Tuesday, February 07, 2012
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Mortgage loan applications have increased 23% this last week due to record low rates.

Mortgage loan applications have increased 23% this last week due to record low rates.

 

Orlando, FL (MBNews.org) -- Historic record low have encouraged many homeowners to refinance according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

We have seen refinancing activity climbed 26.4% just this week week ending January 13, to its highest level since early August, the MBA reported. Meanwhile applications for new mortgages climbed 10.3% week-over-week.

 

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Time to buy a house? Home prices have fallen and mortgage interest rates are lower than they have ever been.

Miami (MBNews.org) — Time to buy a house? Home prices have fallen and mortgage interest rates are lower than they have ever been.

A recent report from J.P. Morgan Asset Management, titled “Housing: A time to buy,” written by David Kelly and David Lebovitz, made the case for why a home may be a wise purchase. Read more: Mortgage rates plunge beyond expectations.

Although the U.S. housing market remains extremely depressed, we believe that given current valuations and demographic dynamics, now may be the time to consider an investment in housing,” the report said.

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Goldman, Two Firms Agree on Foreclosure-Signing Practice

Goldman Sachs will compensate some home loan borrowers for wrongful foreclosures under an agreement reached with a New York state banking regulator.


The agreement, which New York financial services superintendent Benjamin Lawsky reached with Goldman [GS  112.16     -4.06  (-3.49%)    ] and Ocwen Financial [OCN  13.28     -0.52  (-3.77%)    ], contains several measures to strengthen the oversight of foreclosure proceedings.

It also will allow Goldman's planned sale of its Litton Loan Servicing LP unit to continue.

Read more...

U.S. asks Bank of America to report back up plans if conditions worsen

The U.S. Federal Housing Finance Agency plans to sue "more than a dozen" major banks for billions of dollars over alleged misrepresentation of mortgage-backed securities sold before the housing bubble burst, the New York Times reported late Thursday.

The U.S. Federal Housing Finance Agency plans to sue "more than a dozen" major banks for billions of dollars over alleged misrepresentation of mortgage-backed securities sold before the housing bubble burst, the New York Times reported late Thursday.

Read more...

U.S. asks Bank of America to report back up plans if conditions worsen

U.S. regulators have pushed Bank of America Corp. to show what measures it could take if conditions worsen for the Charlotte, N.C., lender, according to people familiar with the situation.

U.S. regulators have pushed Bank of America Corp. to show what measures it could take if conditions worsen for the Charlotte, N.C., lender, according to people familiar with the situation. Read more...

More Americans at Risk of Foreclosure

The number of Americans at risk of foreclosure is rising, reflecting the U.S. economy’s continued struggles.

The number of Americans at risk of foreclosure is rising, reflecting the U.S. economy’s continued struggles.

The Mortgage Bankers Association said Monday that 8.44 percent of homeowners missed at least one mortgage payment in the April-June quarter. That figure, which is adjusted for seasonal factors, rose 0.12 percentage point from the January-March period. Read more...

New York AG Kicked Off Foreclosure Probe Panel

Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller said late yesterday that his New York counterpart, Eric Schneiderman, had been removed from the executive committee working on a multistate foreclosure probe – and potential settlement – with U.S. banks.

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U.K. RICS Home Sales Fall to Record Low, Prices Drop PDF Print E-mail
Secondary Market
Tuesday, 10 March 2009 00:00

The average number of transactions in a survey of real- estate agents and surveyors dropped to 9.5 per respondent in the quarter through February, the lowest since the data began three decades ago, the group said today in London. The gauge of house prices fell last month to minus 78.3 from minus 76.6 in January.

The number of new homes being built in Britain may fall to the lowest since 1921 this year as the recession deepens, the National Housing Federation predicted today. The Bank of England cut its key interest rate last week to 0.5 percent, the lowest ever, and said it will buy assets to replenish banks’ balance sheets and encourage lending.

“Mortgage finance is still a problem, and people are worried about job security because of the recession,” Brigid O’Leary, an economist at RICS, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “The housing market is going remain weak for the rest of this year.”

The housing data add to signs that the U.K economy continues to deteriorate. Manufacturing fell by the most since records began in 1968 in the quarter through January from the previous three months, the Office for National Statistics said in a separate report.

Construction Forecast

The number of new homes being built in Britain may fall by half from the total of 140,000 for the current financial year, the National Housing Federation said. House prices fell an annual 17.7 percent last month, Lloyds Banking Group Plc’s Halifax division said last week, the most since the survey started in 1983.

Still, the RICS measure of potential buyers registering with real-estate agents rose to the highest since August 2006, today’s report showed. While the index for price expectations increased, it remained negative at minus 78, indicating that surveyors predicting further declines outnumbered those expecting gains.

U.K. mortgage rates declined in February by less than the full amount of the Bank of England’s interest-rate cut, central bank data showed today. The average cost of a home loan fixed for 24 months with a 25 percent deposit slipped to 4.32 percent from 4.35 percent in January after the central bank lowered its key rate by half a point.

Market ‘Blockage’

“The lengthy process of obtaining mortgage finance, even for those with large deposits, is contributing towards the blockage in the market place,” Jeremy Leaf, a spokesman for RICS, said in the statement today. “Without further intervention, the housing market will continue to stagnate and the opportunity to take advantage of this renewed interest could be lost, which will inevitably have serious implications for the wider economy.”

The Bank of England on March 5 lowered the benchmark interest rate by half a point and said it will spend 75 billion pounds ($104 billion) in the next three months to buy government and corporate debt. Governor Mervyn King said the bank will expand the money supply to stimulate growth.

The housing slump mirrors waning consumer demand in the U.K. after the economy contracted 1.5 percent in the fourth quarter. Retail sales fell 1.8 percent from a year ago in February, a separate report by the British Retail Consortium showed today.

“The women’s and men’s clothing sectors had their worst month since April 2008,” said Helen Dickinson, head of retail at KPMG, in a statement. “More announcements of job losses and other cost cutting measures in the sector look likely.”

 SOURCE: Bloomberg



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