Our popular tour to surrounding communities in search of HELOC abuse continues in Huntington Beach. So far we have seen $3,367,500 HELOC Abuse from Hollywood, $5,000,000 HELOC abuse from Laguna Beach, $7,000,000 HELOC abuse in Newport Coast and 18 different properties in Huntington Beach. Today we will examine the sleepy beach community of San Clemente.
Asking Price: $798,000
Address: 121 W Avenida San Antonio San Clemente, CA 92672
Don't Worry Baby — The Beach Boys
Well its been building up inside of me
For oh I dont know how long
I dont know why
But I keep thinking
Somethings bound to go wrong
When you see all these people who took out so much money that they lost their homes, you have to wonder if there was a little voice inside quietly warning them things might turn out badly. It did.
I like San Clemente. In fact, if I do not end up buying in Irvine, I will buy in San Clemente. It is a beach town with a laid-back atmosphere. It is more relaxing than Irvine, although not as convenient. After the crash, you will get more for you money there. There is a great deal of toxic financing in San Clemente because there were many homes built there during the bubble in Forster Ranch, Marblehead, and Talega. Based on the toxic loans and the HELOC abuse I found there among long-term homeowners, I can safely say that San Clemente's housing market is going to get flattened.
When I look at the market in San Clemente, I am struck by the number of short sales. As a percentage of listings, it is much higher than the other cities I have looked at. When I last looked at the San Clemente market a few months ago, there were not this many short sales.
There are three types of listings in San Clemente: (1) short sales where the buyers bought in 2004 or later and paid too much, (2) short sales where the buyers bought before 2004 and abused their HELOCs and now they are underwater, and (3) the high-end WTF listing prices from people who do not yet realize they are underwater. My observation is that HELOC abusers are as common as late buyers in San Clemente. That is a much larger percentage than I have found in other communities.
There is HELOC abuse in the group of late buyers, but these people did not own long enough to do any real damage. There is HELOC abuse in the high-end WTF listings, but since they are not short sales, they are a bit harder to find. The HELOC abusers who bought before 2004 are the list below:
224 Via Alegre San Clemente, CA 92672 Price: $635,000, Paid $620,000, Debt $750,000
16 VIA PAQUETE San Clemente, CA 92673 Price: $790,000, Paid $717,000, Debt $845,000
505 Via El Risco San Clemente, CA 92673 Price: $949,000, Paid $693,000, Debt $1,230,350
201 Camino San Clemente San Clemente, CA 92672 Price: $365,000, Paid $235,000, Debt $350,000
2806 Bello Panorama San Clemente, CA 92673 Price: $495,000, Paid $370,000, Debt $654,300
9 Calle Merecida San Clemente, CA 92673 Price: $549,000, Paid $478,000, Debt 780,901
94 Via Onda San Clemente, CA 92673 Price: $674,900, Paid $485,000, Debt $920,000
1617 Vista Luna San Clemente, CA 92673 Price: $700,000, Paid $636,000, Debt $875,000
120 Avenida Algodon San Clemente, CA 92672 Price: $485,000, Paid $189,000, Debt $730,000
1002 Avenida De La Estrella San Clemente, CA 92672 Price: $633,650, Paid $575,500, Debt $1,035,000
239 Calle Neblina San Clemente, CA 92672 Price: $675,000, Paid $237,000, Debt $1,078,250
525 Calle Del Rito San Clemente, CA 92672 Price: $799,000, Paid $725,000, Debt $1,155,000
764 Calle Vallarta San Clemente, CA 92673 Price: $624,900, Paid $187,000, Debt $662,200
Assembling this partial list of HELOC abusers is not difficult. You could do it looking at Redfin. Look in your own city, and find properties purchased earlier than 2004 where the asking price is over the purchase price, but the property is listed as a short sale. There is only one way an owner can make a profit on the sale and owe more to the bank than the sales proceeds–HELOC abuse.
{book4}
Although high-end HELOC abuse is a bit harder to find because they are not listed as short sales, it is still quite common. Here is a sampling of high end HELOC abusers:
4027 Calle Lisa San Clemente, CA 92672 Price: $2,695,000
Recording Date: | 09/01/1993 | Sales Price: | $640,000 |
Loan Amount:
|
$512,000 |
Recording Date: | 08/29/1997 | Loan Amount: | $547,000 |
Recording Date: | 12/27/2001 | Loan Amount: | $400,050 Paid down the mortgage |
Recording Date: | 12/30/2002 | Loan Amount: | $600,000 |
Recording Date: | 12/11/2007 | Loan Amount: | $1,900,000 Option ARM |
314 S La Esperanza San Clemente, CA 92672: Price: $1,650,000
Recording Date: | 11/07/1996 | Sales Price: | $317,000 |
Loan Amount: | $370,000 |
Recording Date: | 12/08/1999 | Loan Amount: | $100,000 This was a HELOC |
Recording Date: | 01/06/2004 | Loan Amount: | $300,000 This was a HELOC |
Recording Date: | 03/13/2006 | Loan Amount: | $850,000 Refinance of first. Notice it was the sum of the previous two loans |
Recording Date: | 05/11/2006 | Loan Amount: | $350,000 New HELOC |
Recording Date: | 01/30/2008 | Loan Amount: | $1,400,000 |
4015 Calle Isabella San Clemente, CA 92672: Price: $1,595,000
Recording Date:05/17/1994 Sales Price: $353,000 Loan Amount: $372,000 — I think the sales price is incorrect on Redfin
Recording Date: | 11/04/2003 | Loan Amount: | $786,800 |
Recording Date: | 02/17/2005 | Loan Amount: | $150,000 This is a HELOC |
This is more typical of what I see; the owner doubled their mortgage while they owned the property, but they will probably still sell for a profit. This total debt on this property is between $786,800 and $936,800 depending on how much HELOC money they extracted. Either way they took out over half a million dollars in mortgage equity withdrawal.
600 Calle Tibidabo San Clemente, CA 92672: Price: $1,295,000
Recording Date: | 00/00/1989 | Sales Price: | $605,000 |
Recording Date: | 10/31/1997 | Loan Amount: | $480,000 |
Recording Date: | 10/31/1997 | Loan Amount: | $30,000 |
Recording Date: | 07/30/2001 | Loan Amount: | $535,000 |
Recording Date: | 04/02/2003 | Loan Amount: | $650,000 |
Recording Date: | 11/25/2003 | Loan Amount: | $43,000 HELOC |
Recording Date: | 08/16/2006 | Loan Amount: | $875,000 Option ARM |
Recording Date: | 05/07/2007 | Loan Amount: | $100,000 HELOC |
Recording Date: | 12/28/2007 | Loan Amount: | $10,000 Stand-alone second |
Today's featured property is a long-term HELOC abuser. Starting in 1998 this guy extracted almost a million dollars over a 9 year period.
Asking Price: $798,000
Income Requirement: $199,500
Downpayment Needed: $159,600
Monthly Equity Burn: $6,650
Purchase Price: $310,000
Purchase Date: 5/1/1996
Address: 121 W Avenida San Antonio San Clemente, CA 92672
Beds: | 3 |
Baths: | 2 |
Sq. Ft.: | 2,546 |
$/Sq. Ft.: | $313 |
Lot Size: | 5,200 Sq. Ft. |
Property Type: | Single Family Residence |
Style: | Other |
Stories: | 2 |
View: | Ocean, Peek-A-Boo |
Year Built: | 1979 |
Community: | San Clemente Southwest |
County: | Orange |
MLS#: | S509071 |
Source: | SoCalMLS |
Status: | Active |
On Redfin: | 585 days |
The realtor is not kidding about the Beach side of the 5 freeway…
You can see the stages of grief in this listing price; denial, fear and capitulation.
Date | Event | Price |
---|---|---|
Oct 01, 2008 | Relisted | — |
Sep 23, 2008 | Delisted | — |
Jun 04, 2008 | Price Changed | $798,000 |
May 07, 2008 | Price Changed | $799,000 |
Apr 02, 2008 | Price Changed | $995,000 |
Feb 01, 2008 | Price Changed | $1,099,000 |
Nov 22, 2007 | Price Changed | $1,199,000 |
Oct 13, 2007 | Listed | $1,299,000 |
As you might have surmised, I picked this property to profile because the HELOC abuse was large, consistent and obvious. Any lender who cared would have noticed the Ponzi Scheme borrowing and cut this guy off years ago.
- This property was purchased on 5/1/1996 for $310,000. The owner used a $279,000 first mortgage and a $31,000 downpayment.
- On 12/3/1998 he refinanced with a $341,000 first mortgage taking out his downpayment plus $31,000. First taste of kool aid.
- On 9/29/1999 he refinanced with a $368,000 first mortgage.
- On 10/17/2000 he opened a HELOC for $30,000.
- On 8/2/2001 he opened a HELOC for $50,000.
- On 6/18/2002 he refinanced with a $495,000 first mortgage.
- On 3/25/2003 he opened a HELOC for $242,000.
- On 6/7/2005 he refinanced with a $750,000 Option ARM.
- On 11/29/2005 he opened a HELOC for $150,000.
- On 2/9/2007 he opened a HELOC for $250,000.
- On 6/26/2007 he refinanced with a $980,000 first mortgage.
- On 6/26/2007 he also opened a HELOC for $140,000.
- Total property debt is $1,120,000
- Total mortgage equity withdrawal is $841,000 including is tiny downpayment.
Hard to believe it’s after 8 a.m. on Sat and not a single post about San Clemente. Suspect it’s the 3 day holiday.
We bought in S.C. in 1978, sold to our son in 1999 and have been following the market for several years assuming that prices will eventually resume normalcy at which time we’ll probably buy again. An example: 102 Vial Zapata: bought in 2002 for $730,000, now asking $995,000 a short sale with backup offers accepted (for about a month or more so far – suspect it will be back on the market like 90% of s.s.). Perfect fit for IR S.C. category 2 HELOC abusers. However, the $249 per sq.ft. price is substantially lower than most of the s.s. examples and approaching normalcy. My guess is that prices will eventually be under $200 p.s.ft. on a reasonable selection of homes not located within walking distance of the beach. We’ll probably pounce on something about then. The realtors we’ve talked to don’t think prices will go that low – anybody care to hazard a guess?
An aside: I understand that banks don’t rent out REOs. The realtors comment on one of today’s s.s. examples shows why:
“Great tenants would like to buy, and very private, so showing a tad difficult.”
One caveat on S.C. If you can see the freeway from any of the hillside views, you can hear it. Might be bothersome to some, particularly at night if you sleep with windows or sliders open.
Talega residents won’t have to be concerned about noise from the currently defunct attempted extension of the 241 tollroad (Foothill South Fwy) – at least for now. And the traffic congestion is significant through all of S.C. If you’re thinking about going to Irvine, particularly on weekends, pack a lunch!
This property is very close to I5, is’nt it? How much would you buy back this one since your are familiar with SC?
Not over $200 p.s.ft. and only if it was in excellent condition. That offer would very likely be rejected out of hand. Wouldn’t buy, however, because of fwy noise.
For comparison, I paid $105K in 1978 for a 3br/2.5ba condo with ocean view just over a mile inland on hillside and sold in 1999 for $200k to our son (a fair price at the time). It would probably bring about $525-$625 now depending on how badly someone wanted the floorplan (biggest and few of them) and view (about the same as this current 2br listing on redfin:
http://www.redfin.com/CA/San-Clemente/176-Avenida-Baja-92672/home/4992858
S.C. prices have been just as slow to decline as Irvine and often as unrealistic but, like Irvine, they’re dropping.
I neglected to mention that fwy noise is also audible anywhere on the hillside even if you don’t have a view. (It diminishes rapidly on the ocean side of the fwy because of the onshore breezes). It only disturbed me in the evenings – could not sleep comfortably with sliders or windows open facing ocean (for breeze in summer) due to it. It’s 24/7 and worse now.
And there were at least 6 weeks a year when a/c was needed, particularly during Santa Ana conditions which lasted about 5 days each time. Now I think it’s more. I wouldn’t be without a/c if I lived there year-round (perhaps a portable unit for the bedroom at night and l/r daytime).
Unfortunately, all the LA and O.C. traffic going to San Diego and vice versa has only one road – I5. It is very busy on weekends. Weekdays are no fun either. There will have to be some construction of new (toll?) roads to accomodate it. I think the recently nixed 241 extension will be revived in some fashion when the traffic becomes unbearable in a few more years.
I once looked at a house in San Clemente on a street called Via Quieto. It backed to the 5 freeway!
I have a good friend in San Clemente who insisted until a couple of months ago that prices in the good neighborhoods would not go down. I had been warning him for over 3 years.
He owns a lot of rental real estate. He also took out HELOCs on a couple of them in early 2008 to maintain liquidity, i.e., he wanted to make sure he got the equity out before the offers disappeared. He is likely to remain current on his loans.
Do you remember a 1965 surfing movie by Bruce Brown called “The Endless Summer”? I have a friend who built a home decades ago off Ortega highway. He said that Mr. Brown had purchased substantial amounts of land along Ortega around that time and subsequently slowly sold them off in smaller parcels. Timing is everything!
What I don’t understand is why all of these people who took out hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of HELOC money didn’t just set some of it aside to help pay the mortgage for a few years. I guess if they were responsible enough to plan ahead for such a thing, they wouldn’t have ended up defaulting as soon as their teaser rate payments ended.
Many people did that. Unfortunately, that is still an unsustainable Ponzi Scheme, and prices will not rise to bail them out.
Depends on what they did with the money. If they bought overpriced real estate, they doubled down on a bubble.
If they bought stocks, they lost about the same amount.
If they bought high grade bonds that weren’t MBS or CDS, they didn’t make a ton of money, but they didn’t lose much either.
If they started a profitable business, they may have done pretty well.
If they sent kids to college, the results are uncertain.
That is one ugly house….
Note to self….
Buy more gold bullion on Monday.
Seriously…is this making anybody else uncomfortable?
IR…if you get a chance…I’ll bet you dinner that the Ahmanson mansion in Hancock Park might be an interesting one.
401 S. Hudson 90020
I heard (from a reliable source) that the owner turned down an offer from Madonna a few years ago.
Lots of them are making money in my book. Simple math:
original purchase price < current sale price Loan abuse is another matter. What happened to the cash? Will the bank's go after them or just bill the Feds, who will pass the bill to taxpayer? Options: (trustee sale with quick foreclosure without recourse vs. judicial foreclosure-with possible lien against other assess), I think the banks will go with the former and stick the bill to the taxpayers. The latter takes too much time and collecting requires work. Why work when you can get money without working or risk? Who needs the Ponzi scheme when the govt will make up the difference?
Is it still considered HELOC abuse if the property is sold for a profit? Taking those loans is definitely a risky maneuver. A the short sales are really unforgivable. But if they manage to get out from under the property without stiffing the lender I’m not sure it should be called abuse.
It does depend on how you define abuse. I suppose you could call adding to a mortgage balance and risking a home “incredibly stupid use” if that sounds better.
Your query is somewhat revealing. The idea that there is a legitimate “use” of a HELOC other than perhaps property improvement shows just how deeply embedded personal Ponzi scheme financing is in our culture.
It is like credit cards. The only sane use of credit cards is to pay the balance off each month. Carrying a revolving balance–financing consumption–is extremely foolish, but some would just call that “use.”
IR,
Even that’s about to change. Prudent savers with good credit are once again being tapped to pay for the foolish credit card revolvers. “Deadbeats” are what collection agents call us who pay our balances off monthly and get airline miles or cash back for card purchases. For that privilege under the new law that the bank lobby wrote, we get to pay fees to use those cards starting next year after having our credit lines cut because the trillions we bailed out the “too big to fail” outfits with wasn’t enough for the poor things to feel comfortable lending us back our own tax dollars. Oh, slightly OT, but our bond buddy Bill Gross says the US and the UK are about to lose their AAA credit rating for the first time ever. But “the bottom is in.” Wasn’t it Seinfeld, or George, that said “it’s not a lie if you believe it.”
The abuse is when the is a walking away with money in the pocket.
Say:
Purchase price: 400,000
Purchase loan: 399,000
HELOC loan: 200,000
short at: 450,000
Or the “Owner” walks away with $150,000 loan forgiving or possible cash in pocket. That $150,000 might even be tax-free (depends on date of forgiven). Taxpayer is billed ~$200,000 ($150,000 for loan default and $50,000 for RE and Bank late fees). The HELOC abuser / “owner” is now a victim.
I know of two that gave back the keys (on with no money for 6 M) and other other had to bring some money to the short closing. They can’t get a home loan for 2 years, but credit is good enough for cars on credit.
I was helping the economy đ
Sorry for the late post thrifty.
These people make me want to vomit.
There, I said it … I feel better now.
Very interesting post on SC. I never understood why everyone here is so obsessed with Irvine. If you add Aliso, Laguna Niguel, San Juan and SC to your roster you get 5-10 times the inventory of only looking in Irvine and a better chance for a good deal. You can also be closer to the beach. If you work in Irvine you can take the 73 and get there in 15-20 minutes for $200 a month.
Here is a great article on knife catchers in Phoenix.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/24/business/24phoenix.html?_r=1&hp;=&pagewanted=all
This quote summarizes the attitude of most buyers: âYou need to buy when thereâs blood in the streets,â he said with a shrug. âEven if itâs your own blood.â
Apologies as this is OT, it’s continued from the previous thread but IMHO it’s important so here goes – (IR, please feel free to delete this as it’s your (marvelous) blog. (about some ugly $hit that affects us all))
I wrote – “It wasnât just the home âownersâ who stole the money from us, the banks & mortgage brokers got hefty fees for their âservicesâ and the realtors got their their 6% as well⌔
AZDavidPhx responded – “I am calling out fauxowners who are squatting after defaulting on their mortgages.
It is (and should be to you) just as offensive as AIG throwing parties after getting bailout cash.
These pigs on the other side of the spectrum donât get a free pass. These mother-fers were part of a two-person tango.
If this pig mailed back the keys after defaulting then I would chalk it up to another gambler biting the dust. But no, she sat in the place stuffing herself and taking a dump at everyone elseâs expense for two years.
This is B.S. You should be outraged. But hey, if you want to go the âallâs fair ho ho ho hah hah hahâ and take to morals down a notch then who am I to stand in the way. What do I care? Letâs all get naked and go streaking through the local elementary school everyone – who are THEY to JUDGE US!”
& here’s why I posted this:
Yes, I blame all parties in this mess, those that ‘bought’ & those that ‘sold’, but my major beef is with those that ‘sold’. Why? Because it’s those that ‘sold’ these bogus mortgages & loans who knew what they were doing was fraudulent at the time they were doing it yet did it anyway because they knew they would get their cut in any case, knowing full well it was their client/(prey) and some lending institution somewhere that would get left holding the bag (& ultimately, responsible taxpayers aka chumps like many of the readers of this blog & myself).
John Q. Public sees his neighbors make off like bandits w/their HELOC $. His mailbox is full of similar offers. Why should his neighbors’ houses ‘earn their keep’ & not his? Yeah, right, he should have known better, BUT, it’s the bank officers, the mortgage brokers, the realtors, they’re the ones who get paid the big bucks TO KNOW THIS STUFF yet they pimped these fraudulent products right down the line. Hate the homeloser all you want to, sir, but if you don’t first & foremost target those few with the power to have made it all happen in the first place, you’re both blaming the victims and setting the stage for the next bankster ripoff of “We, the people”. Priorities, man, priorities!
How many people in Irvine don’t own the land their homes are built on?…and don’t even know they don’t own the land?
If they don’t own the land, then they would most likely be paying a lease on a regular basis (monthly, quarterly, yearly) by separate check. Can’t imagine an owner not having been advised at the time of purchase that the land (or their share of commonly owned property in a condo complex) is not being sold with the structure.
Uh… All of them? I’m not an Irvine expert, but the Irvine Company owns all the land there, right?
I had no idea that the Irvine Co still owned the residential land. I assumed it owned and leased the commercial land (apts, business locations, etc). And that it had sold the land with the master planned communities such as Irvine. In any event, I think the residential sales docs must stipulate that the company still owns the land.
Interestingly, Palm Springs is laid out like a checkerboard with Indian ownership of every other square mile except the acreage sold off piecemeal. This has resulted in some homes being owned (fee simple) and others being built on leased land. Like homes on leased land are usually cheaper since the land is leased and not part of the purchase. After 50 yrs the land and all structures on it reverts back to the Indian owners. Wonder if all the homes in Irvine revert back to the Irvine Co after a given period?