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  • Home prices drop for fourth straight quarter

    NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The price of a typical home in the United States continues to drop but at a slower pace, according to a new survey. During the second quarter, the median single-family home price was $223,800, 1.5 percent less than a year ago, according to the National Association of Realtors (NAR). It was the fourth consecutive quarter of price declines. Condo prices rose 1 percent to a median of $226,800. Despite the continued drop, NAR's senior economist, Lawrence Yun called the results, "encouraging." "Although home prices are relatively flat, more metro areas are showing price gains with general...
  • Countrywide tumbles 19% on financing rumors

    NEW YORK (Reuters) -- Shares of Countrywide Financial Corp. dropped as much as 19 percent Wednesday on market rumors the mortgage company has been unable to raise money from the commercial paper market. Countrywide officials were not immediately available for comment. "People are buying Countrywide puts very aggressively on Wednesday off of rumors that the commercial paper market could be closed to them," said William Lefkowitz, options strategist at brokerage firm vFinance Investments. Puts are options that allow an investor to sell a stock at a preset price by a certain date. Another trader attributed the drop in the stock...
  • World Stocks Tumble

    Stocks dropped sharply in Asia and sold off in Europe as well as the U.S. credit crunch continues to worry investors. 1. VMware IPO Debut Dazzles 2. Thornburg Postpones Dividend 3. Top 10 Potential Takeover Targets 4. The Top Buffett Value Stocks 5. The House That Won't Sell: Walk Away? TD AMERITRADE Charles Schwab Zecco.com Fidelity Investments E*TRADE FINANCIAL Options House Japan's Nikkei dropped 2% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng gave up 3.3%, and those were some of the smaller drops. Stocks dropped 6.9% in Seoul, 5.9% in Jakarta, 4.6% in Taipei and 4.3% in Mumbai. Even China's highflying Shanghai...
  • Housing starts at decade low

    NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Housing starts and permits both fell to the lowest levels in more than a decade, as the latest reading on the battered housing and home building markets both came in below expectations Thursday. Housing starts fell to an annual rate of 1.38 million in July from a revised 1.47 million rate in June. Economists surveyed by Briefing.com had forecast starts would fall to a 1.41 million pace in June. Housing starts and permits are at the lowest level in more than a decade. The latest reading is the lowest level of starts since January 1997. Building...
  • Countrywide Crushed Again (Credit line tightening)

    1. VMware IPO Debut Dazzles 2. Thornburg Postpones Dividend 3. Top 10 Potential Takeover Targets 4. The Top Buffett Value Stocks 5. The House That Won't Sell: Walk Away? Fidelity Investments E*TRADE FINANCIAL TD AMERITRADE Options House Zecco.com Charles Schwab The run on Countrywide (CFC - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr - Rating) stock intensified Thursday morning after the struggling mortgage lender said it drew down its $11.5 billion unsecured bank credit line. The Calabasas, Calif., lender said it made the move as it "supplemented its funding liquidity position." The announcement came just a day after Merrill Lynch cut its rating...
  • Real Rout Greets Faux Ease (Stockmarket)

    08/16/2007 3:04:16 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 7 replies · 468+ views
    The Federal Reserve is playing a tricky hand as calls for an emergency rate cut get louder after another day of significant stock market losses. Through its open market activities, the Fed has virtually cut the fed funds rate already, but officially left the target rate steady at 5.25%. "The target funds rate is meaningless for the time being," says James Bianco, president of Bianco Research. The Fed has injected enough liquidity into the banking system to bring the effective fed funds rate, or the rate that banks lend to each other, below 5% for three days now. This average...
  • Paulson: Market turmoil to slow U.S. growth (DUH!!!)

    LONDON (CNNMoney.com) -- Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said the current turmoil in financial markets will slow economic growth but should not spark a recession, according to a report published Thursday. Paulson told the Wall Street Journal that the turmoil "will extract a penalty on the growth rate" of the U.S. economy, but that "the economy and the markets are strong enough to absorb the losses" without triggering a recession. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson expects the current market turmoil will slow U.S. economic growth, but he doesn't see a recession occurring. Paulson, the former CEO of Goldman Sachs (Charts, Fortune 500),...
  • Homebuilders' confidence at 16-year low

    08/15/2007 10:45:02 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 12 replies · 635+ views
    NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Builders' confidence in the new home market fell to a 16-year low, according to a trade group survey conducted this month which reports buyers' problems finding financing spreading beyond the subprime sector. The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index fell two more points to a reading of 22, the lowest level since January 1991, when the nation was struggling with a recession, an energy price shock and the start of the first Gulf War. Any reading below 50 indicates more builders view sales conditions as poor than as good. The index's various components...
  • High-risk mortgages turning into toxic mess

    08/13/2007 5:29:02 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 18 replies · 418+ views
    SAN FRANCISCO - When Linda Martin refinanced the mortgages on three different houses nearly three years ago, she thought the lower monthly payments would help her save more money for retirement. Instead, the Lakewood, Colo. skin-care specialist is sinking in financial quicksand amid a widening mortgage morass that’s pulling down home prices and threatening to drag the U.S. economy into a recession. “I’m hanging on by a thread, not knowing whether I am going to be living in a car in six months,” said Martin, who declined to reveal her age. Martin is among the hundreds of thousands of borrowers...
  • Accredited Sues Lone Star (Mortgage brokerage Accredited Home Lenders suing to be bought out.)

    Accredited Home Lenders (LEND - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr - Rating) sued Lone Star in a bid to force the firm to complete its $400 million buyout of Accredited. San Diego-based Accredited said Lone Star indicated in a filing with regulators that it doesn't expect to complete its purchase of Accredited, based on the assumption that Accredited won't be able to satisfy conditions to the closing. Accredited said it believes all conditions to closing have been satisfied and said it sued "to hold Lone Star to its obligations, and to hold it fully responsible for any damages caused by its...
  • Fannie Mae CEO: Housing Slump Won't Hit Bottom for A Year

    08/10/2007 8:50:49 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 7 replies · 352+ views
    Daniel Mudd, chief executive of mortgage lender Fannie Mae, told CNBC that the housing slump won't hit bottom for another year and that the current credit crunch will spread “all across the housing market.” In an interview, Mudd said Fannie Mae is seeking regulatory approval to increase its lending limits in order to put more liquidity back in the mortgage market, which has been hurt by growing subprime lending troubles and tightening credit. “We’re ready to start investing now,” Mudd said. A lot of "people and institutions in the middle of the system" could benefit from the increased liquidity, he...
  • Big investors fleeing risk

    LONDON (Reuters) -- Big-money institutional investors have turned more risk averse than at any time since August last year, taking positions they typically do not reverse quickly, State Street data showed Friday. The U.S. financial services firm said its clients, who keep some $13.04 trillion with it as a custodian, have moved into what it called a "safety first" regime. More markets news... European stocks in the red for '07 European banks to inject more cash America's most dangerous jobs Video More video Vice Chairman of Goldman Sachs International Bob Hormats gives his analysis of the global credit crunch. Play...
  • Some mortgage borrowers getting desperate (Video report of home owners desperate to sell)

    08/10/2007 8:03:53 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 48 replies · 914+ views
    Aug. 9: Growing problems in the housing and mortgage markets are putting pressure on borrowers who are trying to sell before losing their homes. Some are even walking away from mortgages. NBC's Josh Mankiewicz reports. Full story
  • Mortgage defaults growing, AIG says

    NEW YORK (Reuters) -- Residential mortgage delinquencies and defaults are becoming more common among borrowers in the category just above subprime, American International Group said Thursday. AIG (Charts, Fortune 500), the world's largest insurer and one of the biggest mortgage lenders, said total delinquencies in its $25.9 billion mortgage insurance portfolio were 2.5 percent. It said 10.8 percent of subprime mortgages were 60 days overdue, compared with 4.6 percent in the category with credit scores just above subprime, indicating that the threat to the mortgage market may be spreading. While maintaining that it is "comfortable" with its mortgage exposure, AIG...
  • Mortgage Fears Drive Up Rates on Jumbo Loans

    08/08/2007 8:02:48 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 69 replies · 1,114+ views
    Turmoil in the U.S. home-mortgage market is starting to pinch even buyers of high-end homes with good credit records, in the latest sign of rising anxiety among lenders and investors. This surge in rates on so-called jumbo loans is particularly notable because rates on 10-year Treasury bonds have been falling. Normally, mortgage rates move in tandem with Treasurys, but market jitters have caused investors to ditch mortgage securities. Meanwhile, American Home Mortgage Investment Corp. finally succumbed yesterday to the mortgage-sector chaos that had crippled it in recent weeks and filed for protection from creditors under Chapter 11 of U.S. bankruptcy...
  • Loan types dwindle as mortgage mess widens

    08/08/2007 6:47:57 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 113 replies · 1,049+ views
    NEW YORK - The dream of owning a home is fading away for many Americans with less than stellar credit. On Tuesday HomeBanc Corp. said it will not issue any more loans, and Impac Mortgage Holdings Inc. shut down a type of loan called “alt-A” for people with limited documentation or slight credit issues. That followed bankruptcies for two of the country’s biggest home lenders — American Home Mortgage Investment Corp. and New Century Financial Corp. — and tighter terms at most other lenders that are thus far surviving a shakeout in the industry. “Every day I hear about a...
  • Credit Worries Swirl Around GMAC

    Cerberus Capital Management may be celebrating its historic acquisition of Chrysler after turmoil in the credit markets delayed the deal, but no champagne is flowing for the private-equity firm's other landmark purchase in Detroit. GMAC, the finance arm of General Motors (GM - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr) that is 51%-owned by Cerberus, is facing worries in the derivatives markets about bankruptcy at its mortgage-lending unit. The price of credit protection for GMAC's mortgage business, Residential Capital, or ResCap, soared by more than $100,000 a year on Friday, as measured by the credit default swaps market. "ResCap is trading like it...
  • Jim Cramer's Mortgage Outcry: My Take On It

    08/06/2007 8:48:07 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 59 replies · 5,108+ views
    Let me just preface by saying that I don't make a habit of commenting on what other colleagues at CNBC say. It's neither prudent, nor necessary. I also didn't even plan on blogging this week; I'm on vacation for crying out loud! But my BlackBerry was buzzing off the base this weekend, with housing bloggers begging me to respond to Jim Cramer's outcry on Friday about the Fed and the mortgage market. So let me just blog here respectfully. I understand Cramer's passion (you can see it again in the clip below.) I do. I'm not out there in the...
  • Wells Fargo Raises Rates: Are Homeowners Out In The Cold?

    08/06/2007 8:29:30 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 27 replies · 2,065+ views
    “They’re pulling themselves out of the market to regroup,” is what one of my mortgage broker buddies told me on the phone this morning when I asked how in the heck Wells Fargo Wells Fargo & CoWFC could raise rates on a 30-year jumbo fixed rate mortgage from 6 7/8% to 8% overnight. A jumbo is anything over $417,000, and given today’s home prices, that’s going to hit an awful lot of borrowers. So, since Bank of America Bank of America CorpBAC and others are still at the old rate, no borrower in their right mind would go to Wells...
  • CNBC's Cramer: Wake Up, Bernanke !

    08/04/2007 10:36:23 AM PDT · by ex-Texan · 99 replies · 3,162+ views
    CNBC ^ | 8/3/2007 | Staff
    Jim Cramer today angrily called on Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke to lower interest rates, saying he "has no idea how bad it is out there" in the nation's credit markets. In his "Stop Trading" segment on Street Signs today, Cramer said the nation's central bank is "asleep" and should immediately "relieve the pressure" on financial firms and the nation's home owners who are facing big increases in their mortgage payments as 'teaser' rates expire. Many thousands will "lose their homes," he warned. "This is not the time to be complacent." About an hour later, he made a return appearance...