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Pending Home Sales Up 8% YOY, But Facing “Headwinds”

  • Published: February 27th, 2012
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There has been a distinct upward trend in the National Association of Realtor’s Pending Home Sales Index: Pending home sales are on an upward trend, which has been uneven but meaningful since reaching a cyclical low last April, and are well above a year ago, according to the National Association of Realtors®. The Pending Home Sales Index, a forward-looking indicator based on contract signings, rose 2.0 percent to 97.0 in January from a downwardly revised 95.1 in December and is 8.0 percent higher than January 2011 when it was 89.8. The data reflects contracts but not closings. The January index is…
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Foreclosure Settlement A Budget Godsend For Some States

Earlier this month, an agreement was reached between the states attorneys general and the nation’s major lenders on a $25 billion dollar settlement that is supposed to compensate homeowners hurt by inappropriate lending practices.  We all know however, that $25 billion won’t solve the problem.  As one real estate agent so aptly put it: “The latest mortgage settlement will have little to no impact on the current real estate market. It is limited to non-government backed loans, which accounts for less than 40 percent of the existing loans. If homeowners can’t afford their homes today the majority won’t be able…
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“Seer of Omaha” Admits Crystal Ball Was Foggy On Housing

  • Published: February 26th, 2012
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Back in 2008 Warren Buffett predicted a quick turnaround in housing.  Here at Doom we were skeptical about his prediction. Turns out that time around our crystal ball was better, and Buffett admits his predictions were off: OMAHA, Neb. — Billionaire investor Warren Buffett said Saturday that he was “dead wrong” with a prediction that the U.S. housing market would begin to recover by now, but he remains optimistic about the nation’s economy. In his annual letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders, Buffett said he is sure housing will recover eventually and help bring down the nation’s unemployment rate. But he…
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Saturday “Rock Blogging”

  • Published: February 25th, 2012
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I was thinking earlier this week how much I missed the late “Tanta” of Calculated Risk.  She had a better understanding of the mortgage securitization  market than anyone I know.  Sadly, she passed away in 2008, leaving a hole in the economic and housing blogging world. On the lighter side, I enjoyed her “Saturday Rock Blogging”.  I thought in honor of those old Rock Blogging posts, I’d share my favorite Saturday song from Cat Stevens (Josef Islam).  

Phoenix: Homownership Is Down, Renting Is Up

Back in 2003 Phoenix had one of the nation’s highest homeownership rates, but the housing bust has changed that.  According to the 2010 Census, Phoenix homeownership rates dropped to their lowest level since 1997, and that still might be overestimating the case: But the measurement accounts only for occupied homes. Calculate owner-occupied homes as a portion of all homes – including vacant ones – and the actual homeownership rate would be far lower. The number of vacant homes in the Valley – those that are not second homes or vacation properties – has climbed by nearly 200,000 since the last…
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Austin’s Housing Down, But Hanging In There

I was really surprised yesterday when I did a Google News search on the Austin, TX real estate market.  I can usually find a selection of articles describing how the Austin market is so much more stable than the rest of the nation.  I was surprised when I found only one article that said Housing Market In Austin Continues Upward: Austin saw a big jump in home sales last month, according to a report today from the Austin Board of Realtors. Home sales were up 10 percent last month from January 2011. Eldon Rude with the real estate tracking firm…
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Your Taxes At Work– Defending Former Fannie/Freddie Execs

  • Published: February 22nd, 2012
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If you are frustrated because taxpayer money is bailing out the GSEs due to mortgages losses, how do you feel about taxpayer money defending former Fannie/Freddie execs? [Thanks L!] A watchdog agency said Wednesday that the legal tab for former leaders of mortgage finance giantsFannie Mae and Freddie Mac is at least $110 million. And taxpayers have paid at least $47 million of it, according to an Office of Inspector General of theFederal Housing Finance Agency report.  And the total bill could be even higher since the inspector general report focused on only one particular legal case against Fannie Mae, and isn’t an exhaustive…
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Housing Answers From 1935

  • Published: February 14th, 2012
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Earlier this month the Obama administration released their latest plan to speed the housing recovery by allowing underwater borrowers to refinance.  While this will undoubtedly help a few people, in the long run, it will do nothing more than make it look like the administration is doing “something”. After all the schemes we see coming out of Washington, I thought it interesting that the best housing economic theory I’ve seen in print recently comes from a cartoon that was published in the Deseret News in 1935: [Hat tip to Mr. Twist]   It’s too bad that the artist who drew…
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Need Help With The Mortgage? Make Your House A Billboard

  • Published: February 13th, 2012
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With a bad economy and sinking home values, there are folks desperate to pay the mortgage.  Desperate enough, in fact, to turn their home into a billboard:  In return for allowing the front of their four-bedroom house to become a garish advertisement, the Hostetlers are getting their nearly $2,000 monthly mortgage paid by the marketing company behind the project, Brainiacs From Mars. In a residential neighborhood without heavy traffic, cars passing by the house slowed and drivers gawked at the vivid colors and a giant Brainiacs From Mars billboard. Romeo Mendoza, the company’s founder and CEO, told Reuters that his ultimate…
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States Negotiate Big Bucks Settlement With Banks– That Will Benefit Few Homeowners

  • Published: February 9th, 2012
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According to the New York Times, states have finally negotiated a settlement with large lenders over alleged foreclosure abuses: After months of painstaking talks, government authorities and five of the nation’s biggest banks have agreed to a $26 billion settlement that could provide relief to nearly two million current and former American homeowners harmed by the bursting of the housing bubble, state and federal officials said. It is part of a broad national settlement aimed at halting the housing market’s downward slide and holding the banks accountable for foreclosure abuses. So what does this settlement look like?  From the Wall…
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Deceased Man’s Body Lies In Vacant Home Four Years Before It Is Foreclosed On

Unpaid mortgages aren’t the only reason homes are foreclosed on, they can also be foreclosed on for unpaid taxes.  West Allis, Wisconsin was in no hurry to foreclose on a vacant home, leaving a deceased man undiscovered for four years. [Thanks L!] The body of a Wisconsin man was discovered inside his home more than four years after he reportedly killed himself with a handgun. The “nearly skeletonized body” of David Carter was discovered inside his home in January by a real estate agent sent to deliver foreclosure papers to the house. But his actual death is estimated to have…
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Zell: Government “Help” Has Hurt The Housing Market

Here’s a great CNBC interview with Sam Zell on CNBC on what government “assistance” has done for the housing market. [Thanks L!] As sales languish and prices continue to fall, the head of Equity Group Investments and numerous other ventures pinned the blame on policies that refused to allow market forces to take hold. “Rather than let the elements of the business world take care of the problems, we basically stopped the process of creating market clearing,” Zell said in a CNBC interview. “Had we allowed the market to clear without trying to stop reality…we would have a healthy housing…
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I had some financial problems. When Can I Buy A House?

Poor L gets all kinds of real estate related spam, but he graciously sorts through it and sends the more interesting stuff.  I did think that the following chart on “When Can I Buy A House”, sent out by an Arizona mortgage broker, might be interesting to some of our readers:   If you go to the webpage, there’s info on how long after Chapter 13 as well.  Of course, if you aren’t buying a house because you are still waiting for that job to come through (and don’t feel bad, you’ve got a lot of company.) it will be…
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State Of The Union: Fannie and Freddie To Pick Up 2 to 3 Million Mortgages?

I confess that I didn’t watch the State of the Union address last night. I don’t even like baloney in my sandwiches– I can’t take it in large quantities. I did however, read the summaries this morning, particularly the housing proposals. This is the one that stood out to me: Obama proposed that “every responsible homeowner” be able to refinance. The existing refinancing program (HARP) lets borrowers who are current on their mortgages refinance even if they’re way underwater — but only if their loans are guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. Obama’s proposal would extend refinancing to borrowers…
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Homeowner’s Loan Isn’t Modified, But Their Wallet Is Now Lighter

Worried about losing your home to foreclosure?  There are a number of companies out there that are willing to help you, or rather, help themselves to your money. [Thanks L!] If you want to try and modify your loan, pick up the phone and call your lender.  You might be an amateur, but at least the price is right, and you can be confident that you have your best interests at heart.

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