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May 13, 2008 8:47:57 AM CDT



Housing Market

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Thread started by S Goldstein; Last updated Feb 29, 08 6:23 AM CST by D Lim | View history
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Housing Market

Navigating today's real estate market is a tricky task for buyers, sellers and those whittling away at that 30-year mortgage; steer yourself in the right direction with these relevant articles

Stories

Stories 1 - 20 of 143

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  • May 2008
    • 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 »

    • House OKs Mortgage Rescue Plan, Despite Veto Threat

      House OKs Mortgage Rescue Plan, Despite Veto Threat

      The House today shrugged off a veto threat from President Bush and passed a wide-ranging rescue plan for US homeowners, Reuters reports. The centerpiece of the legislation would allow people to trade in risky, fast-rising mortgages for more stable government loans. The $300 billion measure would help an estimated 500,000 homeowners at risk of foreclosure. More »

    • Big Fannie Mae Losses Prompt Fears of Failure

      Big Fannie Mae Losses Prompt Fears of Failure

      Fannie Mae lost a worse-than-expected $2.2 billion this quarter, forcing it to cut its dividend and seek $6 billion in capital. The news is especially troubling as Fannie and Freddie Mac, the companies Washington relies on to keep the housing market functioning, are under unprecedented pressure, the New York Times reports. Many are now worried that one or both of them, after stepping in to rescue a torrent of troubled mortgages, may soon need bailouts themselves. 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 »

    • Bush Blames Congress for Economic Sloth

      Bush Blames Congress for Economic Sloth

      President Bush conceded that “it’s a very slow economy” one day ahead of possibly ugly GDP numbers, the New York Times reports, and said Congress is dragging its feet on gas prices, the mortgage crisis, farm subsidies and student loans. The Democratic-controlled legislature should be “sending me sensible and effective bills,” he said, not ones "that simply look like political statements.” More »

    • Home Prices Take Record Dive

      Home Prices Take Record Dive

      A key measure of home prices fell fell 12.7% in February, the biggest decline in its 7 years of existence, and consumer confidence measured this month hit a 5-year low, Bloomberg reports. The S&P/Case-Shiller home price index reflects the crush of foreclosures and resultant tightening of lending standards. “There is no sign of a bottom in the numbers,” said an S&P spokesman. More »

    • Mortgage Biz Battles Fed Reforms

      Mortgage Biz Battles Fed Reforms

      As the Federal Reserve moves toward stricter lending rules, mortgage providers are firing back, calling the rules too broad and arguing that they could limit loans to borrowers who don't have credit problems, the New York Times reports. Regulation, bankers say, could raise the price of mortgages by increasing paperwork and the risk of lawsuits. The outcry has pushed the Fed to consider narrowing the number of mortgages the rules would apply to. More »

    • First Tax Rebates Go Out Monday

      First Tax Rebates Go Out Monday

      Treasury is putting its rebate money where its mouth is—ahead of schedule, Reuters reports, with the first wave of checks going out Monday. “We're a little bit ahead of schedule, so we will start right on Monday with direct deposits," Henry Paulson tells Reuters. The Treasury secretary is happy to get cash into Americans’ pockets a little quicker, in order to stave off worsening economic conditions. More »

    • New-Home Sales Hit Lowest Level Since '91

      New-Home Sales Hit Lowest Level Since '91

      New-home sales fell yet again in March, the Wall Street Journal reports, with single-family sales off 8.5% to an annual rate of 526,000, the lowest level since 1991. Analysts had expected a drop of only 1.9%. The median price, meanwhile, plummeted 13.3%, to $227,600. With an 11-month supply of homes available—the most since 1981—prices will likely continue to fall. 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 »

    • March Home Sales, Prices Fall

      March Home Sales, Prices Fall

      Prices on existing homes fell in March, but buyers stayed away, either unable to get loans, or betting on yet bigger drops, Bloomberg reports. Sales dropped 2%, to an annual rate of 4.93 million, as the median price fell to $200,700 from $217,400 last year. The number of available homes meanwhile swelled by 40,000, exacerbating supply problems. More »

    • Maybe You Shouldn't Own a Home

      Maybe You Shouldn't Own a Home

      Should all Americans own their dream home? Not really, writes Joshua Riner in the New Republic —only those who can afford one. But Washington made homebuying easy, sparked the subprime crisis, and is now making things worse by buying up risky mortgages. Officials "need to replace the dream of homeownership with policies that actually increase wealth—not just the illusion of it," writes Riner. More »

    • Bush Tabs 'Problem Solver' to Head HUD

      Bush Tabs 'Problem Solver' to Head HUD

      With the housing market in turmoil, President Bush is turning to an investment banker-turned-bureaucrat to head HUD, the Washington Post reports. Steven Preston, 47, has run the Small Business Administration since 2006 after a stint at Lehman Brothers; he succeeds Alphonso Jackson, who announced his resignation 2 weeks ago amid allegations of uethical misconduct. More »

    • Housing Bill Loaded with Corporate Tax Breaks

      Housing Bill Loaded with Corporate Tax Breaks

      The bill was rushed through the Senate to come to the aid of homeowners facing foreclosure, but it turns out that some of its biggest beneficiaries are automakers, airlines and energy producers. The Senate’s housing bill is packed with billions in corporate tax cuts, the New York Times reports. With populist fervor behind the bill, lobbyists from a host of industries hit the Hill. And while the bill would help homebuilders and homebuyers, there’s little to actually prevent foreclosures. 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 »

    • Linens 'n Things to Go Bust

      Linens 'n Things to Go Bust

      Linens ‘n Things ls expected to file for Chapter 11 by Tuesday, the deadline for a $15-million quarterly debt payment, the Wall Street Journal reports. The move would make the home-furnishings giant the first major retailer sunk by the housing crisis, after bloated debt and plummeting demand handed the New Jersey company $242 million in losses last year. More »

    • Senate Passes Housing Aid Bill

      Senate Passes Housing Aid Bill

      The Senate approved a $15 billion measure to address the housing slump today, including $6 billion in total tax breaks to homebuilding firms and a $7,000 tax credit for buyers of foreclosed homes. Though it passed by an 84-12 margin, opposition from President Bush and the House could yet sink the measure, Reuters reports. More »

    • Mortgage Crisis Spreads Across the Atlantic

      Mortgage Crisis Spreads Across the Atlantic

      UK home prices tumbled 2.5% in February—the largest fall since the 1990s—as the International Monetary Fund warned that Britain could face a housing crisis similar to the US. British PM Gordon Brown insisted yesterday the decline was containable, but the Bank of England is now under serious pressure to cut interest rates at its meeting tomorrow, the Times of London reports. More »

    • Slump Stings Vegas McMansion Owners

      Slump Stings Vegas McMansion Owners

      The housing crisis has caused the number of homes for sale across the country to grow, but in Las Vegas, brokers are dealing with an unusual aspect of swelling inventory—an excess of $1 million-plus listings. Although they're luxury properties with pools and excesses of polished marble, those constructed more than a few years ago are tough to sell because they're considered outdated. The LA Times goes house-hunting. More »

Stories 1 - 20 of 143

<< Prev 1 2 3 4 5 ... 8 Next >>
Housing Market
A house for sale is seen in Somerville, Mass., Tuesday, April 24, 2007. Sales of existing homes plunged in March by the largest amount in nearly two decades, reflecting bad weather and increasing problems...   (Associated Press)
Housing Market
Real estate sale signs sit in front of a home in Montpelier, Vt., Tuesday, July 24, 2007. Sales of existing homes fell for a fourth straight month in June and even a small increase in home prices was...   (Associated Press)
Housing Market
Real estate sings mounted on homes are shown in Philadelphia, Thursday, Aug. 16, 2007. First-time homebuyers and people with poor credit would have greater access to federally insured mortgages under...   (Associated Press)
Housing Market
Jose Flores, who calls himself a "Mexican hillbilly," sits in his real estate office in Dodge City, Kan., April 3, 2007. When he arrived in 1987, the only Mexican-owned business in town was a secondhand...   (Associated Press)
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