The Foreclosure Crash is Starting | Housing Reset.
By Meet Kevin
Summary
## Key takeaways - **Foreclosure filings surge 19% year-over-year**: Foreclosure filings, including default notices, auctions, and repossessions, saw a 19% increase in October compared to the previous year. Florida, South Carolina, and Illinois reported the highest state-level filings. [00:04], [00:19] - **New construction homes underwater**: A significant percentage of new construction homes, particularly those originated by builders like Lenar Mortgage and Dr. Horton, are now underwater. This means homeowners owe more on their mortgage than the property is currently worth. [01:08], [01:27] - **Builder incentives mask declining values**: Homebuilders are using aggressive incentives, such as mortgage rates below 1% and financing for upgrades, to prop up prices in overbuilt markets. This can lead buyers to purchase homes at inflated prices, making them underwater shortly after closing. [03:48], [06:38] - **New construction a 'negative wedge' deal**: Buying new construction often results in a 'negative wedge,' where the purchase price, especially with financing, exceeds the immediate resale value. This strategy can leave buyers upside down, particularly if they need to sell or face job loss. [09:22], [09:47] - **Seek low new construction areas**: To avoid the 'foreclosure madness' associated with overbuilt markets, consider investing in areas with low new construction. These markets, often found in 'liberal or blue states,' tend to have more stable or increasing home prices due to limited supply. [09:56], [10:13]
Topics Covered
- Are new construction homes making buyers underwater?
- Overbuilt metros face price declines, unlike other regions.
- How homebuilders use incentives to prop up prices.
- New construction creates a 'negative wedge' for buyers.
- Foreclosed new construction offers great deals for investors.
Full Transcript
Persistent rise in foreclosures may be a
sign of cracks in the housing market.
There were just less than 37,000 US
properties with some type of foreclosure
filing in October. That's default
notices, scheduled auctions, or bank
repossessions. According to Adam, a
property data firm. That was 3% higher
than September and a 19% jump from
October of last year. And Florida, South
Carolina, and Illinois led in the nation
in state foreclosure filings. There are
now concerns about a real estate housing
crash in a very specific part of the
market and it's led by buyers who are
already heavily underwater.
This is scary because it brings us back
to the thoughts of the days of 2008 that
we thought were behind us where people
could borrow more than the home was
worth. And those ended in 2008 after the
crash or well so we thought. It turns
out home builders have figured out how
to get people underwater.
And I'm here to explain what's going on.
Listen to this. Of the roughly 28,300
FHA loans that Lenar Mortgage
originated, which is the mortgage
division of LAR Homes, a homebuilder,
over the 2-year period tracked in the
Ginnie Mays mortgage database, 27% of
them are now underwater. At Dr. Horton,
18% of those people are underwater.
So, why all of a sudden are people
underwater? And how do people get
underwater when they're buying new home
construction? This is scary and it's a
really important lesson for you as a
long-term investor. And something that I
mentioned this morning that I want to
reiterate here is folks, if there's one
thing you recall from this video is
write down a little sticky note. If you
ever see foreclosures in the long-term
future on new construction homes,
they're often really great deals to buy
because if homes are built in 2018 and
they get foreclosed in 2028, you've got
a 10year-old home, you usually don't
usually have usually, not always, some
builders suck, but usually don't have to
worry about things like the roof or the
foundation or the plumbing or the sewer
lines or whatever like you would in a
1950s home, which almost a hundred years
old, right? Instead, you could
potentially get a great deal for pennies
on the dollar, which is great for people
looking for opportunities.
Now, most of these we think are going to
be concentrated in areas of new
construction home building, which makes
sense. Sort of housing clusters they
call it. See, the Wall Street Journal
says the risk is that owners who paid an
overinflated price find will find
themselves underwater soon after the
sale closes or already do. Newly built
homes can be clustered in areas with
plenty of new supply, which exacerbates
the problem with if values fall. I've
said it a thousand times on the channel
and I'll say it again. When you get new
construction home builders gone wild,
like instead of girls gone wild, it's
new construction home builders gone
wild, you end up getting declines in
prices. And it's actually a feature of
capitalism. A feature of capitalism is
that when there's money to be made in
home sales or building homes or new
construction homes, what happens? Well,
you end up seeing a an over supply of
new construction and a decline in
prices. That's not true across most of
the nation. across most of the nation.
You could actually see that in 2025, not
only are home housing prices at the
highest level we've seen in the last
four years, but we're actually inlecting
up on home prices, which is insane. And
it's only when you go to those overbuilt
metros like Austin, Texas, that you
actually see that home prices are kind
of flat to 2023, but compared to 2022,
you're actually down a chunk. parts of
Texas and Florida. Home prices have
collapsed in part because of the
overbuilding of supply.
>> Florida, South Carolina, and Illinois
led in the nation in state foreclosure
filings. On a city level, Florida's
Tampa, Jacksonville, and Orlando had the
most filings with Now, wait a minute.
How can people actually end up buying
real estate and being upside down on it?
And this takes a little bit of an
explanation, but it's actually pretty
simple. So, I already wrote this out for
us to make it simple. Let's say you want
a three-bedroom, two bath house in the
1337 zip code. You look at homes, you
get preapproved, and everything's a
1960s,7s or 80 home, and you're like,
"Oh my gosh, old neighborhoods, smelly,
dated homes. You feel like you got to
remodel everything. They're all selling
for $450. That means for $450,000,
those are your comps. Three-bedroom, two
bath, call it 2,000 ft². Those are your
comps in that zip code. Then you go walk
into the LAR neighborhood. And the LAR
neighborhood neighborhood is basically
like a sexy girl pulling her top off
going, "Look at my package, bro." And
the package is really sexy. It's only
$50,000 more than all the comps in the
neighborhood, but we'll buy down your
interest rate to 2.99%
and we'll throw in some upgrades for
you. You get a quartz counter. You get a
quartz countertop. You get a quartz
countertop. Why? Because that's how the
homebuilders prop up the prices in the
neighborhood, which they have to do.
Think about it, folks. If you're selling
homes or that you're building, you build
them in phases. You build them in phases
because you can't afford to build five
phases of homes at once. Lenders or
construction lenders will actually give
you money for phase one. You build it
out, you sell it, and then you got to
show them that you sold phase one, so
you can actually start financing the
construction of phase two. This only
works if prices are going up $4.99,
you know, call it 509 for the next
phase, 519 for the next phase, 529, 539.
Well, how do they do this in a market
that's declining in new construction
neighborhoods, parts of Texas or
Florida, where you have this glut of
homes? How do they do this? Well, even
though market values might be declining,
what they do is they throw in more
incentives. Oh, these titties aren't
good enough for you at 2.99. How about
1% mortgages? We'll buy you down to a 1%
mortgage for a limited time only.
Seriously, you're literally starting to
see some of these things get pitched at
new construction homes because that's
how they can end up selling
properties. I kid you not. Look at this
realtor.com. Mortgages below 1%. They
exist, but only for those who buy before
the end of the year. I kid you not.
Pressure sales endofthe-year sales tap
tactics. Look at this. Dr. R. Horton,
the nation's largest home builder, has
introduced a mortgage incentive program
that drops the intro rate below 1% for
qualified home buyers only. Oh boy,
we're back to 2007, boys and girls. You
can now get a 1% mortgage. And how's
that for propping up phase 5 home
prices? Oh, but wait, then you go buy a
phase 5 property and then guess what
happens? Well, all of a sudden you go
into escrow and you're like, "Oh, I'm
going to finance even more upgrades. I'm
going to finance crown molding. I'm
going to finance new flooring. I'm going
to finance blinds. I'm going to finance
solar panels." Now, you buy a house for
550 to 500, you know, or even $600,000.
And then somebody's like, "Hey, you
know, what's this place going to be
worth uh after you buy it?" Well, much
like a new car, I hate to say it. You
end up walking out and guess what? all
the neighborhoods, all the houses in
that neighborhood are selling for
$450,000.
And so it's like, well crap, the new
construction
is all of a sudden now what? Way
overvalued and way overpriced. And this
is how you end up getting a lot of these
first-time home buyers or FHA home
buyers absolutely screwed. You rope them
in to these terrible deals that are
introductory financing motivating people
by, oh, you don't have to refinance or
you don't have to renovate the property.
You don't have to do anything. You could
just move in. It's so great. It's nice
and easy for you. And you wrote people
in with 3.5% down payments and
introductory loans. They finance
themselves to the to the, you know,
whatever max. And then guess what? Oopsy
dupsies. you're upside down and that
sucks. That's how foreclosures happen.
And it's not good because it's exactly
what's happening, especially in
overbuilt areas right now. People are
getting suckered in to what are bad
deals. Now, I'm not saying you shouldn't
buy a place with 3 and 12% down. I
actually think you can get a good deal
with 3 and 12% down. You just got to
make sure you buy a wedge deal. I talk
about that a lot on the channel. Quick
example, you buy a $450,000 home for
like $350,000 because it needs 50 grand
of work. then you're into it for four.
But you're into it for four in a $450
neighborhood. You have $50,000 of
buffer. It's new construction is
literally a negative wedge. So you are
literally upside down on new
construction. Uh most of the time,
yeah, if you're going to be for there
for the long term and you can afford it,
great. But I'm I typically tell home
buyers of new construction that you
generally pay a little bit above market
value. And if you get too crazy with
financing, it gets even worse. And
that's great if you can afford it, but
if you lose your job and you're upside
down, it sucks. Now, if you are going to
buy real estate, here are a couple
things to pay attention to. Number one,
try to find areas where there is low new
construction because it keeps you away
from this sort of foreclosure madness.
Think liberal or blue states. I know
half of you are going to hate that idea,
but the reality is they're so bad at
building new housing, prices just go up.
It's kind of this great irony because
usually politicians run on the idea of
affordable housing and they just make it
more unaffordable. Uh, and then of
course, while you don't have to find
something as advanced as what I'm about
to show you, I just want you to know
this is a deal I walked through
yesterday. These things hit the market
all of the time all across the country
and there are no shortages of deals. By
the way, I just like to be clear. What
you buy to get an positive wedge doesn't
have to look like this. This is a
hoarder property that I went through
with my little guy, and it's a disaster.
It needs a lot of love. Hoarder
properties aren't easy, but they can
make you money. But you don't have to
buy something like this where the poor
kiddo is like, "Bro, this is this is
insane, man." Right? It doesn't have to
be that extreme. I'll show you another
one because these properties come up all
of the time. I I run a business doing
this and I'm not trying to pitch you on
the business, but I run a business
where, you know, we buy properties like
this that other people don't want to buy
and and then I do my best to just sort
of teach and educate like why these
could be good deals. Like here's an
example of a hoarder house that had been
cleaned out. And unfortunately, well,
this was filmed with the meta glasses,
but unfortunately, so the framing is a
little weird, but unfortunately, because
this has been so filled up with junk,
you've got this mildew at the side of
the property here. You can see that at
the bottom few feet over here. So, this
is obviously a little bit advanced. You
know, there's a little bit of love to do
here or a little bit of work to do here.
I film it as I walk through the
property, I guess, on my iPhone or parts
of it. But anyway, uh I love the meta
glasses for exactly this sort of
purpose. But you go through these
properties and these are properties that
create fear for other people because
they're stinky and they're gross and
nobody wants to handle this. It doesn't
have to be this extreme. But the point
is there's no shortage of properties
that need love out there that can create
value for you as a home buyer or a new
investor or whatever. Uh and so I just
want to remind folks that when you do
that, you're providing a service for
people, right? You're taking a home that
nobody can safely live in and you're
turning it into a property that somebody
can safely live in. That's providing a
service. In this case, the vent hood was
split open inside there. So, all the
grease was spewing out when they turned
on the vent hood. Kind of wild.
Beautiful house though. Beautiful
neighborhood. A lot of potential over
here. And so, uh, yes. Yes. If you want
to learn more about what it is that we
do and you want to invest with us, you
can. Uh, you could go to househack.com
or reinvest.co.
That's the shirt I was wearing there.
Uh, and uh, this is my startup. And what
we do is we buy homes and we fix them
up. You can actually see all the homes
if you just click on little real estate
button. Well, you can see a lot of them.
We just bought 11 more, so we've got to
add, but you can kind of see where we
transform what's gross and make it nice.
And you can see these different examples
and estimates and stuff uh, in terms of
how we do these transitions. And so, we
think it's kind of cool. You can page
around there if you want. And if you
want to invest, you could always read
the information here, see what we're
doing with artificial intelligence, uh
the app that we're launching, see what
the investment is all about. And uh
check it out over at houseack.com or
reinvest.co. Make sure to read the
offering circular to understand all of
your risks because every investment
comes with risk and this video can't be
a solicitation. Thanks for watching.
We'll see you in the next one.
>> Why not advertise these things that you
told us here? I feel like nobody else
knows about this.
>> We'll we'll try a little advertising and
see how it goes.
>> Congratulations, man. You have done so
much. People love you. People look up to
you.
>> Kevin Papra there, financial analyst and
YouTuber. Meet Kevin. Always great to
get your take.
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