought our third home last year when all friends were splurging, and our lender Intercontinental Capital told us to stick to monthly payments that were no more than a third of our monthly income (31% to be exact). My husband had to take a pay cut two months into our mortgage and we were real glad then that we didn?t buy the McMansions our friends bought. We were just able to squeeze buy. But it?s all about moderation and the younger generation has to learn that.
Reply to this comment
by curse914 February 14, 2010 2:43 PM EST
by mimi5952 February 14, 2010 6:20 AM EST
Yes it is really bad and Obama has obligated you and me to pay for other people home plus ours. So more will be homeless soon enough. Study how Communists take over a country... 2 ways..destroy the economy or civil war. Obama is destroying the economy and we don't even know if he is a citizen but we sure are going to be Communist country if Obama stays in office. Scary!

=================

You are a scared ignorant nutter.

The government has become the last consumer, because idiots like you bought into the concept of Unfettered Capitalism and that infinite growth is possible on a finite planet.

If you had any semblance of intelligence, you would know that we have been in decline since the 1970's. Are you actually accusing all those administration of a vast "Commie" conspiracy?

Get clue. We had a short period of broad based prosperity because of:

1) Cheap localized energy.
2) Localized manufacturing. (no NAFTA)
3) Sane financial institution regulations put in place after the Depression. (Regulated Capitalism)

These ingredients to prosperity did not go away because of a vast Marxist Conspiracy. You are actually scary stupid.
Reply to this comment
by ekim3129 February 16, 2010 12:38 PM EST
This whole problem boils down to the number 1 deadly sin. Greed!
by curse914 February 16, 2010 5:11 PM EST
by ekim3129

The myth of perpetual growth and an ever growing economic pie has been very profitable for a select few.
by wfw3536 February 12, 2010 9:35 PM EST
I can't believe these polls that CBS is citing as accurate. Whoever did them must have cut corners or the questions in the poll were suspect. The real truth is that the housing situation is really bad. We have so many people losing their homes or who are in debt that it will be only a matter of time before they lose them. I just feel sorry for these folks as the direction of our economy is going is only going to get worse in the next 3 to 4 years.
Reply to this comment
by P2Prod_com February 11, 2010 3:05 AM EST
Stand strong AMERICA,
It's the classic Tortoise vs. the Hare.
Keep working HARD and for the long run,
lets pass something BETTER down to our children...

(Please check out my political cartoon, commenting on this topic)
http://paulpointer.art.officelive.com/images/turtlesm.jpg
Feed back is appreciated! Thanks! -P2
Reply to this comment
by Berkeley-SkirtLifter February 10, 2010 1:44 PM EST
This story has been on the "front page" for over a week ... time to go!
Reply to this comment
by angrycitizen99 February 10, 2010 12:23 PM EST
It's not surprising people are still losing their homes. The government is still making deals to help the fat cats running the banks, rather than the homeowners. Watch this: http://www.thinkbigworksmall.com/mypage/archive/1/29027

Stuff like that really ticks me off!!
Reply to this comment
by nasadawg February 12, 2010 8:57 AM EST
Get off it. These people took loan (ARM and interest only). and walked into houses they could not aford. It is no one but their fault. If you can aford a 30 year fixed load, then find a cheaper house. Plus, remember alot of these are flippers. If you but a 300.000 dollar house but can really aford a 150,000 house - well sorry about that.
by fredricwilliams February 12, 2010 9:54 AM EST
nasadawg should be as severe with the billion-dollar bankers and insurance companies and automobile companies and their unions. They all did things they couldn't afford, but unlike the typical homeowner, these fat cats were given all the cash they needed to prevent them from losing their shirts. Almost everyone guessed that housing prices would continue to rise, but only the homeowner pays the price for guessing wrong. AIG? Goldman Sachs? Wells Fargo? They are too Pig to fail.
See all 184 Comments
.
Scroll Left
Scroll Right More »
CBS News on Facebook