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  • Squalor, crime follow wave of foreclosures [Women and children hardest hit]

    11/13/2007 11:48:26 AM PST · by Hydroshock · 32 replies · 46+ views
    Eighty-five bungalows dot the cul-de-sac that joins West Ontario Avenue and East Ontario Avenue in Atlanta. Twenty-two are vacant, victims of mortgage fraud and foreclosure. Now house fires, prostitution, vandals and burglaries terrorize the residents left in this historic neighborhood called Westview Village. "It's created a safety hazard. And if we have to sell our house tomorrow, we're out of luck," said resident Scott Smith. "Real estate agents say to me 'We're not redlining you, but I tell my clients to think twice about buying here.'" As defaults surge on mortgages made to borrowers with spotty credit and adjustable-rate loans,...
  • On housing front, it's beginning to get ugly

    09/01/2006 7:00:09 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 40 replies · 1,573+ views
    msnbc.com ^ | 8-31-06 | Seth Jayson
    Look away, if you can. File this under car wreck, as in, you don't really want to see it, but you cannot look away. I'm talking about the latest batch of housing numbers. They all show pretty much the same thing: sales slacking off, inventories rising. Builders like Toll Bros. are saying they've never seen anything so bad in, oh, half a century. Builders, of course, aren't the only companies to see their stocks get whacked. Lenders like Accredited Home Lenders and Countrywide Financial have been hammered, as has H&R Block, which announced one of what I suspect will be...
  • Housing Slump Proves Painful For Some Owners and Builders

    08/24/2006 8:44:42 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 53 replies · 1,619+ views
    The Wall Street Journal ^ | 8-23-06 | JAMES R. HAGERTY and MICHAEL CORKERY
    HERNDON, Va. -- For years, real-estate brokers and home builders promised that the soaring property market eventually would glide to a soft landing. These optimists predicted that home prices, which had more than doubled in parts of the country between 2000 and 2005, would continue to rise, but at a more normal pace of 5% or 6% a year. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Interactive Tool • Use an interactive tool to search the latest data on housing inventories and price trends in 26 real-estate markets, at RealEstateJournal.com. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- It isn't working out that way. The rapid deterioration of the market over the past...
  • The No-Money-Down Disaster (Housing)

    08/23/2006 5:30:14 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 37 replies · 1,633+ views
    Barrons.com ^ | Lon Witter
    A HOUSING CRISIS APPROACHES: According to the Commerce Department's estimates, the national median price of new homes has dropped almost 3% since January. New-home inventories hit a record in April and are only slightly off those all-time highs. Existing-home inventories are 39% higher than they were just one year ago. Meanwhile, sales are down more than 10%. Although the stocks of new-home builders are down substantially, the stock market and many analysts are ignoring other implications of the housing news. In the latest Barron's Big Money Poll of institutional investors, not a single money manager ranked problems in the housing...
  • How US mortgage debt could cause a global financial crisis

    07/06/2006 6:40:55 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 198 replies · 2,986+ views
    Moneyweek.com ^ | 7-5-06 | Dan Denning
    In the US, Fannie Mae (FNMA) and Freddie Mac are Government Sponsored Enterprises (GSEs) which buy residential mortgages and repackage them to sell on as mortgage-backed bonds. Although these bonds are not backed by the US government, most believe the GSEs would never be allowed to fail. But Dan Denning reports below on how a US Treasury report has warned that this mistaken belief and the illiquid nature of property means that an ‘interest rate shock’ could topple the US mortgage market – making the Long Term Capital Management (LCTM) crisis look like a walk in the park... Could this...