Mortgages could “go Green”

Among signs of a greening in U.S. real estate, a major private mortgage-insurance company plans to jump in with cost savings for energy conservers, already a practice in Canada.

Nation’s Housing

WASHINGTON — For the growing numbers of home purchasers who care about energy efficiency, it’s the ultimate “green” goal: Lenders should recognize the net savings that energy improvements provide to property owners and take them into account when they underwrite and set the fees for mortgages.

Appraisers should also recognize the added value.

The rationale: Owners of homes that reduce energy use pay lower utility bills than owners of energy guzzlers, so why not factor these out-of-pocket savings into household debt-to-income ratios and appraised valuations?

This might permit larger mortgage amounts for energy-efficient homes and help qualify more first-time buyers for loans.

Bipartisan legislation is pending in the Senate — the Sensible Accounting to Value Energy (SAVE) Act — that would require Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, the Federal Housing Administration and other federal mortgage players to revise their rules to better recognize and reward energy savings.

More than 125 local Realtor multiple-listing services across the country are helping out by including so-called “green fields” in their online listing information.

The green fields allow sellers, buyers, realty agents and appraisers to describe energy improvements or special certifications that a property offers, such as Energy Star appliances.

Thousands of appraisers are undergoing “green valuation” training, and the country’s largest association in that field, the Appraisal Institute, has created a comprehensive “green addendum” that can be used to translate energy-conservation improvements into higher property valuations.

But there’s just been another milestone on the way to seeing green in real estate: A major American private mortgage-insurance company plans to jump into green lending and is gearing up to offer a version of what it already provides to buyers in Canada — cost savings to energy conservers.

Adam Johnston, chief appraiser for Genworth Mortgage Insurance, says his company is determined to incorporate energy savings and green valuations into its underwriting.

This is becoming more feasible, he said, because of advances such as the green appraisal addendum, more accurate MLS listing data, and growing acceptance of energy-efficiency standards for homes.

In Canada, Genworth offers buyers a 10 percent “energy-efficient refund” of their mortgage insurance premiums, a break on debt-to-income ratio calculations in underwriting, and online access to discounts on a wide variety of commonly purchased household items.

Here’s an example. On a $300,000 mortgage with a 5 percent down payment, the insurance premium comes to $8,250. You pay that if you’re buying a house that doesn’t qualify on energy-conservation standards.

But if the home you’re buying meets national or provincial energy-efficiency guidelines, you may qualify for an $825 refund and have your monthly savings on heating factored into your debt-service ratios.

Your lender might also approve you for a larger mortgage amount if you need it.

To get the benefits on an existing property, the house must be certified as either 20 percent more efficient than Canada’s Model National Energy Code for Buildings, or 5 percent more efficient than any applicable provincial standards, whichever is greater.

In an interview, Johnston said that while there’s no specific starting date yet for Genworth to begin offering mortgage-insurance breaks on green-certified homes, it’s coming.

By necessity, insurers such as Genworth are highly sensitive to a variety of borrower risk factors, and now they have statistical evidence that people who buy homes with significant energy-saving components present lower risks for lenders and insurers.

A national study tracking payments on 71,000 home loans found that mortgages on energy-efficient properties are 32 percent less likely to default.

Funded by the Institute for Market Transformation and conducted by researchers at the University of North Carolina, the study controlled for other factors that might explain payment performance, including income, home values, credit scores and local utility costs.

Other, subtler factors could be at work — for example, are buyers who care about energy conservation and utility payments inherently more likely to care about keeping current on their mortgage? Who knows?

Bottom line: Though this country is years behind Canada in recognizing and valuing home-energy efficiency, there are now determined efforts under way in the appraisal, lending, building and realty brokerage industries — even in Congress — to catch up, sooner rather than later.

~ by Ken Harney, Seattle Times

Seattle Market Review

MARKET HIGHLIGHTS

Labor Market: Hiring Demand in Seattle’s Silicon Forest Grows Tall
Retail Market: Haggen closing Top Food grocery stores in Kent, Auburn, Yakima
Regional Development: Major redevelopment planned for Rainier Square in downtown Seattle
Travel: Cruise Industry Publication Lauds Port of Seattle
Economy: Boeing’s economic impact on state estimated at $70B
Real Estate Market: Seattle home prices rise again

Area Stores Opening 
• New Seattle restaurant Westward takes a different approach
• Ballard Bridge Cafe opens for breakfast and lunch (Seattle)
• B & E Meats & Seafood hosts weekend-long grand opening (Newcastle)Area Stores Moving/Renovation/Other 
• Tommy Bahama moving headquarters to new Seattle buildingArea Stores Closing
• Haggen closing Top Food grocery stores in Kent, Auburn, Yakima

King County was tops for wage growth among nation’s 10 biggest: King County posted the highest wage growth among the nation’s   10 largest counties in the first quarter, data released Thursday by the   Bureau of Labor Statistics show. Average weekly wages in King rose 1.6 percent from a year earlier to $1,288 for the period ended   March 31, led by solid growth in the professional and business-services sector. King County, which ranks as the ninth-largest job market nationwide, was followed by Miami-Dade, Fla., where average weekly wages rose 0.9 percent to $912.
Source: The Seattle Times, September 26, 2013 http://seattletimes.com/html/businesstechnology/2021906474_kingemploymentxml.html
Best cheap U.S. restaurants? Seattle has five: Of the 80 U.S. restaurants listed in a new listing of cheap places to eat, five are in Seattle. Online restaurant guide Urbanspoon compiled the “Best Cheap Eats in the U.S.” list, which were restaurants that “received the most positive reviews from professional food critics, bloggers, and the Urbanspoon community of diners over the past 12 months.” According to Urbanspoon, the five best cheap restaurants in Seattle are:
1) Paseo — 4225 Fremont Ave. N
2) Bakery Nouveau — 4737 California Ave. SW;
3) Red Mill Burgers — 312 N 67th St.
4) Salumi — 309 3rd Ave. S;
5) Honey Hole Sandwiches — 703 E. Pike St.
Source: Puget Sound Business Journal, October 10, 2013 http://www.bizjournals.com/seattle/morning_call/2013/10/best-cheap-us-restaurants-seattle.html?ana=e_sea_rdup&s=newsletter&ed=2013-10-10
The Seattle area has second-highest salaries for software engineers: The Seattle area has the second-highest salaries for software engineers in the country, according to employer review site Glassdoor. This region’s engineers make an average of $103,196 per year, and three of the 25 highest-paying companies are based in the Puget Sound region, according to a report released Thursday by the Sausalito, Calif.-based employment salary and review site.
Source: Puget Sound Business Journal, October 17, 2013 http://www.bizjournals.com/seattle/blog/techflash/2013/10/seattle-has-second-highest-salaries.html?ana=RSS&s=article_search
Bellevue named one of the best places to live in the U.S.: Bellevue placed twelfth on a list of   the “Top 100 Best Places To Live,” a ranking of small to mid-sized U.S. cities compiled by the website Livability.com. The rankings, released on Wednesday, were developed for Livability.com by the University of Toronto’s Martin Prosperity Institute. Researchers studied 1,200 U.S. cities with populations of 20,000 to 350,000. The cities were evaluated in eight categories: economics, housing, amenities, infrastructure, demographics, social and civic capital, education and healthcare.
Source: The Seattle Times, October 16, 2013
http://blogs.seattletimes.com/fyi-guy/2013/10/16/bellevue-named-of-the-best-places-to-live-in-the-u-s/

To view the entire article by Steve Fuller, click here

 

King Co median price up 15% over year ago

The pattern was repeated in Snohomish and Pierce counties: Median prices were $286,250 in  Snohomish and $222,000 in Pierce, with double-digit appreciation over the year, according to the  Multiple Listing Service.

The median price of single-family homes sold in King County last month rose to $426,000, a 15 percent increase over the year.

After a remarkable frenzy of home buying in early summer sent the median price to $434,000 in July, the highest level in five years, October’s activity showed a more balanced market, with more inventory for sale.

Buyers closed on 2,187 homes, 10 percent more than in the previous October, the Northwest Multiple Listing Service (MLS) reported Tuesday.

While extremely tight inventory drove bidding wars in spring, October was the first time this year that inventory of single family homes was higher than a year earlier. In King County, there were 4,575 single family homes listed, 6 percent more than a year earlier. In the condominium market, there were 1,133 units listed, 8 percent more than a year ago.

The Eastside, as usual, had the highest median price in King County: It was $575,377, up 14 percent from a year ago. Southwest King County had the lowest median price at $240,000, about 7 percent higher over the year.

The median price was $286,250 in Snohomish County and $222,000 in Pierce County, with double-digit appreciation over the year, according to the MLS.

Pending sales slipped to 2,579, down almost 4 percent from a year earlier, perhaps related to the federal government’s partial shutdown from Oct. 1-16. Pending sales are where the shutdown’s impact would have shown up, but it’s hard to tease that out from other possible causes, said Glenn Crellin, associate director of research at the Runstad Center for Real Estate Studies at the University of Washington.

“I’m very encouraged by the fact that listings are increasing gradually,” he said. Regionally, inventory remains tight: King, Snohomish and Pierce counties all have less than three months’ supply, the MLS reported.

A balanced market generally has enough supply for four to six months. “It still looks like a potential housing shortage in Puget Sound come 2015 if building doesn’t increase,” Dick Beeson, principal managing broker for RE/MAX Professionals in Tacoma, said in a statement. Mike Gain, president and CEO of Prudential Northwest Realty Associates, said the shutdown “definitely hurt consumer  confidence” and caused would-be buyers to pause.

~Sanjay Bhatt, Seattle Times