house of cards part 2: the mortgage market folds

8
House of Cards A five-part series by the Steamboat Pilot & Today | Aug. 7, 2009 WWW.STEAMBOATPILOT.COM/HOUSEOFCARDS The rise and fall of Routt County’s real estate economy Part 2: The mortgage market folds

Upload: steamboat-pilot-today

Post on 07-Mar-2016

218 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

The rise and fall of Routt County’ s real estate economy A five-part series by the Steamboat Pilot & Today | Aug. 7, 2009 WWW.STEAMBOATPILOT.COM/HOUSEOFCARDS

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: House of Cards Part 2: The mortgage market folds

House of Cards♦ ♦

A five-part series by the Steamboat Pilot & Today | Aug. 7, 2009 WWW.STEAMBOATPILOT.COM/HOUSEOFCARDS

The rise and fall of Routt County’s real estate economy

Part 2: The mortgage market folds

Page 2: House of Cards Part 2: The mortgage market folds

House of Cards♦ ♦

Steamboat goes all in

Retiring baby boomers helped fuel the demand that led to record real estate sales in the mid-2000s. But when the market went upside-down, the impacts were widespread.

Story by Tom Ross

Photos by Matt Stensland

Part 2 — Today

The national mortgage meltdown hit hard locally, as homeowners and business-people struggled to face a new reality of vastly decreased values.

Story by Brandon Gee

Photos byJohn F. Russell

Part 3 — Aug. 14

Since the market’s plunge knocked the wind out of the work force, businesses have been forced to change and shrink — and some have closed their doors.

Story by Blythe Terrell

Photos by Joel Reichenberger

Part 4 — Aug. 21

Declining tax revenues have hit local governments hard, and falling home prices and a tighter lending market are hurting affordable housing ini-tiatives, as well.

Story byZach Fridell

Photos by Matt Stensland

The rise and fall of Routt County’s real estate economyA five-part series by the Steamboat Pilot & Today | WWW.STEAMBOATPILOT.COM/HOUSEOFCARDS

On the coverMain photo: Homeowner Kathy Woodford holds 1-year-old Kira while watering the front yard of her Red Hawk Village home in Stagecoach. Kathy and her husband, Scott, bought the home at the top of the market, and have watched as prices of other homes in the community have dropped.

1. Elizabeth “E.A.” Black

2. Mike Larson

3. Ed Allbright

4. Jeremy MacGray

Photos by John F. Russell/Staff Design by Christopher Woytko/Staff

Part 5 — Aug. 28

Everyone has an opinion about the future of housing in Routt County as interested players in the real estate busi-ness look for footing in a shift-ing landscape.

Story by Margaret Hair

Photos byJohn F. Russell

1

2

3

4

Page 3: House of Cards Part 2: The mortgage market folds

A Supplement to the Steamboat Pilot & Today Friday, August 7, 2009 | 3House of Cards

Erik Griepentrog doesn’t take bagels to work on Mondays anymore.

For Griepentrog, it is one of many steps

— others include selling a car and cutting back on child care expenses — he and his family have taken in the past year to curb spending.

For his employees, those who are still left, it’s a small yet poi-gnant reminder of the status of the economy, the condition of their company and the precarious state of their jobs.

Construction valuation through June 2009 was just $43.53 mil-lion, down 80 percent from the $208 million Routt County saw through June 2008, according to the Regional Building Department. That kind of drop is terrible news for designers and engineers like Griepentrog, owner of Landmark Consultants, a surveying and civil engineering company.

Griepentrog is thankful for the work he has and that his business is only down half that much, at 40 per-cent. There’s no work in the pipeline, however, and Griepentrog is prepar-ing for a grim winter, the season that is usually his busiest.

“The problem is we’re doing work two years old. We’re still eating off our plate. We’re not getting a second course,” Griepentrog said. “I think it’s going to be tough for a little while. I don’t worry about making it, though. I worry about other people, like our employees. … We’ve got another year or two years of getting worse before it gets better.”

Griepentrog has cut his staff in half and, more recently, cut hours to four days a week and

instructed his employees to only come into work when they have work to do, in an effort to avoid shedding more jobs. He was surprised with the way his employees took the changes.

“The only backlash was people who asked, ‘Why didn’t you do that all along?’ The reality now is there’s nowhere for them to go,” said Griepentrog, who said one of his for-mer employees applied for a new job along with 250 other people. “They’re saying, ‘This is better than nothing.’”

This is a different picture from just a few years ago, when construc-tion was the county’s largest creator of jobs and real estate sales volume surged to a record $1.58 billion in 2007. Griepentrog was advertising as far as the Midwest in an effort to hire enough people to handle all the work, which wasn’t just coming from the pri-vate sector. Griepentrog listed the new Soda Creek Elementary School, the expansion and remodel of Bud Werner Memorial Library, the Routt County Justice Center and new Steamboat Springs Community Center as public construction projects that were built in a very short period of time.

“If you’re in public sector work, you really enjoyed a boom there,” Griepentrog said. “It just shows the growth and the activity in this area was just crazy. … It was more, ‘How the heck do we get this done,’ as opposed to ‘Oh boy, what are we going to do this week?’”

As the rest of the country and state started to show signs of the recession, Steamboat stayed resilient. Although foreclosure filings hit a record high nationwide and jumped by 40 percent in Colorado in 2007, they actually decreased

by more than 10 percent in Routt County. But inevitably, things fell apart, shak-

ing the foundations of life in Northwest Colorado. The Steamboat Springs market managed just $31.8 million in sales volume in the first quarter of 2009, according to data compiled by the Rocky Mountain Resort Alliance, down from $118 million in the first quarter of 2008 and $190.3 million in the first quarter of 2007. Through July of this year, there have been 99 foreclosure fil-ings in Routt County. The pace of fore-closures in Routt County is about three times that of 2008, when there were just 55 filings for the entire year.

“Just a couple years ago it was so hard for Erik to get quality employees,” Griepentrog’s wife, Lori said. “He spent all that time getting these good, quality people here and then he just has to say, ‘Good luck.’”

Mortgage madness

The Griepentrogs are far from the only family suffering from the local housing market’s fall from

grace.Scott Woodford said he and his

wife, Kathy, probably owe more money

on their mortgage than their house is worth. The house is in the Red Hawk Village subdivision in Stagecoach. The Woodfords, who have three young children, paid $430,000 for the 1,800-square-foot home in July 2007 — a price inflated by Front Range investors who bought homes in the neighbor-hood for speculative purposes and later were unable to make their payments. Some Red Hawk homes are now selling for less than $300,000.

Scott Woodford said the initial plan was for the family to stay in Red Hawk Village for four to five years before tak-ing the next step up the housing ladder.

“I just imagine with what’s hap-pened it’s going to take a little longer than we originally thought,” said Scott Woodford, who also said the family was able to sell their townhouse at the height of the market. “You win some, you lose some, I guess.”

Central to all these problems, and to the recession of the global economy in general, is the American home mort-gage industry. Saying the mortgage industry is in flux right now is like say-ing the Yampa River flows a little bit in May. The statement fails to capture

Story by Brandon Gee | Photos by John F. Russell

Adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM): A mortgage loan with an interest rate that can change at any time, usually in response to the market or Treasury Bill rates. These types of loans usually start off with a lower interest rate comparable to a fixed-rate mortgage.

Foreclosure: The legal process by which a property may be sold and the proceeds of the sale applied to the mortgage debt. A foreclosure occurs when the loan becomes delinquent because payments have not been made or when the borrower is in default for a reason other than the fail-ure to make timely mortgage payments.

For more: For more about House of Cards Part 2: The mortgage market folds, visit the Steamboat Pilot & Today’s Web site at www.steamboatpilot.com/houseofcards.

JOHN F. RUSSELL/STAFF

Erik Griepentrog, owner of Landmark Consultants, holds his oldest son, Connor, while he sits at the dinner table with his wife, Lori, and youngest son, Casey. The economy has hit home for the Griepentrogs, who have had to cut back at the office and around the house.

Page 4: House of Cards Part 2: The mortgage market folds

4 | Friday, August 7, 2009 A Supplement to the Steamboat Pilot & Today House of Cards

the magnitude of the situation.The uncertainty has led some to

leave the industry altogether. Mike Larson left his position as vice presi-dent of Mountain Valley Bank at the end of 2008 to play the markets. Others, like Kathy Arce of Phoenix Resources Mortgage in Steamboat, have supple-mented their incomes with extra work.

“I have time,” Arce said. “I have lots of time.”

To fill the hours, Arce has become an independent contractor for the gourmet foods direct-sales company Tastefully Simple. Her day job has been anything but.

Ed Allbright, of Columbine Mortgage in Steamboat, says selling a mortgage is like selling a handy but dangerous piece of equipment.

“Any loan you do is like a chain saw. It can cut a lot of wood if used prop-erly,” Allbright said. “It’s a great tool if you understand how they can help you and how they can hurt you.”

For the better part of this decade, there was a fire sale on chain saws in the form of products such as adjust-able-rate, interest-only, no-documen-tation and subprime mortgages with fewer safety features than the tradition-al 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage — the safest chainsaw of them all.

A variety of factors led to the pro-liferation of these products. Larson recalled the mood of local Realtors as the market effects of Sept. 11 emerged.

“You’ve never seen such long faces. It was an instant high level of uncertainty that fairly quickly, late that fall, began to rotate into real estate as a safe haven.”

The local market dipped a bit that year, Larson said, but that slowdown was followed by a record year in 2002.

Buoyed by a healthy economy, low interest rates and high levels of con-sumer confidence, real estate values continued to surge in the early part of this decade. That attracted developers, speculators, second-home owners and regular folks to the market like never before. Locally, Intrawest’s purchase of the Steamboat Ski Area and other major investments by deep-pocketed, out-of-town developers fed the fire.

“Steamboat was an immediate, instant beneficiary of that dynamic,” Larson said. “It fed on itself. … It’s unbelievable how we went from $200 million (in annual total sales volume) to more than $1 billion.”

With values increasing, lenders were more comfortable lending money to people who had been unable to bor-row in the past because they would be able to tap into the equity in their home if they ran into trouble. Lenders also began to make widely available “creative” financing tools previously reserved for wealthy borrowers looking for flexibility.

“We had a very generous supply of debt or borrowing out there (so) that when the job market shifted and the economy shifted, people are struggling to figure out how to pay it,” said John Kerst, director of business devel-

Following the mortgage trailHow modern mortgage practices affected the housing market meltdown

Markets on the riseA healthy economy and low interest rates increase consumer confidence in the early part of the century and push real estate values up. Skyrocketing prices lured real estate specula-tors and developers, which further increased demand and put upward pressure on prices.

Easy lendingLooking to get in on the action, residents go to their local mortgage broker or bank to obtain a mortgage. During the housing market boom, they meet with great success. With values increasing, lenders are more comfort-able lending money to people who had been unable to borrow in the past because borrowers will be able to tap into the equity in their home if they run into trouble. Nationwide, home ownership rates surge to a record 69 percent in 2004.

“The more liberal the loan, the more house you

could buy. As prices go up, that works beautifully. But once values go down,

that whipsaws on you. Overleverage became the

enemy.”

Mike LarsonFormer vice president

of Mountain Valley Bank

“When you have a customer who is asking for that particular program and it’s available to me from the lenders, we sold the product. … Let’s face it: If they don’t get it from me, they knew they could get it from the broker down the street.”

Kathy ArcePhoenix Resources Mortgage broker

“I think any intelligent analysis of the market would say 30 percent

gains year to year were not sustainable,

regardless of any world or national

trends.”

David Baldinger Jr.Managing broker at

Steamboat Village Brokers

“Any loan you do is like a chainsaw. It can cut a lot of wood if used properly. It’s a great tool if you understand how they can help you and how they can hurt you.”

Ed AllbrightBroker for Columbine Mortgage in Steamboat

“We had a very generous supply of debt

or borrowing out there (so) that when the job market shifted and the

economy shifted, people are struggling to figure

out how to pay it.”

John KerstDirector of business development

at Yampa Valley Bank

“We definitely don’t look at it as a bust. We’ll acknowledge that the market is slower than we’d like. … There was a pretty solid demand until this financing hiccup came about. … It will just take some time. It’s going to cost us more.”

Mark ScullyDeveloper with Green Courte Partners

Continued from page 3

Page 5: House of Cards Part 2: The mortgage market folds

A Supplement to the Steamboat Pilot & Today Friday, August 7, 2009 | 5House of Cards

Housing bubble burstsThe bubble bursts. Housing prices flatten and ultimately fall. In 2007 and 2008, $636 billion in adjustable-rate mortgages — $367 billion of which are subprime — reset to higher inter-est rates. Many homeowners counting on appreciation are unable to refinance their loans and can no longer make their payments. Delinquencies and foreclosures surge.

Lending tightensThe money flowing into mortgage-backed securities decreases. Financial institutions suffer huge losses as they are forced to shore up the decreased value of the securities. Many institu-tions and mortgage companies go bankrupt. The rest have less money to lend and dramatically increase lending standards.

Market takes on risksIndividual mortgages are bundled together and pieces of the bundle are sold to investors. The investments are known as mortgage-backed securities. While the bundle includes risky loans, the securities are given good credit ratings. This, combined with their high rate of return, makes the securities extremely popular. Regulators exercise little control over the booming mort-gage market.

Mortgage sell-offsUnlike in the old days, mortgages origi-nated locally are not held locally. Banks and mortgage brokers sell the loans they originate on the secondary market to major lenders with the resources to hold long-term debt. Competition among lenders hoping to capitalize on the growing pool of borrowers further liberalizes mortgage practices. Creative financing products previously reserved for high-income borrowers looking for flexibility are made widely available to the general public.

Economy crippledThe credit or liquidity crunch cripples economic activity. Unemployment increases. Inventory of homes for sale increases. The unprecedented ease of obtaining a mortgage just a short time ago reverses itself. People are unable to take advantage of low prices and increased housing options because of restricted lending and decreased or negative equity in their current homes.

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009*

Foreclosure statistics in Routt County by year* Numbers for 2009 are through July 31, 2009

Source: Routt County Treasurer’s Office

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

25 2527

22

50 51 50

3842

53

47

55

99

90

100

Page 6: House of Cards Part 2: The mortgage market folds

6 | Friday, August 7, 2009 A Supplement to the Steamboat Pilot & Today House of Cards

opment and former president at Yampa Valley Bank.

Mortgage meltdown

When real estate prices flattened and fell, the system that had been built on appreciation

met with disaster. While the severity of our current recession is a shock to most, many say there were signs that the heyday wouldn’t last forever.

“I think any intelligent analysis of the market would say 30 percent gains year to year were not sustainable regardless of any world or national trends,” said David Baldinger Jr., of Steamboat Village Brokers.

Mike Larson, the former mortgage broker, agreed.

“You had the sense that it couldn’t stay this hot forever,” he said. “You had this sense that when we had 400 Realtors in a town of 10,000 and a county of less than 30,000.”

The slowdown hit nationally first, but then it trickled its way into Steamboat and other resort markets.

In 2007 and 2008, $636 billion in adjustable-rate mortgages — $367 bil-lion of which were subprime — reset to higher interest rates, according to First American CoreLogic, a real estate data firm. Many homeowners counting on appreciation were unable to refinance their mortgages to a lower rate and could not make their payments.

“Our values rose so fast here from

2002 to 2007 that, even if you over-extended yourself, you could sell and make a profit,” Larson said. “The more liberal the loan, the more house you could buy. As prices go up, that works beautifully. But once values go down, that whipsaws on you. Overleverage became the enemy.”

Who to blame?

Mortgage brokers and bank-ers have taken much of the heat for the meltdown, and

some think that is deserved. Elizabeth “E.A.” Black, a consultant formerly of Millennium Bank and the Yampa Valley Housing Authority, said over-zealous lenders engaged in predatory practices and greedily made as many loans as possible by aggressively putting people in loans they ultimately couldn’t afford.

“I think it was happening in every major city. I have reason to believe it happened here,” she said. “We had this free-for-all mortgage availability.”

Colorado is a top-10 state for mort-gage fraud, according to the FBI. Black said products that required no docu-mentation of a person’s income or other verifications were particularly troubling.

“A person could essentially lie on their application and sign they were tell-ing the truth,” she said.

The practice of selling mortgages on the secondary market also is a problem, some argue, because the people origi-nating the loans don’t have any skin in

the game.“I’m not saying it was rampant, but

certainly that dynamic of not having to worry about whether the loan per-formed invites liberal lending practices,” said Larson, who added that he doesn’t think such practices were widespread in Routt County. “That was a very large systemic problem, and as a result of that, that’s why we’re seeing nationwide underwriting standards significantly tightened up now.”

Although some acknowledged that a few of their customers have gone into foreclosure, all mortgage originators interviewed by the Pilot & Today said they did not regret any of their loans because of factors that existed at the time the loan was made and unantici-pated events that happened after.

Kathryn Pedersen, a mortgage loan officer at Yampa Valley Bank, and Holly Rogers, a mortgage loan officer and vice president at the bank, said they think they have skin in the game because if they sell bad loans on the secondary market, lenders will stop working with them.

“We’re not going to do anything that’s going to risk our reputation because that’s our biggest asset,” Rogers said.

Many brokers said borrowers should take personal responsibility and that many were so eager to take part in the booming housing market that they did not heed advice to avoid purchasing risky loans.

“There were a few people I told this does not make sense and I’m not going to do it,” Pedersen said. “But if I wouldn’t do it, someone else would.”

Others said they didn’t feel it was their place to block someone from getting a loan if it was compliant, a lender would accept it and the customer insisted on it.

“My role as I saw it was to educate you as best I could,” Allbright said.

As an example, Allbright said he would advise any customer seeking 100 percent financing to have six

Refinance: Paying off an existing loan (such as a balloon mortgage) with a newer, usually lower rate loan.

Subprime mortgage: Generally, a mortgage loan made to a borrower with a weaker credit profile than that of a prime borrower. As a result of the weaker credit profile, subprime borrowers have a higher likelihood of default than prime borrowers.

On the ’Net For more photos from Part 2 of the Steamboat Pilot & Today’s special section House of Cards, visit www.steamboatpilot.com/houseofcards.

JOHN F. RUSSELL/STAFF

A sign just outside of Stagecoach frames the area’s once booming development. The collapse of the housing market has hit the area hard, leading to short sales and homeowners willing to take the extra steps to sell their homes in a very competitive market. Below: Elizabeth “E.A.” Black, a consultant who formerly worked at Millennium Bank and the Yampa Valley Housing Authority, said some lenders engaged in predatory lending practices. By making as many loans as possible and placing people into loans they could not afford, she said, the lenders added to troubles that played a role in the collapse of the housing market.

Continued from page 4

Page 7: House of Cards Part 2: The mortgage market folds

A Supplement to the Steamboat Pilot & Today Friday, August 7, 2009 | 7House of Cards

months worth of reserves to pay his or her mortgage.

“If you decide to take my advice, great. If not, I still have to submit the loan to the underwriter,” Allbright said. “My job is to give you advice, not be your dad. Is it my job to say you can’t rent the chainsaw because you’re an idiot? My job is to explain to you and make sure you understand what all the issues are.”

Arce agreed.“If it’s your life and your loan and

your house and your future, ask the questions,” she said. “When you have a customer who is asking for that par-ticular program and it’s available to me from the lenders, we sold the product. … Let’s face it: If they don’t get it from me, they knew they could get it from the broker down the street. That’s a fact of business.”

Holding the bag

Although the housing market meltdown has global causes and effects, it also has hit very close

to home — from the wealthiest to the most vulnerable sectors of our society.

Steamboat’s economy floats on a sea of outsiders, and John Kerst, of Yampa Valley Bank, noted that if people have less disposable income to spend nationally, they are less likely to visit Steamboat. And, perhaps more important, they are less inclined to buy real estate here. The latter hesitancy has had dramatic effects that have soaked through all layers of society, including the immigrant community that is esti-mated to make up 5 percent of Routt County’s population.

“The most obvious is the decline in job opportunities in the construc-tion and landscaping industries. The majority of the immigrant community work in those industries,” said Tatiana Achcar, executive director of Integrated Community. “It’s weird to think about how the halt in the luxurious homes has affected the immigrant community. They are the ones who were feeding the industry all along.”

The middle class is reeling, as well, and residents are struggling to buy and sell property.

Joe Birkinbine, of ATP Financial Services in Steamboat, hopes to move his family out of a Steamboat town-house and into a larger single-family home, but has taken his home off the market because of a lack of interest.

“Had we had the crystal ball, we would have sold in 2006, rented for two years because our crystal ball would have told us there was going to be a downturn in the market, and then we could have been a cash buyer,” he said.

On the plus side, Birkinbine is glad he resisted the temptation to purchase a new truck after a record year

Short sale: The process in which a servicer works with a delinquent borrower to sell the house by a real estate agent prior to the foreclosure sale.

Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC): A way of borrowing money against the equity or assets that you have in your home to pay for things such as home repairs, college education or other personal uses.

Source: Fannie Mae

For more:For more about the housing market crisis visit the House of Cards Web site at www.steamboatpilot.com/houseofcards.

Walk into the Steamboat Springs offices of Mountain Valley Communities and an

empty desk will greet you. It turns out a receptionist is an expendable luxury for the company in times like these.

“As developers, we’re struggling,” Managing Broker Ren Martyn said. “We’re all feeling the pinch.”

If you were to pick one Routt County subdivision to illustrate the housing market crash’s impact locally, Mountain Valley Communities’ Red Hawk Village might be it. The neighborhood in Stagecoach south of Steamboat was built at the height of Routt County’s real estate boom. The first units came on the market in 2006.

Martyn and his partners envisioned Red Hawk Village as an affordable development for young families, with homes ranging from 1,600 to 1,800 square feet. They even offered eight deed-restricted affordable units. Buyers were not interested in the deed restric-tions, however, and they were removed. And instead of young families, specu-

lators poured into Red Hawk Village looking to capitalize on Steamboat’s booming market. Most home sites in Red Hawk Village were sold to inves-tors from the Front Range for prices as high as $555,000.

“The prices were very high,” Martyn said. “Philosophically, it was difficult because here we were trying to build an affordable product. … But as a developer, we like to sell our property. Developers don’t hold our property. That’s not our business.”

But when the market fell apart, the investors were unable to make their payments, leading to a sizable number of short sales at Red Hawk Village. Offerings of short sales come about when a property owner alerts his or her lending institution that the owner cannot keep up with the payments, and the bank agrees to sell the property for less than the loan value. The motive is to avoid the expense of a foreclosure. The property owner faces losing his or her equity but also avoids some of the other negatives of a foreclosure.

Investors aren’t the only ones who are struggling. Martyn said some locals made purchases in Red Hawk Village at the inflated, speculation-driven prices, “and now they’re upside down.”

“There are so many similar situa-tions,” Martyn said. “Red Hawk has just been the perfect storm. … The irony is the original plan has come to fruition.”

Martyn was speaking to the fact that the bank-driven short sales have deflated prices to a point where Red Hawk Village is affordable for the young families that were targeted all along. A three-bedroom home that sold for $555,000 in April 2007 sold for $297,000 on June 29.

Although he bought at the height of the market, Red Hawk Village resident Jamie Morgan said he and his family are glad to see that the speculators gone and that the neighborhood is filling up with families.

“I could see us staying there a long time,” Morgan said.

— Brandon Gee

JOHN F. RUSSELL/STAFF

Red Hawk Village may be Routt County’s best example of the effects of the housing market crash. Instead of young, local families envisioned as the residents of the development, developers Mountain Valley Communities found themselves popular among investors on the Front Range. Home sites sold for as much as $555,000 to the out-of-town investors, and when the market came crashing down, a number of properties went to short sale.

Red Hawk Village A case study

Continued from page 6

Page 8: House of Cards Part 2: The mortgage market folds

8 | Friday, August 7, 2009 A Supplement to the Steamboat Pilot & Today House of Cards

for his business in 2007 and instead paid cash for a good, used one.

“That’s wise spending,” Birkinbine said. “Now that my income is declining, I don’t have a second car payment.”

In Stagecoach, Shamus and Julie Spitzley are offering a $10,000 finder’s fee to anyone who can find a buyer for the house they have been trying to sell for two years. Their latest price for the house, $489,000, is $135,000 less than its most recent appraisal.

“It’s tough because there’s so many houses on the market, so you just got to try to stand out from the guy next door,” said Julie Spitzley, owner of Storm Mountain Roasters. “Many (buyers) just want the perfect house, and they can be picky right now.”

Although she said she doesn’t regret buying the house, she and her hus-band are certainly sick of it being for sale. They bought the house in 2005 as an investment and hope to build a new home on another lot they own in Stagecoach.

“I bought it to sell it,” Shamus Spitzley said, “not to live in it.”

On the other side of the coin are potential buyers like Matthew and Jessica Farrington. The couple has a 3-year-old daughter and another child on the way. They tried for years to find a home. They were consistently told their only real options were in Hayden and Oak Creek. Now that prices are down and the Farringtons could real-istically afford a place in Steamboat, the lending markets are too big of a challenge.

“His personal opinion is that it’s impossible for anybody to get financ-ing right now,” Matthew Farrington said about a friend who is a mortgage broker.

Friends have urged the Farringtons to stay, arguing that Steamboat is a great place to raise children. Matthew Farrington would agree, but with one caveat.

“If they live in a cardboard box, it’s not that great.”

The Farringtons moved to Australia in July to live with Matthew’s mother.

Overbuilt?

Only 55, or 3 percent, of Steamboat’s 1,791 active listings sold in the first quarter, accord-

ing to the Rocky Mountain Resort Alliance, and only 20, or 5 percent, of 380 single-family homes listed were sold. Fourteen percent of Steamboat’s inventory sold in the first quarter of 2008, and 40 percent sold in the first quarter of 2007.

Some interpret stats like that to mean that Steamboat was overbuilt during the boom. Others disagree and say people were merely building according to infor-mation available at the time.

“There’s definitely a lot of product right now, but the market is so bad,” said Jeremy MacGray, of JSM Builders in Steamboat. “The market isn’t bad. It’s really bad. It’s ridiculous. If the market had simply corrected itself

instead of just tanking, I don’t think we would have overwhelming supply.”

Mark Scully, of Green Courte Partners, developers of major down-town redevelopment projects, also doesn’t think that Steamboat was over-built, but he said the company would have delayed things a year or two if it could have foreseen the recession.

“We definitely don’t look at it as a bust,” Scully said. “We’ll acknowledge that the market is slower than we’d like. … There was a pretty solid demand until this financing hiccup came about. … It will just take some time. It’s going to cost us more.”

Out of 45 residential units in Green Courte’s projects, five have closed and another 17 are under contract.

“We certainly expect to lose a few (contracts),” Scully said.

About 65 percent of 24,000 square feet of commercial space is leased in two projects, Alpen Glow and Howelsen Place. A third redevelopment project, River Walk, has been delayed indefinitely, Scully said.

Similarly, Baldinger said he thinks the redevelopment of Ski Time Square will be delayed two to five years.

“Developers are not going to over-build on purpose,” Baldinger said.

That’s bad news for Erik Griepentrog, who bought a condomin-ium on Ski Time Square Drive specu-latively after learning about Ski Time Square and Thunderhead Lodge’s $54 million sale for redevelopment in 2007. He regrets that purchase, particularly

because lending practices have thwarted his efforts to refinance the condomini-um. He might feel better about it if and when The Atira Group moves forward with plans to build a million square feet of high-end, mixed-use development at the site of the demolished properties.

“I sure don’t like to have to bleed out of it right now,” Erik Griepentrog said.

In addition to taking hits from invest-ment properties, many in Steamboat are also struggling because their home-equi-ty lines of credit, or HELOCs, have now run dry. “Using your house as an ATM” was common in Steamboat, Rogers said. The most troubling trend she saw was people using home equity lines of credit to pay off credit cards that they would

immediately run up again and pay off with their home equity. When values went down, many HELOC users got a call from the bank saying their credit line was maxed out and could no longer be used.

Jeff Steinke, general manager of Steamboat Motors, said some buyers — but not many — used HELOCs to pur-chase cars. But if nothing else, Steinke said, growing home values certainly boosted buyers’ confidence. Sales at Steamboat Motors are down about 10 percent, or four or five cars, a month.

“People thought that forever they would have equity,” Rogers said. “But the well is dry. You have nothing to dip into anymore.”

Continued from page 7

PHOTOS BY JOHN F. RUSSELL/STAFF

Renters Matthew and Jessica Farrington pack their suitcases before moving back to Australia, where Matthew is from. The Farringtons had hoped to buy a home in Steamboat Springs, but they could not afford a home when the market was hot, and now that things have slowed, they can’t qualify for a loan. Below: Julie Spitzley gets some help from her daughter Virginia while making smoothies in the kitchen of the family’s home in Stagecoach. The Spitzleys have been working to sell their home for two years and have resorted to offering a $10,000 finder’s fee to anyone who can find a buyer for their home.