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Friday, March 29, 2013

After a few weeks hiatus here is another blog.

Foreclosures are at the lowest rate in three years. 
"Servicers have modified 2,878,228 mortgages since the beginning of 2008 through the end of the third quarter of 2012," the OCC said. "At the end of the fourth quarter of 2012, 47.7% of these modifications were current or paid off. Another 7.1% were 30 to 59 days delinquent, and 14.2% were seriously delinquent. There were 7.7% in the process of foreclosure, and 7.3% had completed the foreclosure process." Keri Anne Panchuck @ HousingWire.com
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Mortgage applications rebounded, rising 7.7% for the week ending March 22, the first recorded increase in two weeks.
The refinance share of overall mortgage activity remained unchanged at 75%, breaking 10 consecutive weeks of straight declines.
Meanwhile, the average 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage with a conforming loan balance fell to 3.79%.
The average 30-year, FRM with a jumbo loan balance sunk back to 3.90%, a position it held two weeks ago.  -BrenaSwanson@BrenaSwansonHW
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TBWSDailyShow:
The average person stays in their home 5-7 years.  Where will interest rates be then?  Probably higher.  FHA loans are assumable, so down the road when your clients put an offer down on an FHA home, they can assume the loan and get today's great rates.  Think 3.5% compared to 7% interest rate.
Remember that when taking out a loan, you are required to have home insurance.  If you let it lapse, the bank will get it for you and you will pay much higher rates.  The banks pay kick backs to the insurance companies who write the forced insurance policies.  FHFA, however, is planning to do away with the higher insurance payment requirements.  This cuts out personal responsibility and will have unintended consequences raising the difficulty of home ownership sometime in the future. 
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I had to include this: 
"According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, monthly crude oil production in the United States is expected to exceed the amount of U.S. crude oil imports later this year for the first time since February 1995."-- From WT100 which got it from EIA Today in Energy.
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From Uncommon Wisdom:  The housing market continues to pick up steam. Single-family home prices, as measured by the S&P Case/Shiller Home Price Index, saw their largest annual increase in more than six years.
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There is a sign that the investors are starting to pull back from buying.  More investors are buying directly from the builders.  The number of foreclosures on the market is dropping. 

Despite this note of caution, the Wells Fargo Securities economists are still expecting a rise in sales and prices as well as new home construction.-David Collins and Mark Fogerty @ Orgination News
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Federal Reserve stimulus and government borrowing to meet its obligations are driving stocks to record highs on a daily basis, according to RC Peck, chief investment strategist and CEO of Fearless Wealth.
Latest Breaking News from Newsmax.com http://www.moneynews.com/StreetTalk/Peck-Fed-Money-Printing-stock/2013/03/10/id/494003?s=al&promo_code=12BE5-1#ixzz2OqEUdX6K
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In the hottest markets around the nation, “for sale by owner” signs are popping up in yards as penurious owners try their hands at selling their own homes. It’s another sign of recovery that’s raising echoes of the real estate boom seven years ago.--Steve Cook for Real Estate Economy Watch

This reminds me of a guy who was practicing mortgage fraud.  He was able to sucker many people before being caught.  You might remind the FSBO's that they may not be equipped to protect themselves and could end up in court paying big bucks. 
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TBWSDailyShow:
People should be allowed to make bad decisions and reap the consequences.  However, the gov't has decided we are too stupid to make good decisions and so is making possible bad decisions illegal.  This is making the possible options for small investors more and more limited.  This is like outlawing the Big Gulp.  If someone wants to make bad decisions, fine!  Just make sure they, themselves, pay the consequences, not the rest of us
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Investors and banks are taking on more multifamily dwelling debt.  I personally know that there are a number of investors who are my contacts and are actively looking for properties in the millions of dollars.  If you know of any multifamily dwellings that might be for sale, contact  your investors. 
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Minnesota's Home Owner's Bill of Rights is all but dead.

A Homeowners' Bill of Rights — similar to one that was adopted by California last year — would require automatic mediation between banks and homeowners facing foreclosure and prohibit the practice of 'dual-tracking,' in which banks negotiate with homeowners while simultaneously moving them towards foreclosure, often without their knowledge. Activists have been hoping that the Legislature will adopt such protections to help end the foreclosure crisis but got a cold dose of political reality: Without banking industry approval, some Democrats in the Senate appear unwilling to support a Homeowners’ Bill of Rights.--from the Twin Cities Daily Planet
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Home prices are up 15.5% in Minneapolis.  Sales are up 2%.  Traditional closed sales jumped 21.5% year-over-year, while foreclosures and short sales dropped 23.5% and 28.5%, respectively.--from HousingWire
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TBWSDaily Show:
Is HUD taking the wrong homes off the market?  The Neighborhood Stabilization Program money is being used in perfectly good neighborhoods instead of blighted neighborhoods.  Non-profits are using the money to buy up the HUD homes for pennies on the dollar in good neighborhoods when investors would buy the homes for full price.  So instead of using the gov't funds to lower the mortgage interest rates, the gov't is using the funds to practically give away property.  This is $4 billion dollars of assistance given where it isn't needed in NSP 1 and $2 billion in NSP 2, NSP technical assistance is $3.92 billion, NSP 3 is $5 billion per state.

FHA is raising the down payment from 3.5% to 5% on loans over $625,500.  HUD wants 90 days to implement this new rule.
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Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae refinanced nearly 1.1 million mortgages last year through HARP and 2.2 million since 2009. --kpanchuck@housingwire.com
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The average contract interest rate for the 30-year, FRM backed by the FHA increased to 3.53% from 3.47%.
Meanwhile, the 15-year, FRM increased to 3.01% from 2.96%, and the 5/1 ARM rose to 2.62% from 2.55%.
bswanson@housingwire.com
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Home builders are building in active markets including Georgia.
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TBWSDailyShow:
600,000 seniors are in foreclosure or are delinquent.  If a senior is 62 yrs old, they would need a 62% LTV to get a reverse mortgage.  The LTV depends on the senior's age.  HECM, home equity conversion mortgage, loans are ALL adjustable starting April 1.  Seniors can be behind on their loans or facing foreclosure and still get the HECM loan.  Then the foreclosure or delinquency would go away-there would be no payments to the bank!  The bank would be paying them from an equity line of credit.  If the value of the home goes up, the senior can refinance into another HECM.  Let your seniors know.
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Four Senators are crossing party lines to propose a GSE reform bill that would prevent the government from using guarantee-fee hikes at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to cover other spending initiatives.
The bill, titled ‘Jumpstart GSE Reform Act,' pulled in four well-known sponsors: CFPB architect and U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass.; Republican Sens. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., and David Vitter, R-La.; as well as Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va. -kpanchuck@housingwire.com
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Home listing inventory increased 1.15% from February.  The average time a house sits on the market now is 98 days down 9.26% from January. 

Berkowitz added, "Looking ahead, we can expect the amount of inventory to increase this spring along with higher list prices as sellers become more comfortable with the market conditions."  The Ticker at HousingWire
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The home mortgage sector in the world’s largest economy has been “effectively nationalized,” says George Melloan, former deputy editor of the editorial page for The Wall Street Journal.


Read Latest Breaking News from Newsmax.com http://www.newsmax.com/FinanceNews/Melloan-Fannie-Freddie-banks/2013/03/14/id/494678?s=al&promo_code=12CDB-1#ixzz2OrD5rNY1
Urgent: Should Obamacare Be Repealed? Vote Here Now!

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JPMorgan raises home price forecast, sees long road to recovery





By Christina Mlynski
• March 15, 2013 • 7:34am

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The fastest growing cities are the ones which the recession hit the hardest.  That is because they have the most affordable housing and good weather. --The Ticker for HousingWire
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TBWSDailyShow:
87% want to own a home, 66% say owning a home is a good idea and 75% say owning a home is essential to raising a family.  These numbers are twice as high as a year ago.  Inventory is down, but our collective national equity is up $500 billion in the last quarter and up $1.7 trillion since spring 2011.  Currently we have a collective national equity of  $8.5 trillion.  Short sales and foreclosures are less probable due to the rise in home equity.  So, Realtors, call your data base and find those who are ready and able to sell now.  This includes the loan officers who have clients, too.  Interest rates are still low to attract new and move up buyers.  Interest rates are up slightly.  They will continue to rise when the stock market starts to pull back.

Thomas Jefferson, "The harder I work, the luckier I get."
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There are fewer home builders in the market now than there were in 2007.  Therefore, those who are left are starting to make money again.  Lennar Corp has revenue from home sales up 40% from the first quarter of last year.  Their backlog of homes incomplete or in the process of completion is up 82%.  --Megan Hopkins with HousingWire.
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Congressman Elijah Cummings, D-MD, ranking member of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, published the report on his website, saying "mortgage companies that service loans backed by Freddie Mac have largely failed to implement requirements to resolve escalated cases of serious homeowner complaints alleging abuses such as improper foreclosures and fraudulent servicing practices."
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Sales of previously owned homes rose 0.8% in February from the prior month as single-family sales were flat and condominium sales jumped 9%.  --Brian Collins for Origination News
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Average home prices are up over 10% from a year ago.  The demand for materials to build home is also up.  (Finally!)

The median home price rose to $173,600.  Home supply is 4.7 months, which is well below the accepted healthy balance of 6.00 for supply and demand.  --Brad Hoppman of Uncommon Wisdom Daily.
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Available home inventory is down 19.2% from last year which is a bad thing.
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TBWSDailyShow:
Freddie Mac suing many banks for the Libor scandal among which are Bank of America, Citi, UBS, Lloyds Banking Group, Credit Suisse, RBS, Chase and more.  Today banks are about twice as big as they were a year ago.  US bank earning jumped 37% from Oct to Dec.  The problem is that the federal gov't tells the banks to do something and then sues them for doing that thing.  Remember the scripture "A double minded man is unstable in all his ways."  That is the federal gov't.  The federal gov't and the banks may be joined at the hip, but the gov't keeps punishing the banks for doing exactly what they are  told to do.  This is insane.  The federal gov't will sink our economy for sure.  (My opinion).
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If you are a move up buyer, the time to sell your present home is now.  The reason is because the price on the home you want to move into will increase faster than the price of your home.  Also, the interest rates are very low right now.  It is spring, put your house on the market and sell.  --Megan Hopkins for HousingWire
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The housing rebound is creating a shortage of vacant lots in Seattle.  How is the market in your city?
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The Census Bureau reported this week that single-family housing starts rose to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 618,000 in February, the highest level since June 2008, months before the collapse of Lehman Brothers turned a recession into a global credit crisis.

The last time housing construction contributed so little to the economy was during World War II.
Floyd Norris comments on finance and the economy at nytimes.com/economix.
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NASA Federal Credit Union and Navy Federal Credit Union are offering members mortgages that do not require a down payment or mortgage insurance.  (Here we go again.)
brenaswanson@brenaswansonhw
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Karl Smith in Forbes says the housing bubble is back.  It is only a matter of time before the credit standards for homebuyers will fall. This will allow homebuyers to make larger offers and it will allow young people to buy a home even when they lack a down payment.  (Here we go again.)
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Because FHA is raising the mortgage insurance premium this spring and interest rates are low, first time home buyers are trying to get in on home buying.  However, repeat home buyers are buying less.
http://www.realestateeconomywatch.com/2013/03/fear-motivates-first-time-homebuyers/
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1.5 million properties in the US are in the foreclosure process or are bank owned as of the first quarter of 2013. --RealtyTrac--mhopkins@housingwire.com
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TBWSDailyShow:
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In January, five states – Florida, California, New York, Illinois and New Jersey – held 44% of all distressed properties in the U.S.
Florida alone houses 16% of the shadow inventory.
kpanchuck@housingwire.com
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Zillow introduced Spanish-language support for its Zillow Rentals Android App. --The Ticker by HousingWire
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Wednesday, March 27, 2013

CORDRAY NOMINATION COULD BE CONTENTIOUS
The more heated portion of the hearing could be focused on Cordray, who has been leading the CFPB under a recess appointment that serves as a bypass to Senate confirmation.
Republicans have continued to fiercely oppose his nomination to the CFPB amid disagreements over how the new bureau is structured.
The CFPB is a new regulator created through Dodd-Frank that is tasked with protecting consumers from potentially predatory lending products, such as mortgages, credit cards and paydayloans.
Republican senators have blocked confirmation of a director since the bureau opened in July 2011, saying it should be led by a bipartisan board similar to the way the SEC is run, rather than by a single director.
Obama's recess appointment of Cordray made business groups and Republicans irate. They have argued that the move was illegal because Congress was not technically in recess at the time. A court ruling that struck down a similar recess appointment has cast further legal doubt over Cordray's leadership.
With Cordray's temporary term due to expire at the end of 2013, Obama earlier this year renominated him for a longer-term directorship.--Sarah Lynch @ Reuters
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The new regulations now under (CFPB) consideration include a provision that would require borrowers to come up with down payments totaling as much as 20 percent of home prices. The provision would deliver a blow to the lending industry and would-be buyers, especially the working class and people hoping to buy their first house, according to the Coalition for Sensible Housing Policy.
In a letter sent to financial and housing regulators, the group argued that the forthcoming rules should hew closely to a set oflending standards laid out in January by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB).

The CFPB measure, known as QM, set guidelines for qualified mortgages that, if adhered to, would give banks “safe harbor” protection from lawsuits.

 To qualify for “safe harbor” protections, banks would have to restrict certain points and fees on loans and limit other risky features such as terms that exceed 30 years, interest-only payments and negative-amortization, where a borrower’s principal actually increases with each payment.--Ben Goad @ The Hill.
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QE~ (Infinity)

The first part of QE~ is the purchase of $45 billion of treasuries each month. To put this in perspective, the sequester in the news is $85 billion for this year and $1.2 trillion over 10 years. The sequester is less than what Bernanke finances in 2 months. Why worry about the sequester? Bernanke can just add $7 billion a month to the $45 billion and the debt would be covered.

The second part of QE~ is the purchase of $40 billion of agency MBS. The entire mortgage market is originating approximately $1.5 trillion loans per year, out of which about 70% are refinances, or $450 billion of new loan originations. Let us assume 90% of all originations are agency loans, then Bernanke is purchasing 100% of all agency originations and still has $75 billion left over, per year. Maybe he can just use that to offset the sequester.

The Fed already bought $1.2 trillion of agency MBS before QE~. The underlying mortgages are constantly prepaid via foreclosures, sales or refinances. Bernanke is replacing these prepayments with new purchases. Combined with the $40b per month under QE~, the Fed is purchasing at the rate of $16.8 billion per WEEK or $873 billion per year. Does that seem like a pretty large number to you?
--Ramsey Su in HousingWire.
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TBWSDailyShow:
OCWN stands up to CFPB.  CFPB told OCWN to pay into the consumer relief fund and OCWN told them NO.  This may result in a $135 million dollar fine.  But the CFPB is acting like a bully telling companies to pay up or else.  Last week we heard the Federal Reserve misallocated $1.5 billion of $8.5 billion to consultants instead of to home owners that the money was intended for.  It wasn't investigated, it was swept under the rug.
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Foreclosure activity is down 17.8% from last year according to CoreLogic.  The five states with the most completed foreclosures for the 12 months ending January 2013 included California with 96,000 foreclosures; Michigan (74,000); Texas (59,000); and Georgia (50,000). All of these states made up nearly half of all completed foreclosures.--Kerri Anne Panchuck @ HousingWire
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Post-college life struggles delay housing recovery.  While the newly graduated want to buy a home of their own, the burden of college debt inhibits the purchase.  Until we have a jobs recovery, we won't have a true housing recovery.  We continue to depend on the investors to buy homes, but when they stop buying, who will take their places?
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TBWSDailyShow:
Tax time helpful hints:
 Deduct property taxes for the year you live there (i.e. 2012).
If you bought a house deduct the points you paid in full for the year.
If you refinanced you home, deduct points over the life of the loan (i.e. $100/yr)
If you took the tax credit back in 2008, you must repay the tx credit over 15 yrs, so repay1/15 of the loan.  If you sold you home, you must pay back the whole tax credit.
If you bought an energy saving appliance, save your manufacturer's certification in case the IRS asks questions.
Capital Gains-you can exclude the first $250k for an individual or $500k for a couple
If you are buying and selling homes there is a time limit you must hold the home in order to take advantage of the capital gains.
Deduct your mortgage interest for the first million.
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Fannie and Freddie are joining forces to form a new company.  Will this shrink gov't role in mortgages?  Will we, the taxpayers, be repaid for all the money we gave these monoliths? 
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Residential Finance Corp is offering a loan program to foreign born buyers.
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Those in the know are expecting mortgage rates to rise soon, as well as house prices.
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An unlooked for consequence in Hugo Chavez's death is that rich Venezuelans have been buying property in Miami with 69% paying in cash.  On his death bed Chavez devalued the currency which balances the books, but hurts those leaving the country with cash.  Will more people who made deals with Chavez leave the country or will the number of Venezuelans buying in America decrease?
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While housing prices are expected to grow 3.3% in the next 5 yrs, many places in TX, FL and even Phoenix, AZ are expected to have almost 0 growth.  Perhaps that is because these places have had record growth in the last year.  Maybe this prediction is totally wrong.  Because there was little information to back up the claim, we will wait and see.
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FHA and VA loans can be assumable.  But you need to ask for that when taking out the loan.  If a buyer is assuming a loan, but there is a difference between the selling price and the amount owed, the buyer can take out a 2nd mortgage to finance the difference or the owner can provide owner financing.
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There may be fewer homes for sale this spring, but the builders are crazy busy getting ready to and building.
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TBWSDailyShow:
Fair Housing Laws-A realtor (and his broker and the home owners' association) who as an IDX feed on his blog and is being sued (a federal lawsuit) for importing the posting because it says "no one under the age of  16 need apply".  However the agent who posted it is not being sued.  The person who is suing is a paid independent fair housing tester (investigator) for this kind of thing and is including in the suit "humiliation, emotional distress and embarrassment" caused by the defendant's discriminatory actions and loss of equal housing rights.  But a 16 year old can't sign contracts!  The suit wants compensatory damages for the drain on the investigator's limited time and resources.  So the one person who put the ad  on the internet is not being sued, but everyone else is.  This is a mess.  It will cost the innocent time and money and the culprit gets off scott free.  Besides, the investigator is being paid to investigate, so how do the humiliation and emotional distress and embarrassment have anything to do with the investigators suit seeing that she gets paid to bring lawsuits against violators.  Another thing, why is the law written such that the 16 year old comment is a violation when 16 year olds can't sign contracts?      And we citizens are paying for this lawsuit!                                             http://thenationalrealestatepost.com/2013/03/08/malicious-fair-housing-lawsuits-really/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+TheNationalRealEstatePost+%28The+National+Real+Estate+Post%29
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I just heard Rhonda Duffy say that here in GA property disclosures are not mandatory, but may be requested.  I had been told disclosures were mandatory no matter what.  News to me.
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TBWSDailyShow:
Let's stop  over thinking the housing industry.  The bottom line is rates.  Scream it to all your clients- RATES are low.
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Fannie and Freddie are still giving subsidies to mortgage investors, laying the ground work for the next housing bubble.

"Policymakers know eliminating Fannie and Freddie would go a long way in preventing another housing bust, and a new report by a commission of several former government housing officials, including two former secretaries of Housing and Urban Development, Mel Martinez and Henry Cisneros, and former Sen. George Mitchell calls for phasing them out over five to 10 years.
The Bipartisan Policy Center's commission proposed reducing the size of loans that Fannie and Freddie can purchase from private lenders until they can't buy anything at all. This would mean no more transferring of mortgage default risk from investors to the taxpayers.
This approach is a compromise between keeping Fannie and Freddie propped up in perpetuity and shutting them down tomorrow. It allows the market time to adjust as the mortgage giants are phased out....................

The government needs to rid itself of the belief that everyone should own a home. From federal tax breaks to state and local programs designed to encourage home ownership, government at every turn urges people to buy homes.
Home ownership is not for everyone. In many parts of Southern California, for example, it is cheaper to rent than buy. Renting also offers greater flexibility and mobility."---Anthony Randazzo at the Orange County Register.
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The Housing Price Index is up 9.7% from last January.  This means for 11 months home prices as an average across the US have risen.  This is the best since 2006, but we all remember what happened in 2007.
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Monday, March 4, 2013

Housing keeps improving

"Home prices in the U.S. edged up 5.8% year-over-year in December as the average home price rose to $207,000, Lender Processing Services said in its latest Home Price Index."
-kpanchuch@housingwire.com Arizona is still leading in housing price rises.  Home prices rose 16.5% in 2012.  California, Nevada, Texas and Florida are all rising at slower paces.
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TBWSDailyShow:
According to Barry Habib, stocks will continue to move higher and bonds lower. 
There is a new move for investors to give higher commissions than contracted to their agents who close the deal for them.  The investors close the deals with cash and immediately turn around and list the property at a higher price.  Is this ethical?  Follow this link to see the whole story-  http://thenationalrealestatepost.com/2013/02/25/pocket-investors-giving-commission-bonuses/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+TheNationalRealEstatePost+%28The+National+Real+Estate+Post%29
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"Hmmm. Washington's dysfunction is indisputable. But it is not America's first, second, or third biggest problem. Those are (1) the lingering effects of the housing bust are still impoverishing families and economic growth; (2) globalization pushing down wages for work that lives along a worldwide supply chain; and (3) essentials like health care, education, energy, and housing getting more expensive while families have to work longer hours just to keep up with microscopic inflation.

(David) Brooks' diagnosis for America isn't just statistically questionable. It's dangerous. There is a fixation in Washington to pass any sort of deficit deal to cure the the uncertainty crisis in American business. But there no measurable uncertainty crisis. And there is a measurable household earnings and debt crisis."--Derek Thompson senior editor at The Atlantic
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QEIII will continue into the third quarter in the form of the Feds buying mortgage backed securities.  The problem our economy is having right now is due to tight credit regulations.  This inhibits individual people buying homes even with the low mortgage rates.  Housing has provided the "tailwind" for the economy in the past. However, unless the number of purchases increase and the prices rise, housing will not help the economy this time around.
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TBWSDailyShow:
The end of the world happens Friday.  Sequestration.  The loony thing is that these people who are being laid off will just go on unemployment.  So, the people who can fix the things we need fixed are going to draw unemployment and in the long run cost us more.  However, while  on unemployment, they do not qualify for home loans.  But neither can they afford their mortgages.  However, if they go into foreclosure inventory of homes for sale will rise.  All this will keep rates low for a long time. 
A number of lenders have been busted for discriminating against women who are going out on maternity leave.  The federal gov't says, "Don't do that".  But, does not a lender have the responsibility and obligation to take into consideration the possibility that the mother may continue to stay home to care for her child.  Given the federal government's predilection for prosecuting mortgage lenders at some time in the future for doing what the feds tell them to do now, what do you think?
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The number of home sales rose in January, but the prices dropped.  As I have said before, investors who are buying the largest share of the properties will keep the prices down.
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Massive mortgage debt is continuing to bog down homeowners.  This is contributing to a lack of inventory. The problem is that the total mortgage debt exceeds the total value of homes with a mortgage.
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This is an unprecedented time in history to buy homes.  The investors are keeping the prices low, the Feds are keeping the mortgage rates artificially low.  Supply is low, so there is more competition for available properties which are not foreclosures or short sales.
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RedState is looking for young,conservative journalists to hire.  There are other organizations who are interested as well.  Must be pro-life.  Contact RedState, Eric Erickson.
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Housing starts were up year-over-year 24%.  Housing starts were at their second-highest level since July 2008.  Existing home sales were up year-over-year 9%.  Sales shifting from distressed foreclosure and short sales to conventional sales.  Delinquency+foreclosure rate fell to 10.44% from January's 10.61%.  -- Jed Kolko, Chief economist for Trulia
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Check out your regional dead celebrity architects.  Clients are now asking for their properties by name and willing to pay premium prices for the buildings.  --Nancy Keats, Wall Street Journal
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Top 5 cities to sell homes:  5) Iowa City, Iowa; 4) Seattle; 3) Washington D.C.; 2) Phoenix; 1) San Francisco.--Aol Real Estate
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It would appear that a real estate salesperson selling a home to a buyer that refers the buyer to a particular loan originator or creditor (lender) or a loan originator that works for the lender and expects compensation becomes a loan originator and thereby gets into trouble if reported to CFPB. Do you have an opinion? This is how I read the new regulation that goes into effect on Jan. 10, 2014.--Herman Thordsen OrginationNews.
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Rick Floyd summarizes If It Doesn't Work/Fix It by Stephan Schiffman:  Many of us have a feeling that something is broken in our lives and/or work place, but don't take the time to define the problem and just continue along in our lives allowing the problem to continue to hinder us.  We do this over and over.  It doesn't need to be this way.  We can find the time to find a quiet place to shut off the phone and sit down and go through our habits and processes step by step to find what is broken.  We can find the steps to find what is broken and how to fix it.  Not only can we, but we must do it if we want to be a highly successful salesperson.  Weekly, evaluate your prospecting habits, workflow and systems, find what is broken and fix it.  By doing this you will find levels of success that you have yet to achieve. 
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Metro Atlanta saw the third-highest rebound in new housing starts in 2012, according to Metrostudy.
The area saw a 91.2 percent jump in starts of single-family detached houses last year, bested only by Las Vegas (up 96.1 percent) and Naples/Ft. Myers, Fla. (up 91.6 percent). These markets were among the hardest hit when the housing bubble burst.

“[National] Starts of detached homes rose by an impressive 46.9 percent from year-end 2011 to year-end 2012, and the rebound is starting a virtuous cycle, providing a much-needed boost to personal incomes, which in turn translate into still-higher demand for homes,” Metrostudy noted.

The organization credited the rebound to pent-up demand finally asserting itself, higher consumer confidence, rising home prices making buyers feel a sense of urgency and affordability.
But although the entire year was up, there was pullback in the fourth quarter in most markets, Metrostudy said.

But although the entire year was up, there was pullback in the fourth quarter in most markets, Metrostudy said.--Jacques Couret, Atlanta Business Chronicle
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TBWSDailyShow:
Innerthinx says mortgage fraud is on the rise.  Really?  Interthinx also owns FraudGuard, so are they just trying to drum up business?  Foreclosures are down, 30 day lates are down, 60 day lates are down, 90 day lates are virtually non existent.  Frank-Dodd is in place. CFPB is ruling with an iron fist.  So with all the new rules in place, if fraud is really up, we can conclude that the new rules are encouraging fraud and we need to go back to a time when there was less fraud.
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Mortgage giant Freddie Mac reported net income of $11 billion for 2012, compared to a net loss of $5.3 billion a year earlier, as a result of the housing market turning a corner and the firm working to minimize legacy losses.

In 2012, Freddie Mac helped 2.5 million families to buy, refinance or rent a home and another 170,000 families avoided foreclosure, bringing the total to nearly 10 million since the start of the housing crisis.

During 2012, the GSE purchased 434,000 HARP loans totaling $86.9 billion, more than double the amount purchased last year, according to the report. --cmlynski@housingwire.com
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Pending home sales rose in January and continued a 21-month trend of growing from year ago levels, the National Association of Realtors said.

"Favorable affordability conditions and job growth have unleashed a pent-up demand. Most areas are drawing down housing inventory, which has shifted the supply and demand balance to sellers in much of the country," LawrenceYun said. --cmlynski@housingwire.com
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“You will never do anything in this world without courage. It is the greatest quality of the mind next to honor.” - Aristotle
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Looking for a home or investment property?  Contact me at jpierce@realestateauctions.com.  If we aren't there already, we will be in yours state this year.