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October 10, 2008 5:45:31 PM CDT



Housing Market track this thread

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

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 81 - 100 of 233

  • June 2008
    • America's Top 10 Cities

      America's Top 10 Cities

      (Newser) - The best cities are those where you can not only find work and affordable housing, but are also infused with culture and creativity, Kiplinger's Personal Finance writes. Its (somewhat surprising) top 10: Houston: Flush with museums, nightlife, and a teeming job market. More »

    • New Wave of Foreclosures Expected in '09

      New Wave of Foreclosures Expected in '09

      (Newser) - 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

      (Newser) - 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

      (Newser) - 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 »

    • 'Evangelist' Renter: Time to Buy

      'Evangelist' Renter: Time to Buy

      (Newser) - As property prices head back down, a self-proclaimed "evangelist" of renting is trading in the lease for a mortgage. David Leonhardt of the New York Times has been advising people for years not to buy a home and get their money tied up in a housing bubble, but he now believes buying is starting to make sense again. More »

    • Foreclosure Sales Rebound as Buyers Snap Up Deals

      Foreclosure Sales Rebound as Buyers Snap Up Deals

      (Newser) - 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

      (Newser) - 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 »

    • Mortgage Deal Close in Senate

      Mortgage Deal Close in Senate

      (Newser) - A Senate committee is close to agreeing on expansion of a government insurance program for refinanced mortgages, the Wall Street Journal reports. Though ridden with partisan conflict as recently as a week ago, staff for Democrat Chris Dodd and Republican Richard Shelby said today the sides were nearing a compromise, and a vote to move the measure along could come in the next few hours. More »

    • Foreclosures Go Upscale

      Foreclosures Go Upscale

      (Newser) - 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 »

    • Home, Retail Sales Keep Sliding

      Home, Retail Sales Keep Sliding

      (Newser) - The housing market continued to plunge in the first quarter of 2008, as single-family sales dropped 22% from their year-ago pace, to 4.95 million annually. Bloomberg reports that the median home price is off 7.7% from a year ago, to $196,300, as foreclosed properties drag down values. Meanwhile, US retail sales were off in April, mainly because of a big drop in autos. More »

    • Fish Clean Up Mortgage Mess

      Fish Clean Up Mortgage Mess

      (Newser) - 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

      (Newser) - 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

      (Newser) - 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

      (Newser) - 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

      (Newser) - 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

      (Newser) - 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 »