Archive for July, 2007

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New Study Shows Impact of Government Fees On Home Affordability

Tuesday, July 31st, 2007

The National Association of Home Builders sponsors an economic
publication for the housing industry which publishes at
HousingEconomics.com. In mid-July it released a study on
Metropolitan Area House Prices and Affordability written by
Elliot F. Eisenberg, Ph.D.

One cannot deny that the study is self-serving, but the findings are
at least a little revealing of some of the reasons that housing prices,
particularly of new houses, continue to climb in a tough market.

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Housing News Turns The Stock Market To Mush

Friday, July 27th, 2007

It’s been a rough week for the housing market. Homebuilder confidence
is in the gutter, existing home sales fell substantially and the bad news
emanating from the subprime debacle continues top headlines. Now we have
new home sales and builders reporting earnings.

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Home Prices Hold Their Own As Existing Home Sales Fall

Thursday, July 26th, 2007

There was mixed news on the existing housing front in last month. The
monthly survey by the National Association of Realtors (NAR) ® showed the
sales of existing homes, including single-family houses,
townhouses, condos, and co-ops declined 3.8 percent off of the pace in
May to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.75 million units. This is a
decline of 11.4 percent from annualized June 2006 sales of 6.49 million
units.

“Home buyers have been getting mixed signals about the
housing market, which is causing some of them to hesitate,” Lawrence Yun,
NAR senior economist, said. Two bright spots in the June
report are…

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Mortgage Rates Virtually Unchanged From Previous Week

Wednesday, July 25th, 2007

In perhaps the only good news in the mortgage and real estate worlds
this week, both long and short term interest rates for the week ended
July 19 barely budged from their positions a week earlier.

With
hedge funds that had heavily invested in residential href="http://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/wiki/Mortgage_Backed_Securities.asp
">mortgage-backed securities literally bleeding dry and href="http://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/7242007_Subprime_Lenders.asp">
subprime lenders announcing severely reduced earnings expectations,
layoffs, or worse, more or less static interest rates had to be seen as
good news.

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Subprime Mess Continues To Wreak Havoc on the Mortgage Market

Tuesday, July 24th, 2007

…on Tuesday Countrywide reported a 33 percent drop in net income for
the second quarter and announced that payments were delinquent on nearly
24 percent of its subprime mortgage loans compared to 15.33 percent at
the same time in 2006. More disquieting, there is evidence that problems
in the company’s subprime sector appear to have spread to their
higher rated prime loans, specifically home equity
products on which 4.56 percent of customers were behind in payments
compared to 1.77 percent during the same period last year.

Another lender is still alive but retrenching. Indymac Bank
announced late last week that…

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More Help Now Available For Those Facing Foreclosure

Monday, July 23rd, 2007

A lot of people are getting nervous about their mortgages, and some
have real reason to worry as they approach the reset
dates
on their adjustable rate, interest only, or option payment
loans.

We have talked before about avoiding foreclosure but it is probably
time to do so again. Fortunately, there are a few new options out there
for homeowners who are in trouble or fear they soon may be…

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Builders Confidence Hits 26 Year Low as Permits and Starts Fall Again

Friday, July 20th, 2007

The homebuilding industry is obviously in distress. But, in testimony
before the House Financial Services Committee, Federal Reserve Chairman
Ben Bernanke made an interesting statement about employment in the home-
building industry. Remarking that there was a bit of
a “puzzle”
about government unemployment reports which…

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Mortgage Rates Mixed But Application Volume Remains Steady

Thursday, July 19th, 2007

Short-term adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs) were unchanged during the
last week, but longer term fixed and adjustable rate mortgages did move;
if up or down depends on whether you accept the surveys behind the
reports of Freddie Mac or the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA).

According to Freddie Mac’s Primary Mortgage Market
Survey
, the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage…

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Nobody Understands Buyer Agency

Wednesday, July 18th, 2007

An otherwise very smart real estate attorney once said to a
friend “Nobody understands dual agency.” It seemed like a weird thing for
a lawyer to say at the time but Newsweek has just proven
his point.

In a rather remarkable short piece promoting buyer
agency
in the “Tip Sheet” portion of the July 15 edition, the
magazine made the following points…

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More Action RE: Subprime Lending and Mortgage Regulation

Tuesday, July 17th, 2007

At the end of June the five agencies that regulate federally chartered
banks and their subsidiary lending corporations issued final
guidance
to those institutions regarding subprime
lending
, particularly the so-called exotic or non-traditional
loans that are threatening to bring down those lenders who haven’t
already filed bankruptcy or shut their doors.

Also General Electric (GE) announced that it was
getting out of the subprime mortgage business and that it has already rid
itself of $3.7 billion in loans, about 75 percent of its total portfolio,
to reduce its exposure to the volatile market…

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