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July 6, 2008 10:14:16 AM CDT


Stories related to: foreclosure

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Stories 1 - 20 of 83

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  • June 2008
    • 75% Blame Bush for Faltering Economy

      75% Blame Bush for Faltering Economy

      A new poll paints a gloomy picture of a pessimistic America struggling with soaring gas prices and a deteriorating economy—and blaming President Bush. Three of four Americans—including a large number of Republicans—hold the president responsible for the economic downturn, according to a Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg poll. The president's approval rating has sunk to an all-time low of just 23%. His constituency is particularly irritated about his lack of action to stem rocketing gas prices. More »

    • Huge Homeowner Aid Bill Nears Approval

      Huge Homeowner Aid Bill Nears Approval

      With 8,000 foreclosures daily and looming elections, Congress is close to approving the most sweeping changes to mortgage financing since the New Deal, reports the New York Times. The pricey aid bill aimed at helping hundreds of thousands of homeowners facing foreclosure has bipartisan support, despite the threat of a presidential veto. More »

    • Housing Slump Won't Ease Anytime Soon, Says Study

      Housing Slump Won't Ease Anytime Soon, Says Study

      Rising mortgage rates and a tenacious slump in sales and home values will continue to depress the worst housing market in decades, reports Reuters. Don't expect potential saviors—new home buyers—to make a dent any time soon, says a Harvard study. With mortgage rates at a 9-month high, credit tight, and foreclosures on the rise, they will likely wait until the market hits bottom, and it appears to have a ways to go.  More »

    • Creditors Fed Off Equity Boom, Creating 'Double Bubble'

      Creditors Fed Off Equity Boom, Creating 'Double Bubble'

      As home values boomed, banks raised credit limits and extended offers for new cards, urging consumers to pay off the debt by drawing on their equity, USA Today reports. Many of those borrowers now face high interest rates on homes tapped of equity and hemorrhaging value—and the boom in foreclosures has been accompanied by a 6-year high in credit-card delinquencies. More »

    • Foreclosures Surge 48% in May

      Foreclosures Surge 48% in May

      The number of US homeowners swept up in the housing crisis rose further last month, with foreclosure filings up 48% over a year earlier. Nationwide, 261,255 homes received at least one foreclosure-related filing in May, up 7%  from April and the second straight monthly record. That's one in every 483 US households, the highest number since the foreclosure listing company started the report in 2005. More »

    • New Wave of Foreclosures Expected in '09

      New Wave of Foreclosures Expected in '09

      America’s subprime victims may have grudgingly accepted their fate, but there’s a new class of borrowers primed to suffer, BusinessWeek reports. Homeowners who took out ARMs, or adjustable rate mortgages, will soon face skyrocketing payments as their loans reset. About a million people have the mortgages, but only a small number have already fallen due. “It's a ticking time bomb inside your house that you can't get rid of,” one insider said. More »

    • Carson Sidekick Faces Home Foreclosure

      Carson Sidekick Faces Home Foreclosure

      Former Johnny Carson sidekick Ed McMahon, 85 and out of work following a fall, is in negotiations with lenders to save his Beverly Hills home from foreclosure, the Wall Street Journal . He owed $644,000 on a $4.8 million loan as of February, plus $300,000 on a line of credit; the property is on the market at $5.75 million. More »

  • May 2008
    • Bill Could Cripple Minn. Governor in Mac Veepstakes

      Bill Could Cripple Minn. Governor in Mac Veepstakes

      A top Republican vice-presidential possible is in a fix, as his pending decision on state housing legislation could come back to hurt in the general election. Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty has a foreclosure-deferment bill sitting on his desk; he’s already voiced opposition to it, but vetoing it might make him look “insensitive to homeowners,” the Wall Street Journal observes. More »

    • Foreclosure Sales Rebound as Buyers Snap Up Deals

      Foreclosure Sales Rebound as Buyers Snap Up Deals

      April generally was not a great month for home sales, the Wall Street Journal reports—except in the areas hardest hit by the subprime crisis as lenders slash prices on foreclosed homes and buyers snap them up. Subprime-riddled Detroit, for example, has seen home sales rise 48% in the past four months over last year; but prices have dropped 56%. More »

    • Squatters, Scammers Move In on Foreclosed Homes

      Squatters, Scammers Move In on Foreclosed Homes

      Add a new twist to the housing crisis: Squatters are increasingly using homes that have been abandoned for months, and con artists are scamming banks in “cash for keys” deals or luring people into “leasing” homes that actually are foreclosures sitting empty, Reuters reports. Authorities can have a hard time proving the squatters aren't renters—and get little help from foreclosed-on owners. More »

    • Foreclosures Go Upscale

      Foreclosures Go Upscale

      Luxury homes—once seemingly immune from the mortgage crisis—are starting to hit foreclosure lists across the nation, the Washington Post reports. And, real-estate agents predict, it’s just the beginning of a trend likely to grow as more buyers who bought beyond their means with adjustable-rate and interest-only mortgages are hit by the economic slowdown. More »

    • Investment Firm Bails Out Neverland

      Investment Firm Bails Out Neverland

      An investment company has bailed out Michael Jackson’s Neverland Ranch and a foreclosure auction of the 2,500-acre California property—which once featured roaming wild animals and amusement park rides—has been canceled, reports the Los Angeles Times . The financially troubled pop star bought the Los Olivos ranch in 1988 for $28 million. Jackson, who moved to the Middle East after his acquittal on sex abuse charges, will now be able to keep the estate. More »

    • Fish Clean Up Mortgage Mess

      Fish Clean Up Mortgage Mess

      Stagnant pools bursting with mosquitoes have become a byproduct of the housing crisis, turning into breeding grounds for diseases like West Nile virus. But, the Wall Street Journal reports, there is a solution: Gambusia affinis , a natural predator, also known as the mosquito fish, that's hardy enough to police abandoned watering holes from Florida to California. More »

    • Treasury Boss: Worst Is Over

      Treasury Boss: Worst Is Over

      The US is emerging from the credit woes triggered by the turmoil over subprime mortgages—despite the continuing wave of foreclosures across the nation, according to Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson. Paulson, in the most positive comments yet from the White House on the nation's economic troubles, in part credited the federal bailout of Bear Stearns, reports the Wall Street Journal. More »

    • US Must Stop Foreclosures, Bernanke Warns

      US Must Stop Foreclosures, Bernanke Warns

      Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke yesterday called for government intervention to halt home foreclosures, warning that to do nothing could "destabilize communities, reduce property values of nearby homes, and lower tax revenues." Bernanke said in a speech in New York that a million Americans were already three months behind in mortgage payments at the beginning of this year, threatening dire consequences for the future of the economy, reports the Los Angeles Times . More »

    • Celebrity Foreclosure: Canseco's Out at Home

      Celebrity Foreclosure: Canseco's Out at Home

      It can happen to the rich and famous, too: Jose Canseco's mansion is in foreclosure, and he's had to move into more modest digs, Inside Edition reports. Canseco owed more than $2.5 million on the California property his neighbors called the "hotel." He made $30 million in baseball and wrote two best-sellers, but it wasn't enough to save him from becoming a high-profile statistic of the housing collapse. More »

  • April 2008
    • Federal Mortgage Plan Not Helping the Neediest: Critics

      Federal Mortgage Plan Not Helping the Neediest: Critics

      A plan to federally subsidize the refinancing of troubled mortgages has in fact helped relatively few of the most at-risk borrowers, the New York Times reports. Though Bush administration officials said FHA Secure has benefited 150,000, federal statistics show that only 1,729 of those mortgages were delinquent. “They came to us before they got into trouble,” one official said. More »

    • House Panel OKs $15B Plan to Buy Foreclosed Homes

      House Panel OKs $15B Plan to Buy Foreclosed Homes

      Lawmakers have backed a $15 billion aid package for municipalities so they can buy and fix up foreclosed homes, the Wall Street Journal reports. A House panel voted 38-26 for the measure, which would be split evenly between loans and grants. States could use the money to get vacated homes in shape and filled quickly. It's part of a larger relief measure making its way through the House. More »

    • Housing Starts Hit 17-Year Low

      Housing Starts Hit 17-Year Low

      Foreclosures and a glut of unsold homes flooding the market were blamed for an 11.9% drop in new housing starts last month, more than twice the slide economists had predicted, reports Bloomberg. Starts are at the lowest level since March 1991, according to the Commerce Department, casting a pall over hope for a rapid economic recovery. "Home construction is probably going to continue to fall right through this year,'' says one economist. More »

    • March Foreclosures Up 57% Over Last Year; Worst Coming

      March Foreclosures Up 57% Over Last Year; Worst Coming

      Bank repossessions skyrocketed 129% over the 12-month period ending in March, and foreclosure filings rose 57% over the previous year, RealtyTrac announced today. March foreclosure notices rose 5%, after a 4% decline in February. All this “is ongoing fallout from people overextending themselves and using highly toxic loan products,” said a RealtyTrac VP. And it hasn't peaked yet. More »

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