Archive for June, 2010

Negative Equity Mortgage Minefield…

Could this be a lifeline for those in negative equity?…

Those with underwater mortgages may hope that new, negative equity mortgages could offer them a way out…

Are negative equity mortgages a way out for people trapped in properties that no longer suit their needs or just another minefield waiting to blow up?

COULD A SOLUTION to the negative equity nightmare currently facing hundreds of thousands of people finally be in sight? No, it’s not a rebounding property market, but rather a number of proposals aimed at lightening the load of those who bought during the boom, are now struggling to meet their monthly repayments and are stuck with properties they cannot sell.

For those with underwater mortgages, the difficulty in selling arises because the sale of the property will not generate enough to pay back the lender. For example, if you bought a property for €400,000 with a 95 per cent mortgage during the boom, regardless of the fact that the apartment will now only make €280,000 on the open market, you are still obliged to repay your lender the full €380,000. So, to be able to sell the property, you will need to pay off the outstanding €100,000 yourself – an unlikely proposition for most.

Now however, our banks are considering introducing negative equity mortgages – albeit on a limited basis and subject to strict regulatory oversight – thereby enabling borrowers to sell their properties and move on.

So, in the above example, if the homeowner wanted to purchase a new property for €400,000, using a negative equity mortgage they could do so by selling their own home for €280,000 and theoretically borrowing €500,000 (€100,000 of negative equity plus €400,000 purchase price). As such, the introduction of such products into the Irish market could free up people who are at present stuck where they are living.

However, negative equity mortgages are likely to have only limited applicability, given that so many people are already struggling with their existing mortgage payments, without taking on the burden of additional debt. Moreover, if property prices were to fall further, homeowners could actually exacerbate the extent of negative equity in which they find themselves by taking out a new mortgage.

For those looking to trade down however, a negative equity mortgage could be just the thing. If the person with the property valued at €280,000 wanted to buy a new apartment worth just €200,000, by taking out a mortgage of €300,000 to cover the new property plus their existing negative equity, they could benefit from a substantial decrease in their monthly repayments.

Another possible solution comes from a change to the legal structure of lending in Ireland.

In the US, it’s not an unusual scenario for homeowners to simply send the keys of their properties back to their lenders when they run into financial difficulties. Although the practice isn’t possible in all states, in those which allow non-judicial foreclosure, such as California, a lender can repossess a house without going through the courts and cannot impose a deficiency judgment on the borrower, requiring them to make up the short-fall on the sale of the house.

In Ireland however, the outlook for those running into difficulties with underwater mortgages is very different. Why? Because lenders only sell full recourse mortgages, which means that the homeowner is fully liable for the total debt due on the loan agreement. This may be significantly in excess of the actual market value of the property, thereby leaving a significant shortfall which must be covered by the borrower.

For the Irish Brokers Association (IBA), such a scenario is “unreasonable and anti-consumer”, and instead, it is calling for a ban on full recourse mortgage lending.

“The mortgage holder cannot simply short sell the house, repay the bank and move on, as is the case in the US. In fact, he/she has to carry the cross of that mortgage for the rest of their lives. This practice hugely undermines confidence for those affected, resulting in a curtailment of consumer spending and an extended recession,” says Ciaran Phelan, CEO of the IBA.

Instead, it is calling on the banks to take some of the hit for their “imprudent lending practices” through the introduction of non-recourse lending, where the lender only has a claim over the asset, rather than the individual. Going forward, according to the IBA, banks would then underwrite mortgages based on two key factors – the borrower’s ability to meet the monthly repayments and the security offered.

So it’s got to be a good thing for the beleaguered homeowner, right? Well, while it may have its merits in setting the indebted free, before you cross your fingers in the hope that non-recourse lending may be on the agenda of the Expert Group on Mortgage Arrears which is due to report shortly, you should first consider the implications of switching to a new system.

Karl Deeter, operations manager with the Irish Mortgage Corporation, doesn’t think it’s the all-encompassing solution as has been suggested. “It doesn’t solve everything, just part of it,” he says. First, it will put up the cost of borrowing, as banks re-adjust to cope with the increased riskiness of their transaction from their perspective – and this at a time when homeowners not on tracker mortgages are already bearing the brunt of high rates.

“Lending will become more risky if the only recourse is the asset not the individual,” says Deeter, adding that higher loan-to-values will also become a thing of the past. As a result, prospective homeowners will have to save up to 25 per cent of the purchase price of the property themselves. Most significant is the fact that however the loan is legally structured, it will not prevent a homeowner who has run into financial difficulties from being dispossessed.

“Non-judicial foreclosure is pretty aggressive, it happens within a month or two in some states in the US. If the court is taken out of the process then the lender can lean heavily on you,” says Deeter. So, while the current Irish court process may seem cumbersome, it does actually offer the consumer some protection.

So what of the banks? Are they likely in any case to agree to a system of lending which would offer them reduced protection in the case of default? Already there have been calls to better protect lenders’ interests by introducing mandatory mortgage indemnity insurance (MII) on all loans where the LTV is greater than 70 per cent.

Insurance company Genworth wants the Government to make this cover obligatory, to protect lenders against losses due to borrower defaults under high LTV mortgage loans, where sale proceeds are insufficient to pay off outstanding debt.

While many lending institutions already take out such policies, the practice of passing on the cost of these to mortgage-holders – at a one-off price of about €900-€1,500 – stopped as the property boom took off. Instead, banks typically apply a higher interest rate to higher LTV mortgages. However if it was to become mandatory, it is likely that prospective homeowners would once more be hit with the charge.

Before you think a €1,000 insurance policy as opposed to a €100,000 shortfall on your mortgage is by far the more preferable option, think again. The very clear distinction which should be made between MII policies and non-recourse lending is that a MII is designed to protect the interests of the lender – not the consumer. So even if the lender has a MII policy in place which will pay out in the event of a shortfall, the lender can still go after the borrower for the outstanding shortfall.

Late last week, the International Monetary Fund joined the debate and called for support measures to protect vulnerable homeowners burdened with mortgage arrears. It said new measures could limit the social and economic fallout of the current crisis, provided they were narrowly targeted.

Report by FIONA REDDAN – Irish Times.

Ireland Property – Daft Property – http://daftproperty.blogspot.com

Celtic Tiger’s High Fliers Face Bankruptcy…

McNamara, FitzPatrick facing bankruptcy ‘in weeks’…

TWO of the Celtic Tiger’s highest fliers — developer Bernard McNamara and banker Sean FitzPatrick — face bankruptcy within weeks.

The Irish Independent has learned that Mr McNamara, once worth almost €240m, is facing a fresh attempt by a group of private investors to force him into bankruptcy.

The group is pursuing up to 40 properties owned by the Clare-born builder, records show.

Meanwhile, Anglo Irish Bank will veto any plans by FitzPatrick — who owes the bank €110m — to reach a private deal with his creditors.

Both men are now facing the real prospect of having all their assets, including their family homes, seized and sold off.

Pursued

Bankruptcy in Ireland lasts for 12 years, with those declared bankrupt facing travel restrictions, curbs on their ability to borrow money and/or run a business.

Mr McNamara is already being pursued by investors arising from the disastrous Glass Bottle site investment.

But now a second group has emerged to force him finally into bankruptcy, even though it is only owed €2.24m.

Mr McNamara has already had art and other items taken from his home on leafy Ailesbury Road in Dublin 4.

The developer is now facing a war on two fronts as he tries to deal with debts coming to almost €1.5bn.

The High Court yesterday heard there was little chance Mr FitzPatrick could get the support of his creditors for a new arrangement where he would be given time to sort out his debts.

The High Court heard it was “absolutely unimpeachable” Mr FitzPatrick would secure the support of 40pc of his creditors, meaning his bankruptcy is now inevitable barring a change of heart by Anglo.

Ms Justice Elizabeth Dunne also heard an application on behalf of two businessmen, Gary Smith and Ivor Dougan, who are seeking to have Mr McNamara declared bankrupt on foot of a €2.24m judgment the pair obtained against him last February.

The petition was moved by the men after Dublin City Sheriff moved to seize goods from his home on May 18 last.

Mr McNamara’s barrister, Bernard Dunleavy, said the developer — who did not attend in court and was not formally identified during the brief hearing — was seeking to have the bankruptcy petition dismissed.

The Clare-born builder, who owes some €1.5bn, claims the bankruptcy petition filed by two former shareholders in Novorostan, a property company which had hoped to develop a site close to Grafton Street in Dublin, is flawed.

He will also claim the men are not entitled to bring a bankruptcy petition on foot of an asset seizure by the sheriff and will also challenge the security held by the men in respect of the debt claimed.

Under Ireland’s bankruptcy laws, a creditor’s petition must state whether any security such as a mortgage or charge is held in respect of the debt.

Securities

However, Mr McNamara will claim that Mr Smith and Mr Dougan have other securities over the debt which have not been formally disclosed.

The bankruptcy move by Mr Smith and Mr Dougan has caught many by surprise as the biggest threat to Mr McNamara to date has been from private clients of Davy Stockbrokers, who backed the soured €412m purchase of the Irish Glass Bottle site in Ringsend in Dublin

The Davy private clients, who include Glen Dimplex owner Martin Naughton and former AIB chairman Lochlainn Quinn, obtained a €62.5m judgment against Mr McNamara last January.

Just weeks later Mr Smith and Mr Dougan also obtained judgment on foot of an earlier High Court settlement under which Mr McNamara was due to pay €5m by December 2008 and a further €2.5m plus interest by January 2009.

Mr McNamara has two weeks to outline his objection and the case has been listed for July 28.

A private hearing involving Mr FitzPatrick will proceed on July 12.

The former Anglo chief had secured temporary court protection earlier this year which prevented creditors from taking legal action against him as he tried to put in place an arrangement to settle his debts.

Anglo Irish Bank holds 40pc of Mr FitzPatrick’s debt and, as he needs the support of three-fifths of his creditors to support his scheme, his bid to avoid bankruptcy is likely to fail.

Report by Emmet Oliver and Dearbhail McDonald – Irish Independent

Ireland Property – Daft Property – http://daftproperty.blogspot.com

2010 Fourth of July Celebrations In Metro Phoenix

4th of July Activities in Greater Phoenix by City.

Get ready for another hot year of Independence Day celebrations starting the 2nd of July 2010.  Some cities have refrained from put together activities due to lack of funds and conservation and I’m sure lots of people will be spending it at home, but there is still lots of stuff to do: some put together by private companies and others are public both paid and free. 

Check the list below and select the appropriate link for more info.

Chandler

1.  4th of July 7up Fireworks Spectacular
July 4th from 4-10pm.
Fireworks, fun, games, entertainment and food.
Tumbleweed Park – 2250 S McQueen Rd
More: City of Chandler

2.  A Star Spangled Shoot Out at Rawhide
July 4th 5:30
Paid Event
More: Rawhide

Goodyear

1.  Star Spangled Fourth
July 4, 2010 – 6pm-10pm
Goodyear Ballpark – 1933 S Ballpark Way
Tel: 623-882-3120
More: City of Goodyear

Litchfield Park

1.  Fourth of July Splash Bash
July 3rd from 10am to 5pm.
Greased watermelon toss, wet t-shirt swimming contest.
Litchfield Park Recreation Center100 S Old Litchfield Rd
Tel: 623-935-9040
More: City of Litchfield Park

Mesa

1.  Arizona Celebration of Freedom
Downtown Mesa including the Mesa Arts Center and Heritage Lane
Family fun, musicians, art and a pyrotechnic display on Friday and fireworks on Saturday.
Free event.
More: City of Mesa

Peoria

Peoria 4th of July Festival
July 4th 2010 from 5-10pm.
At the Peoria Sports Complex Mariners Practice Field16101 N 83rd Ave
Call: 602-773-8700
Activities for children and adults, F-16 flyover, fireworks and food.
Paid Event
More: City of Peoria

Phoenix

1. Freedom Wireless Fabulous Phoenix Fourth
July 4th from 6-10 pm at Steele Indian School Park
This is a family event with local entertainers, a giant misting area, inflatable rides, stages with entertainments, Classic Car exhibit, Phoenix Fire Dept. and a huge fireworks display – the biggest one in the state. There
More: City of Phoenix Parks.

2. Light Up The Sky at the Maryvale Baseball Park
July 2nd, 2010. From 7-9pm
3600 N. 51st Ave.
There will be games, activities for all ages and fireworks.
Free event.
More: City of Phoenix

3. Zoo-ly Celebration at the Phoenix Zoo
July 4th from 6-10pm at the Phoenix Zoo.
Take the Safari Train, family stuff to do and a view of the Tempe fireworks.
455 N Galvin Pkwy. Tel. 602-914-4333
Paid event.
More: Phoenix Zoo

4. Arizona Diamondbacks All-American Weekend
July 2nd-4th
More: All American Weekend

5. Wet ‘n’ Wild Independence Day BBQ and Fireworks Show
July 3rd and 4th 2010
With a BBQ, water and fire: water for play and fireworks for show.
More: Wet ‘n’ Wild

Queen Creek

Queen Creek’s 4th of July Fireworks and Independence Day Celebration
Sunday July 4, 2010 from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Games, rides, fireworks.
More:

Surprise

July 4th 2010. 4:30pm-8:30pm
Rookie baseball game between the Royals and Padres, Kid Zone games, family fun, and fireworks.
Surprise Stadium15850 N Bullard Ave
Tel. 623-222-2000
More: City of Surprise

Tempe

1.  Tempe Center For The Arts
July 4th, 2010 6 p.m. to 10 p.m
Paid Event

More: Tempe Center For The Arts

2.  CBS 5 Tempe Town Lake Festival Produced
July 4th 2010 from 4pm
Might be the biggest fireworks display in Arizona, but others say that as well.
Tempe Town Lake in downtown Tempe, Arizona
More: City of Tempe dedicated site.

Fire Sales Draw Bargain Hunters…

Despite movement in the property market in the first six months of this year, little has changed really.

Prices are still falling, the banks are continuing to enforce tougher lending criteria and discussion about the dreaded property tax has loomed its ugly head again instilling fear among most homeowners.

Bank sales of apartment blocks that have gone bust have gained interest from buyers as the banks try to recoup some of their loans. But what’s going to happen for the rest of the year?

Houses have started selling again, but are the volumes worth talking about and are bank sales going to become a common feature of the property market?

Some commentators consider successful sales of receivership properties a sign of a recovery starting, others view them as a negative influence on an already struggling market.

There has been considerable debate about a levelling-out of property prices or ‘‘a bottoming’’ of the market since the start of the year. Instead we’ve seen prices continue to fall.

The rate of decline in property prices has slowed, but prices are still falling. It has resulted in improved sales in the second-hand market.

Anecdotally, the seemingly unchangeable ‘‘for sale’’ boards outside houses are slowly beginning to turn into to ‘‘sale agreed’’ or ‘‘sold’’ signs, but only in well established areas in the capital. Estate agents concede that the market in the rest of the country remains dire and that the only interest being shown by buyers in the new homes sector is in receivership sales.

First-time buyers have snapped up properties at knockdown prices in the few ‘‘fire sales’’ that have taken place so far this year. Some investors have also been attracted by the dramatically low prices.

Although agents dislike the term, the banks don’t mind it if they bring in much needed publicity and sales – and it seems receivership sales are going to become an important part of the market for the foreseeable future.

This weekend the asking price of a Mulhuddart apartment block has been reduced from €3 million to €1.895 million.

The block of 30 apartments on Blakestown Road in west Dublin is located 500 metres from Mulhuddart village and convenient to Blanchardstown shopping centre.

The block comprises one, two, and three bedroom apartments and is being sold by Martin Ferris, receiver over some of the assets of developers Larry O’Mahony and Thomas McFeely.

Selling agent HT Meagher O’Reilly is seeking investors who are interested in purchasing the block in one lot rather than individual units.

The asking price equates to an average of €63,167 per apartment Earlier this month, Anglo Irish Bank sold almost 90 apartments in a receivership sale at Carrickmines Green, just off the M50 in Carrickmines, south Dublin.

Those who have been keeping a keen eye on the market pounced on the sale with crowds forming at the scheme to buy the units.

The one beds were priced at €135,000, the two-beds at €180,000, and three-beds were available from €300,000.These prices are dramatically less than similarly sized properties at other schemes in the area.

The purchasers were mainly first time buyers, accompanied in some cases by their parents who wrote the cheque for the deposit.

Some buyers have been chided by the public for capitalising on others’ misfortunes. The same properties were selling for between €299,950 and €740,000 in 2005; early buyers the scheme lost their deposits after Laragan Developments went into examinership.

Others argue the quicker the overhang of stock is sold, the quicker the chance of a recovery in the market. In Templeogue, south Dublin, Douglas Newman Good’s new homes division sold almost 25 units at discounted prices at the Cedar Grove scheme on Firhouse Road.

The two-bedroom apartments, which were originally priced at €525,000 were sold for between €275,000 and €325,000.

The three beds were discounted to starting prices of €340,000.

Gemma Lanigan, new homes manager at Douglas Newman Good, said receivership sales were now at the ‘‘forefront of every purchasers mind’’.

‘‘There’s a huge appetite for receivership sales. They are very good value whether in a development that needs to be finished or a scheme that is fully finished.

There’s an appetite for both. It just shows you that there are people willing to buy once the price is right.

‘’She said with Cedar Grove the units were so well finished and of such high specification that they attracted interest and sold immediately.

The new homes division also handled the sale of Butterfield in Rathfarnham, south Dublin earlier this year on behalf of receivers where four-bedroom semis were sold for between €600,000 and €640,000.

‘‘The prices are making people react.” HT Meagher O’Reilly sales manager Andrew Long said interest has been growing in fire sales among first time buyers and investors and were likely to become amore frequent feature in the market.

‘‘Interest has been strong from investors in the [Mulhuddart] scheme because its complete vacant possession, the scheme doesn’t have problems with management companies or residents.

Long said the agency had also received offers against the Hampton Rise development in Navan, another bank sale of 31 apartments and four ground floor commercial units which has an asking price of €2 million.

‘‘We’re just waiting for proof of finance.

Five parties were interested in the development since the start of the year,” he said.

Long described the market in the first six months of 2010 as ‘‘bad rather than awful’’ in comparison to last year. HT Meagher O’Reilly handled the successful sale at Carrickmines a fortnight ago.

Long anticipates further receivership sales in the autumn but only in small numbers. ‘‘There will be more sales but just in the volume of people think there will.”

‘‘Carrickmines will give some confidence to the market.

Two months ago many people thought that you couldn’t sell an apartment at any price. But today, we now know where we are and that apartments will sell at the right price. There are buyers out there.

We’ve a 25-page cancellation list.”

The purchasers were mainly first time buyers at Carrickmines, according to Long. ‘‘A lot of them were getting substantial help from their parents’’.

That help in some cases, Long said, was a financial gift in the region of €40,000 to €50,000 from parents to their children.

From autumn onwards receivership sales are likely to become more prevalent. Sources confirmed to the Sunday Business Post that Fleming Construction’s Rockford scheme in Sandyford, south Dublin will be sold by the banks in the autumn selling season.

So too will Liam Carroll’s scheme in Tallaght, Dublin 24. Between the two schemes it’s expected that a further 200 plus apartments are likely to come onto the market at knockdown prices.

Friends First economist Jim Power said the problem with receivership sales was that when houses are being sold off at incredibly big discounts, it sets the benchmark for house prices in that area.

‘‘Receivership sales certainly set a lower benchmark for prices and that affects the whole market negatively. But it is a process that has to be gone through, whether in a receivership sale, or not, those properties are going to have to be offloaded and there’s going to be an increase in supply over the next couple of years.

That will keep prices down.

‘‘We’ll definitely see receivership sales become a greater feature of the market.”

Other developers have reacted to the prices on offer in these sales and have been quietly reducing prices over the last few months.

A further price reduction was made in the last few weeks at the Newcastle Lyons development in west Dublin. Onebeds are now priced from €119,950.

At the Mimosa development in Dublin 18 the asking prices were reduced to €180,000 for one-beds and two-beds are for sale from €230,000.

Ronan O’Driscoll, head of residential sales at Savills said Carrickmines was the first high profile fire sale. ‘‘We haven’t seen anything significant yet.

But it’s reasonable to assume that they are going to continue but it’s hard to gauge at what level.”

‘‘I don’t see a tsunami of them coming to the market.

The ones associated with Nama aren’t likely to flood the market. But it will be a feature of the market over the coming years.” O’Driscoll said Savills has sold 180 units at Clare Village in Dublin 17since the start of the year, purchased primarily by the first time buyers.

‘‘We sold 200 units in the first half of the year, which is way more than last year, but 90 per cent less than we sold in 2005,” he said.

Sherry FitzGerald’s chief economist Marian Finnegan believes receivership sales are good for the overall market.

She said it was understandable that they were generating such interest and that they will ‘‘stimulate the market and create confidence’’.

‘‘There’s no doubt the market is still challenging but we are seeing some signs of emerging confidence in the secondhand market in Dublin,” she said. ‘‘There has been an intensification of interest.”

Sherry FitzGerald recorded 13,000 proper ty viewings through their offices in the first three months of this year, Finnegan said, compared to 8,000 viewings of property in the same period last year. ‘‘April was sluggish with the transfer of loans to Nama. In May and June, however, houses have been selling for over their asking prices [in some areas in Dublin] for the first time since 2006.

‘‘It’s a trend but a fragile trend in the second hand market. Prices are still correcting,” she said.

An improvement in the market comes after 2009 being the worst year for the property market since the downturn began.

The Department of Finance’s exchequer figures show 2009 was the worst year for property sales since the downturn in the market began with just 1,958 first time buyers transactions exempted from stamp duty.

The figures are a good indicator of the marketplace, particularly one which is heavily dominated by first time buyers as it is currently.

That figure compares to 5,178 first time buyer transactions in 2008, and 3,093 transactions in 2007.

According to the latest permanent tsb/ESRI house price index, the national average house price fell by 4.8 per cent in the first three months of the year.

Economist Jim Power estimates prices will have fallen by about 7 per cent in the first six months.

‘‘A drop of another 5 per cent is likely in the second half of the year, so at the end of 2010, residential property prices will have fallen by around 12 per cent,” he said.

‘‘I had predicted a fall of about 10 per cent, so it’s probably worse than I thought.”

‘‘The rate of decline is going to gradually slow down. In established areas where there is a lack of supply properties are starting to turnover, albeit at low prices. There’s a bit of movement in the marketplace, reflecting the dramatic decline in prices.

‘‘Areas people might have desired three/four years ago, and couldn’t possibly contemplate affording, are becoming more affordable. But that’s the exception rather than the rule.

‘‘I think the market is still soft. Credit availability is still going to be a major issue [for the second half of the year].

Despite the palaver from the banking sector the moment, credit is just not available.

‘‘On the demand side, there is still a tremendous amount of uncertainty out there.

‘‘The labour market is still weak, economy is still very difficult, people will be facing into further spending cuts in the December Budget and wages are still under pressure.”

Power believes it will be the end of 2011 before there is any significant change in the property market.

Report by Michelle Devane – Sunday Business Post.

Ireland Property – Daft Property – http://daftproperty.blogspot.com

Property Tycoon’s Dolce Vita Ends…

Tycoon’s dolce vita ends as art seized…

THE Dublin city sheriff has seized an art collection and other valuables from the Ailesbury Road home of fallen property developer Bernard McNamara. The collection will be sold to help pay his debts.

The sheriff, Brendan Walsh, is believed to have moved against the property developer within the past fortnight, calling to his salubrious Dublin 4 home acting on a court order to seize anything of value from his home to reimburse his creditors. The sheriff is believed to have taken paintings from the family home along with a small number of other items.

The development marks a new low for Mr McNamara, once one of Ireland’s richest men but who now owes €1.5bn. The property developer and former county councillor from Clare turned the building firm founded by his father Michael into one of the biggest in Ireland.

He is the highest-profile former tycoon to date to be targeted by bailiffs, signalling just how far some of Ireland’s billionaires have fallen now that the state sheriffs are being deployed to seize their assets.

Mr McNamara admitted earlier this year that he was facing personal ruin because he was unable to meet his debts and could possibly lose his family home.

He owes money to Anglo Irish Bank, AIB, Bank of Scotland (Ireland) and Ulster Bank. A group of business people — known as the Davy investors — who invested with him in the disastrous Irish Glass Bottle factory site in Ringsend secured a personal judgement against him for €62.5m in January. The judgement meant that his creditors could then seek an order to have the sheriff collect the debt on their behalf by going to his home and seizing valuables they could find to go towards repaying the debt.

Another judgement against Mr McNamara for €2.24m was registered in March.

The knock on his front door from the bailiffs a fortnight ago was not unexpected.

Mr McNamara told RTE in January that his “head was on a plate”.

“Everything I have had since I was a young fella is being put on the line. I’m not running anywhere. I’ll stand here and face whatever music there is,” he said.

He claimed that he was “hit on the road by something that no one saw was coming”.

“All I can do is my level best to behave with decency in the situation I am in,” he said.

However, the Davy investors have been pressing Mr McNamara to disclose the full extent of his assets in the Commercial Court. During one court hearing earlier this year, Mr McNamara’s barrister told the court that his client’s finances were so complex that it would be impossible to outline the value of all of his assets and liabilities. Both sides eventually reached a deal that he would disclose his personal wealth in private.

Mr McNamara has lived in the family home on Ailesbury Road since 2000, when he bought the property for a reported €2.8m and carried out a massive redevelopment, turning it into one of the biggest mansions in the Embassy belt. He also has holiday homes in Marbella, Spain and Co Clare and an apartment in Manhatten, New York, in his wife Moira’s name.

Mr McNamara recently denied newspaper reports that he had sold the Ailesbury Road mansion, which includes a cinema and an underground swimming pool.

Despite his financial difficulties in Ireland, Mr McNamara is reportedly trying to rebuild his empire abroad. He has been travelling regularly to the Middle East where his company, Arabian McNamara Contracting, is reportedly involved in a building project for a new terminal at Doha International Airport for Qatar Airways. He is believed to be acting as a consultant to the project. The Davy investors are seeking details of the contract, which is reportedly worth between m and m (€13m to €24m).

Mr McNamara could not be contacted for comment yesterday.

Mr Walsh said it was his policy not to comment.

Report by MAEVE SHEEHAN – Sunday Independent.

Ireland Property – Daft Property – http://daftproperty.blogspot.com

A Selection Of Phoenix Historic Neighborhoods Were Added To The National Register of Historic Places

A win for preserving Phoenix and some national recognition.

Recently The National Register of Historic Places agreed with and accepted 10 Phoenix Historic Districts in the its register.  The neighborhoods all in Central Phoenix are spread out in Midtown and Downtown Phoenix. 

To view more details about the neighborhood select the district of interest for some history, photos, information and homes for sale.

  1. Campus Vista
  2. East Evergreen 
  3. Encanto Manor
  4. Encanto Vista 
  5. Garfield
  6. Los Olivos
  7. North Garfield 
  8. Villa Verde
  9. Woodlea
  10. Yaple Park

The city of Phoenix has 35 historic neighborhoods of varying sizes and historic significance.  The ten neighborhoods above were already listed in the Phoenix Historic Register.  

The are many benefits to preserving homes and neighborhood: they extend beyond the financial tax benefits into a cooperative wind for the resident of the city. 

Most people don’t realize how much of Phoenix we lost of the last decades, a loss which cannot be replaced, but a loss which has affected how the city is viewed and understood.

See Also

Debt Crisis To Worsen…

Debt crisis to worsen as markets target Ireland…

Ireland has lost control of its financial fate and its future is now in the hands of the markets, one of Europe’s leading sovereign bond commentators has said.

Luca Cazzulani, deputy head of fixed income at Italian-German bank UniCredit, said the Irish and Portuguese governments could do little to influence their fate because the markets had signaled them out from the so-called PIIGS – Portugal Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain – for extreme scrutiny.

He forecast that key sovereign interest rates in Ireland and Portugal, which rose last week to more than 5.5%, were “unlikely” to fall back below 5% because markets were not anticipating good news from Europe.

“If anything, we are likely to get further bad news,” Cazzulani warned.

Irish and Portuguese sovereign interest rates could stay “very high” for five or six months. “If so, then we are going to face a series of stresses because these levels are clearly unsustainable,” Cazzulani said. “Investors will start to realise that it makes no sense to lend to those countries because they will not be able to pay back in the long run.”

Following Spain’s successful debt, Ireland and Portugal last week stood out in the eurozone for the high interest rates they face in refinancing and raising new debt.

Cazzulani said that Italy, one of the euro peripheral countries the markets perceived to be in trouble, was now best placed paying “quite low” interest rate on its debt of 4%. Spain is paying 4.6%.

Ireland and Portugal interest rates are “by no way a sustainable rate for either because neither of the two countries can meet a growth rate in line with that yield. For example Portugal is paying 5.6%, which is basically the highest yield ever and the picture for Ireland is fairly much unchanged,” he said.

But Chris Pryce, the senior analyst who sets the credit ratings for Ireland at Fitch, told the Sunday Tribune that the agency’s rating for Ireland had been stable “for most of this year and will continue to be stable.” He added: “I do not think that Ireland is in danger of losing access to the markets. That has not been our experience these last few months.”

He said Ireland was “very slowly” emerging from recession and the economy was “probably past the bottom”.

Report by Eamon Quinn – Tribune Business.

Ireland Property – Daft Property – http://daftproperty.blogspot.com

The Average Size Of A Home In Phoenix

The average size of the Phoenix home over the last decade.

We entered a home for 0,000 in Surprise.  It was 3,400 square feet with high cathedral like ceilings in some areas, a huge living room, a kitchen where 50 people would not feel cramped and most would have a space at the granite counter-top to lean on. 

This space also needs to be heated, cooled and cleaned and most likely it will be a small family that lives there.  For a starter home 3,400 square feet is big, but over the decades the average size of a home has grown considerably.  

In the 1950′s, according to the census, the average home size was 1,100 square feet.  In 2000, the national average just to be clear, was 2,349. 

The most recent data in Phoenix show an average size of around 1,930 square feet which is down from a peak of about 2,035 square feet.  The chart above certainly makes the difference look more dramatic then it is: 100 square feet is small, but still quite a bit of space.

Do we really need so much more space, especially since the average family has decreased from 3.54 family memebers in 1950 to 3.14 family members.  It seems that we have moved away from quality to quantity in building styles:  homes are bigger, but most of the new construction is cheap – effecient, but cheap.  

Maybe with the increasing energy prices the home sizes could be scaled back, floorplans improved, and energy effecience improved as well: in other words quality over quantity. That’s not going to be easy to do.  

See Also

Property Bubble Warning…

Department says it warned of property bubble…

THE DEPARTMENT of Finance says it warned the Government from 2005 onwards about the dangers of a property bubble, internal official documents show.

Briefing material prepared for the department’s secretary general Kevin Cardiff last month states that the department warned over several years that the “over-emphasis on construction left the economy vulnerable to macroeconomic shocks”.

It also defends the department’s performance in failing to forecast the extent of the downturn, and points to similar failures by institutions such as the ESRI, Central Bank and the private sector to predict the magnitude of the slowdown.

The material was prepared for the secretary general ahead of his appearance before the Oireachtas Public Accounts Committee just over a month ago.

The contents of the documents have been released under the Freedom of Information Act in the same week Minister for Finance Brian Lenihan announced an external review of the department’s management of the financial crisis.

This review will “evaluate the systems, structures and procedures” used by the department in providing advice to the Minister and the Government.

While the department said that some commentators also warned about a property bubble, the documents state that “none of them predicted the magnitude of the slowdown, the speed of the impact or the impact on banks’ balance sheets”.

In the case of the ESRI, the department said that while the institute warned that the economy was over-dependent on construction, it concluded as recently as May 2008 of “the need for a large number of additional dwellings over the coming 15 years”.

It also points to the Central Bank’s performance, stating that while it warned that the share of residential investment was too large, its stress tests concluded that “Irish institutions were well-capitalised”.

Similarly, the department says that bank and stockbroker economists repeatedly concluded residential investment in Ireland was sustainable and prices were justified by fundamentals.

The department is also defensive about its record in economic forecasting. However, in 2008, for example, it forecast a deficit of €1.5 billion, while the actual deficit was some €13 billion. Its forecasts for 2009 were also overly optimistic.

The material states that economic forecasting is an “inherently uncertain process” and this uncertainty was heightened by the openness of the economy as well as structural changes in recent years.

The documents also state that the department’s forecasts were criticised for being overly cautious in the period leading up to 2007. It lists extracts from individual private sector commentators in NCB, Ulster Bank, AIB and Goodbody who felt its tax forecasts were too cautious.

Report by CARL O’BRIEN – Irish Times

Ireland Property – Daft Property – http://daftproperty.blogspot.com

Ireland’s Negative Equity Scourge…

Mortgage bid to unlock market could backfire…

NEGATIVE equity is the scourge of homeowners who bought their houses in the past few years.

By the end of this year, as many as one-in-three mortgage holders are expected to be in negative equity — where the value of their home has collapsed to such an extent that they owe their lender more than it is worth.

Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI) economist David Duffy made the estimate based on house prices having fallen by 30pc from the peak of the housing boom in 2007.

But most commentators say that house prices have fallen by around 50pc from the peak. In that case, the ESRI estimates that some 350,000 homeowners will end up in negative equity this year.

Being in negative equity means you cannot sell your house to move somewhere else. This is because you will still owe the bank more than the sale price of the home. Banks will not normally allow you to sell up in that situation.

This is why Ulster Bank and EBS Building Society are already offering limited negative-equity mortgages to their existing customers.

Now Bank of Ireland, Irish Nationwide Building Society and Permanent TSB are working on introducing their own negative-equity mortgages.

The idea is that these mortgages will allow those who have to move house to take the negative equity portion of the original mortgage on to a new mortgage when they move.

For instance, if someone originally borrowed €300,000 but their house is now only worth €250,000, they would be €50,000 in negative equity.

If this person needed to move to another part of the country for a job, or simply wanted to move home, they might be able to buy a new house for €250,000.

Their overall borrowing would still be €300,000 — with their €50,000 negative equity ported over to the new load.

Dangers

But the lenders insist that such products will be limited to homeowners who genuinely need to move house and have the ability to repay the new mortgage.

However, the potential of negative-equity mortgages to blow up in our faces is huge. What happens if house prices keep falling? And who is to say that they won’t?

Further property prices falls would mean that those availing of a negative-equity mortgage would end up even deeper in debt.

In such a situation, the borrower could be retired before they clear the new mortgage, assuming that they do not lose their jobs.

And any attempt by lenders to top up the existing mortgage would only add to heavily indebted homeowners’ problems. That will have to be resisted.

That is why the introduction of negative-equity mortgages is being closely monitored by Financial Regulator Matthew Elderfield and his staff.

The last thing the regulator or the taxpayer, who has so generously bailed out our foolish lenders, wants is to re-heat the burnt-out embers of the housing market.

Especially when we still do not know the full cost of sorting out our building bonfire.

Report by Charlie Weston – Irish Independent

Ireland Property – Daft Property – http://daftproperty.blogspot.com