Layoffs spreading in the housing industry

The 21,000 job cuts this month are almost equal to the number for all of 2006.

Just a few years ago, mortgage salesman Terry Orlowski rode the housing boom and a six-figure income down to the car dealership and bought a new Audi A6.

Now, the soaring market and the fast car are gone. Last week he lost his job, along with 6,000 other employees of First Magnus Financial Corp., a mortgage lender. With a 1999 Dodge Grand Caravan, he plans to move back in temporarily with his ex so their two children can stay in private school.

"My first thought was this was one of the bigger companies. No one is safe," Mr. Orlowski says.

The flood of layoffs – some 21,000 since the beginning of the month in the real estate, construction, and mortgage-lending industries – is one way the Federal Reserve can see real impact on the economy from the turmoil in the markets. It's not just guys in hard hats looking for work; it's also white-collar workers. Many of these jobs in finance and real estate are relatively high paying, which has helped car dealerships and high-end retailers. To be sure, all sorts of jobs are affected, because when a house changes hands, a small army of brokers, appraisers, pest-control inspectors, title searchers, and lawyers send out invoices.

"Unlike a lot of other businesses, real estate is everywhere," says economist Bob Brusca of Fact & Opinion Economics in New York. "Even if this turns out to be small potatoes in one place, it has a fairly big impact."

A simple real estate transaction can involve up to 20 people, says Steve Walsh, president of Scout Mortgage in Scottsdale, Ariz. "An escrow officer may make $1,000, the county recorder gets a few hundred, the appraiser makes $300 to $400, the termite man $50 to $100, and there are movers and landscapers and decorators."

Mr. Walsh says his accountant told him of some real estate agents who had been making $200,000 a year but are down to a $15,000 income. He says his firm, with business down 40 percent, has cut staff, too.

For many companies, it's not a select few who are being let go. Instead, entire divisions or even the entire company is shutting its doors. Yesterday, Accredited Home Lenders Co. in San Diego said it would eliminate 1,600 jobs – about two-thirds of its workforce. On Monday, Capital One Financial in McLean, Va., announced it would ax an entire mortgage division with 1,900 people.

The 21,000 layoffs that the real estate and related industries have announced so far this month are almost equal to the number for all last year – 22,814.

"It's only going to get worse," says John Challenger, CEO of Challenger, Gray & Christmas. "It's already much worse for the year than last year."

Last week, First Magnus announced it would let go 99 percent of its 6,000 employees. That implosion, which swept away Orlowski's job in Arvada, Colo., also wiped out Ron Gapp's role as vice president and the 600 positions underneath him on the West Coast.

"Everyone was panicking," recalls Mr. Gapp, a 33-year industry veteran of Rancho Cucamonga, Calif. "I said, 'Don't count us out. We'll be back.' That's my dream."

The layoffs sweeping the mortgage brokerage industry are not surprising to Wayne Archer, a professor of finance, insurance, and real estate at the University of Florida, Gainesville. "The business has always been extremely volatile," he says, adding that it has often attracted people with less than stellar credentials.

So far, in terms of actual numbers, the damage is not at the same level as the dotcom crash, when the layoffs helped drive the economy into a recession. "By way of contrast, this is a slow leak in a balloon," says Mr. Challenger.

But at the same time the industry has been laying off people, it has also been hiring them. In the past year, 120,000 jobs have been created, Mr. Brusca says.

In an e-mail, Jim Buckmaster, CEO of Craigslist, says online ads for both finance and real estate jobs recorded an all-time high last week.

Some of those hiring are hedge funds, commercial banks, private-equity groups, mutual funds, and even some mortgage companies, according to Doug Rickart, a division director in Minneapolis for Robert Half International. "A sector struggling does not mean the sector comes to a screeching halt," he says.

In fact, the real estate business has long been filled with entrepreneurs, and the current situation has just forced them to find new ways to make money. That's the case for Certified Termite Inspections in Sacramento, Calif.

"We're doing a lot of the foreclosure homes, so it's not as bad for us," says Jamie Rivera. "We've just switched which type of real estate business we're in."

For others, it means more time in the car. Appraiser John Simms of Peoria, Ariz., says he'll travel as far as Flagstaff, some 145 miles away. "The work is still there. It's just not as plentiful," he says.

For others, the downturn is really pinching their pockets. "Right now, I have no income," says Cole McNally, whose real estate photography business is in Auburn, Calif. "I've been advertising and putting fliers up. I've been pushing things on the Internet, [but] I've really seen no hits."

The layoffs remind some of the roller-coaster jobs situation on Wall Street. "When the market is down, you lay off the traders hired during the bull market. It's a normal boom-and-bust cycle for some industries," says Ken Goldstein, an economist at the Conference Board, a business research organization in New York.

In fact, many real estate veterans have steeled themselves for these times, buying big items in boom times only when they could pay cash. Younger workers see why. "I'm wiser now," says Orlowski. "When you reap, you save. When the harvest is plenty, you learn to live on less to weather you through these times."

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
QR Code to Layoffs spreading in the housing industry
Read this article in
https://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0823/p01s04-usec.html
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
https://www.csmonitor.com/subscribe