Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Home buying : Most affordable in decades

February 20 2012

CNNMoney

According to the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Opportunity Index, 75.9 percent of all new and existing homes sold during the fourth quarter 2011 could have been comfortably purchased by families earning the national median income of $64,200.

Read the full story:
http://money.cnn.com/2012/02/15/real_estate/housing_affordability/index.htm?hpt=hp_t3

Enhanced by Zemanta

State AGs, feds reach $25 billion mortgage settlement

February 16 2012

Last Thursday, the nation’s five largest mortgage servicers agreed to a landmark $25 billion settlement with a coalition of state attorneys general and federal agencies. The settlement addresses past mortgage loan servicing, foreclosure abuses and fraud, provides substantial financial relief to borrowers harmed by bank fraud, and establishes significant new homeowner protections for the future.
The joint state-federal group announced the agreement with the nation’s five largest servicers: Bank of America Corporation, JPMorgan Chase & Co., Wells Fargo & Company, Citigroup, Inc., and Ally Financial, Inc. (formerly GMAC). Collectively, the five banks service nearly 60 percent of the nation’s mortgages.
Under the agreement, the five servicers agree to:
Commit a minimum of $17 billion directly to borrowers through a series of national homeowner relief effort options, including principal reduction. Servicers will likely provide up to an estimated $32 billion in direct homeowner relief.
Commit $3 billion to an underwater mortgage refinancing program.
Pay $5 billion to the states and federal government ($4.25 billion to the states and $750 million to the federal government).
Provide homeowners with comprehensive new protections from new mortgage loan servicing and foreclosure standards.
Additionally,
An independent monitor will ensure mortgage servicer compliance.
States can pursue civil claims outside of the agreement including securitization claims as well as criminal cases.
Borrowers and investors can pursue individual, institutional or class action cases regardless of agreement.
More info

Enhanced by Zemanta

Foreclosures at the high end increase

February 13 2012

The Mercury News

The housing crisis has caught up with people whose wealth helped them hang onto their houses longer.
Read the full story:
http://www.mercurynews.com/business/ci_19899224

Enhanced by Zemanta

Fast Facts

February 9 2012

Calif. median home price: December 2011: $285,920 (Source: C.A.R.)
Calif. highest median home price by region/county December  2011: Marin: $693,880 (Source: C.A.R.)
Calif. lowest median home price by region/county December 2011: Madera: $106,000 (Source: C.A.R.)

Calif. Pending Home Sales Index: December 2011: 91.6, an increase from the revised 82.5 recorded in December 2010

Calif. Traditional Housing Affordability Index: Third quarter 2011: 52 percent (Source: C.A.R.)

Mortgage rates: Week ending 2/2/2012 30-yr. fixed: 3.87% fees/points: 0.8% 15-yr. fixed: 3.14 fees/points: 0.8% 1-yr. adjustable: 2.76% Fees/points: 0.6% (Source: Freddie Mac)

Enhanced by Zemanta

More mortgage relief from the White House – but congressional ok doubtful

February 6 2012

The Mercury News

In his State of the Union Address, President Obama laid out a plan to help responsible borrowers and support a housing market recovery.  Details of that plan were released yesterday.  However, funding for the proposed program must be approved by Congress, lowering the possibility that it will be implemented quickly.

Making sense of the story

  • Operated by the Federal Housing Administration, the plan would allow underwater homeowners to refinance into cheaper federally insured loans.  Borrowers with good credit who are current on their loan payments are eligible.
  • The measure also streamlines the process of refinancing an underwater mortgage, eliminating the need for an appraisal or submitting a new tax return.
  • To qualify, borrowers must be current on their mortgage, have a minimum credit score of 580, and must be refinancing a loan on a single-family owner-occupied principal residence.
  • Lenders only need to confirm that the borrower is employed.  Loans that are more than 140 percent of the home value probably would not qualify until banks wrote down part of the balance.
  • Congress must approve $5 billion to $10 billion in funding, leading housing experts to praise the plan’s objectives with skepticism of it passing this year.

Read the full story
http://www.mercurynews.com/bay-area-news/ci_19872097

Enhanced by Zemanta