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  • Falling prices trap new homebuyers

    12/13/2006 4:40:07 AM PST · by GodGunsGuts · 380 replies · 6,169+ views
    The Orange County Register ^ | December 13, 2006 | JEFF COLLINS
    Wednesday, December 13, 2006 Falling prices trap new homebuyers Neighbors in a new Garden Grove tract say a developer's plan to slash prices by about $140,000 has left them owing more for their homes than they're now worth. By JEFF COLLINS The Orange County Register
  • Georgia foreclosures jump 99%; rate is nation's 3rd highest

    12/06/2006 6:24:53 PM PST · by GodGunsGuts · 106 replies · 2,463+ views
    Atlanta Journal-Constitution ^ | December 6, 2006 | MICHAEL E. KANELL
    Hundreds of Georgians lost their homes Tuesday. The houses, taken from debt-laden homeowners, were sold to bidders on courthouse steps statewide. The increasingly busy monthly auctions show that not all of the residential market is in decline. Foreclosures are rising. More than 115,000 properties across the country were in the foreclosure process in October — up 42 percent from the same month a year earlier, according to RealtyTrac, a California company that tracks foreclosures. Foreclosures in Georgia are up a stunning 99 percent in the past year...
  • Home prices drop 17 percent [Florida]

    11/29/2006 6:44:22 PM PST · by ex-Texan · 367 replies · 4,899+ views
    Herald Tribune ^ | 11/29/2006 | Stephen Frater and Michael Pollick
    Prices remain the story in home sales, with Sarasota-Bradenton prices falling 18 percent in October, the second biggest drop in the state. The median sales price in the Sarasota-Bradenton market was $277,900 last month, compared with $340,700 during the same month in booming 2005. The Charlotte County-North Port market was not far behind, with a drop of 17 percent, from $243,900 to $202,800. Only Fort Myers-Cape Coral took a bigger fall, posting a 44 percent decline in median sales price, from $445,100 to $249,200, the Florida Association of Realtors reported on Tuesday. The median is the point where half the...
  • Alcoa announces job cuts, plant closings

    11/22/2006 5:39:38 AM PST · by Hydroshock · 14 replies · 626+ views
    Cnn ^ | 11-21-06
    NEW YORK (Reuters) -- Aluminum producer Alcoa Inc. announced a restructuring of its product operations on Tuesday that will include plant closings and could ultimately result in a 10 percent reduction of its worldwide work force. About 6,700 jobs will be cut in the next year and a further 6,400 jobs will be moved into a joint venture with Norway's Orkla ASA with the intent eventually to spin it off, the Pittsburgh-based company said. Video More video Learn how to assess what health care plan is perfect for your family. (Part 2 of 2) Play video The restructuring program is...
  • Frauds Pump Air into Real Estate Bubble

    09/29/2006 1:10:22 PM PDT · by ex-Texan · 46 replies · 1,605+ views
    Oregon Live ^ | 9/27/2006 | S. Renee Mitchell
    It seems like every month, I'm running into people passing out a slick new business card that announces them as a real estate agent or mortgage broker. Who wouldn't want to get a piece of the action? On certain Portland streets, housing prices are doubling in a matter of months. And when there's this kind of temptation to make quick money, greed can't be far behind.Insiders call it land flipping. Silent second. Straw buyers. Foreclosure fraud. Equity skimming. Air loans. If there's a thought to do it, there's a scheme attached to it."It's the fastest-growing white collar crime in the...
  • Sweet Mortgage Deals Turning Sour

    09/24/2006 11:51:17 AM PDT · by ex-Texan · 138 replies · 3,073+ views
    As rates creep up, borrowers with interest-only loans face sharply higher mortgage payments: Tina Gren Clarence saves $600 a month with an interest-only loan she took out about a year ago for a Petaluma home, yet already is considering heading off the financial hit when her monthly payments could jump. And Peter Shidler, whose low-payment-option loan could turn from a sweet deal into a potentially bitter one, is refinancing and still will pay $500 more monthly on his Santa Rosa home. Gren Clarence and Shidler, like two out of three Sonoma County home buyers and owners, joined the fast-growing club...
  • Foreclosures spiked in August

    09/13/2006 7:31:40 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 117 replies · 1,582+ views
    CNN.COM ^ | 9-13-06 | Les Christie
    NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The number of homes entering into some stage of foreclosure is surging, according to a survey released Wednesday. In August, 115,292 properties entered into foreclosure, according to RealtyTrac, an online marketplace for foreclosure sales. That was 24 percent above the level in July and 53 percent higher than a year earlier. Where foreclosures are jumping Year over year gain in homes in foreclosure. Click for more stats on each state. Nevada: Up 255% California: Up 160% Florida: Up 62% It was the second highest monthly foreclosure total of the year; in February, 117,151 properties entered foreclosure....
  • When Will the Tsunami of Foreclosures Hit?

    09/05/2006 2:01:48 PM PDT · by ex-Texan · 237 replies · 4,982+ views
    MSN.com Real Estate ^ | 9/5/2006 | Charles DuBow
    With millions of adjustable-rate mortgages about to reset this fall, experts expect a wave of foreclosures by Americans in every income bracket. Here's why they could soar in late 2006 and beyond: Those easy-mortgage chickens are coming home to roost. This fall the adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) that millions of Americans took out during the recent housing boom will be reset, and many homeowners will see their monthly mortgage payments shoot up by as much as 20%. According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, of all mortgages financed in 2005, 36% were ARMs -- the highest ever. This is a matter of...
  • Housing Slump Threatens Jobs

    08/21/2006 5:40:55 PM PDT · by ex-Texan · 31 replies · 1,756+ views
    US News.com ^ | 8/20/2006 | Alex Markels
    The economy's growth has never before been so driven by real estate. Now that engine is sputtering. Jiany Massad isn't quite ready to throw in the towel on his fledgling career as a Miami real-estate tycoon. But if the local housing market continues to head south, the 30-year-old real-estate broker is already making alternate plans. "I might restart my old business," he says of a home decorating company that specialized in high-end window treatments. "At least it's real-estate-related." With home sales down by nearly a third in Florida last quarter, thousands of those who hoped to cash in on the...
  • House Broke

    08/10/2006 5:31:16 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 94 replies · 3,495+ views
    MSNBC.COM ^ | 8-8-06 | Jennifer Barrett
    Millions of Americans bought into the real estate boom with adjustable mortgages and home equity loans. Now rising interest rates are forcing them into agonizing financial choices. Aug. 8, 2006 - When Shawn Howell saw the house in the summer of 2004, he thought he couldn’t lose. The location-close to family and in an upscale subdivision in Louisville, Ky.,—was perfect; the three-bedroom plus loft was just right. The price was a little high at $217,000—especially as Howell's wife, Niki, had just given birth to their second child. But the couple learned they could purchase it with no money down by...
  • As Data Point to Slowdown, Housing Market May Land Harder Than Economists Predict

    08/07/2006 8:31:12 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 280 replies · 3,489+ views
    wsj.com ^ | 8-7-06 | MARK WHITEHOUSE
    NEW YORK -- Home prices in some parts of the country are falling. Builders are scaling back. Bubble or not, the biggest housing boom in recent U.S. history is coming to an end. Now here is the big question: How bad will the aftermath be? At this point, most economists expect a "soft landing," a gradual decline that won't derail the nation's economic expansion, now in its fifth year. But there is a good chance they are being too optimistic. The boom has depended heavily on the upbeat psychology of consumers, builders and lenders. As moods swing, the landing could...
  • Consumer credit rose $10.27 billion in June

    08/08/2006 9:29:53 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 26 replies · 568+ views
    Yahoo News ^ | 8-7-06
    Washington (Reuters) - U.S. consumer credit rose by a bigger-than-expected $10.27 billion in June on a surge in credit card debt, a Federal Reserve Report on Monday showed. ADVERTISEMENT Analysts polled by Reuters were expecting consumer credit to rise by just $4 billion after increasing by an upwardly revised $5.88 billion in May. Consumer credit outstanding rose to $2.186 trillion in June, rising at a 5.66 percent annual rate from $2.176 trillion the prior month. Revolving credit, which includes credit and charge cards, rose by an annual 9.80 percent rate in June to $820.65 billion after a 11.04 percent surge...
  • Painful ARM Twisting: Resets of adjustable mortgages will leave costly stretch marks

    08/06/2006 8:59:22 AM PDT · by ex-Texan · 51 replies · 2,254+ views
    Market Watch ^ | 8/6/2006 | Chuck Jaffee
    BOSTON (MarketWatch) -- It is becoming increasingly obvious that financial advisers, real estate experts and parents will someday point to what is happening in the mortgage market today and use it as a cautionary tale of what can go wrong when a buyer stretches to get too much house during a market that seems invincible. Real estate has been booming in most markets over the last five years or longer, fueled by interest rates that reached four-decade lows and by consumers who used new mortgage products to extend their buying power. Many home buyers stopped worrying about buying a home...
  • Mortgage Malaise is Spreading

    07/24/2006 8:30:41 PM PDT · by ex-Texan · 188 replies · 4,731+ views
    St. Petersberg Times ^ | 7/22/2006 | James Thorner
    Many brokers thrived last year amid record home sales, but this year the industry has taken a turn for the worse. TAMPA — The sneeze came first: Home sales in the Tampa Bay area dropped by a third from last year’s peak. For symptoms of the developing head cold, plunge into the exhibition hall at the Tampa Convention Center, where the Florida Association of Mortgage Brokers is holding its annual trade show. Puffed up to handle record-breaking home sales of last year, which poured money into savvy brokers’ pockets, the residential lending industry and affiliated businesses are mostly deflating this...
  • Attack of the real estate rip-offs

    07/23/2006 1:40:40 PM PDT · by ex-Texan · 74 replies · 2,382+ views
    Forbes ^ | 7/19/2006 | Tom Van Riper and Steve Perlis
    Urge to cash in on the housing bubble has spawned an industry of schemers: Every boom has a dark side. The merger mania of the 1980s produced insider trading scandals. The '90s stock bubble was busted for biased investment research. And so it is with real estate, the hottest market of the past eight years. The urge to cash in on rising home values has spawned a growing share of hucksters, schemers and rip-off artists. Learn how to avoid ten of the biggest real estate rip-offs or view Video: Real Estate Rip-OffsClick HereSo far, it is tough to know exactly...
  • June housing starts fall more than expected

    07/20/2006 7:33:18 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 7 replies · 548+ views
    MSNBC.com ^ | 7-19-06
    WASHINGTON - The pace of U.S. home building fell more than expected in June as groundbreaking on single-family units logged the slowest pace in 1-1/2 years, according to a government report on Wednesday that added to signs of a broad cooling in the housing market. The Commerce Department said June housing starts fell 5.3 percent in June to a 1.850 million unit annual pace, from a downwardly revised 1.953 million unit pace in May. May’s rise had interrupted a string of three straight monthly declines. Economists had expected June housing starts to decline to 1.90 million units from May’s originally...
  • Refi Loans Could Prove Costly in Foreclosure

    07/11/2006 10:24:34 AM PDT · by ex-Texan · 172 replies · 3,635+ views
    Orenge County Register ^ | 7/08/2006 | Mary Ann Milbourn
    Law allows lenders to go after personal savings as well as the house, unlike original mortgage. Homeowners behind in their mortgage payments after hocking the house to pay for a major remodel or a new boat or car may be in for a rude awakening. If they previously refinanced and their lender decides to foreclose, they may not only lose their house, but the bank also may be able to go after their other financial assets including stocks, savings and their paycheck. And even if the bank doesn't go after their other assets, a foreclosure may mean a big tax...
  • Consumers Face Challenges in Handling Debt (Higher Consumer Cost Squeezing People.)

    07/05/2006 5:39:20 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 69 replies · 1,198+ views
    Yahoo Finance ^ | 7-3-06 | Eileen Alt Powell
    Rising Interest Rates, Higher Gasoline Prices Make It Harder for Consumers to Handle Debt NEW YORK (AP) -- Rising interest rates and higher gasoline prices are putting the squeeze on consumers' budgets, and many are finding it harder to keep up with their bills. Credit counseling agencies say that consumers are coming in in droves seeking help. ADVERTISEMENT "My phones are going crazy," said Howard Dvorkin, president of the nonprofit Consolidated Credit Counseling Services Inc. in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. "Consumers are carrying an exorbitant amount of debt -- and they don't have any savings to fall back on if things...
  • Home loan demand drops as rates hit 4-year high

    06/28/2006 5:19:01 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 6 replies · 431+ views
    Yahoo News ^ | 6-28-06 | Julie Haviv
    NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. mortgage applications fell last week as interest rates hit their highest in over four years, an industry trade group said on Wednesday. ADVERTISEMENT The Mortgage Bankers Association said its seasonally adjusted index of mortgage application activity for the week ended June 23 decreased 6.7 percent to 529.6 from the previous week's 567.6. Borrowing costs on 30-year fixed-rate mortgages, excluding fees, averaged 6.86 percent, up 0.13 percentage point from the previous week, its highest level since April 12, 2002 when it reached 6.92 percent. The MBA's seasonally adjusted purchase mortgage index fell 6.2 percent to 389.0....
  • Stuck! Homes sit longer on the market

    06/28/2006 5:41:05 AM PDT · by Hydroshock · 75 replies · 1,592+ views
    Cnn.com ^ | 6-27-06 | Les Christie
    NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The tell-tale sign of a stagnating real estate market? When homes for sale start lingering - and that's exactly what real estate brokers and other industry watchers say they're seeing now. The National Association of Realtors does not maintain national time-on-market figures. But inventory - the number of homes for sale - spiked 37 percent for the 12 months through April 30, the most recent data available. Homes are staying on the shelf longer. Languishing in hot markets There are no official regional statistics for the time homes spend on the market. Here are estimates for...