The 30-year fixed mortgage rate (national average) is at 3.72%, down from 3.82% last week. The rate for a 15-year fixed home loan is at 3.01% down from 3.12%. The rate for a 5-1 adjustable-rate mortgage is 2.63%, down from 2.76%; a 5-1 ARM has an initial rate that applies for the first five years of the loan and then adjusts annually.
Thursday, February 2, 2012
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Obama "No more red tape. No more runaround from the banks"
With about 10.7 million U.S. borrowers, roughly 22 percent, of all outstanding loans underwater, the Obama Administration has declared that banks should cover the cost of a (new version) mortgage refinancing plan, "because they helped cause the crisis."
Three months ago, the White House loosened requirements on a federal effort, called the Home Affordable Refinance Program, or HARP, to make it easier for underwater homeowners with government-backed loans to lock into mortgages at lower rates. Cutting costs for borrowers whose mortgages are backed by government-run housing finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the new plan would be open to all borrowers who are current on their payments.
The Home Affordable Refinance Program, aka HARP 2.0, is a program to help underwater borrowers refinance to lower current rates. HARP 1 was announced in March 2009, allowing borrowers up to 105 or 125% of amount owed to current market value. But, less than 900,000 home owners have taken advantage of this program. So President Obama announced an 2.0 version of the HARP program, with the hope of reaching more underwater borrowers. The HARP 2.0 program essentially removed the 125% cap for the amount being underwater to unlimited. The program took effect in Dec. 1, 2011 with only bank servicers allowing refinance until Fannie Mae can update their software to allow non-servicing lenders to originate these loans, expected by March 2012.
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Florida Housing Market Indicators
*Florida existing home sales: -2% (month-to-previous-year comparison)
*Florida existing condo sales: -2% (month-to-previous-year comparison)
*Florida existing home median price: $134,300
*Florida existing condo median price: $91,900
National existing home sales: +5% (month-to-previous-month comparison; all housing types)
National existing home median price $164,500
Saturday, January 28, 2012
Proposed settlement with Banks little help for homeowners
A proposed $25 billion settlement between five big banks, state attorneys general and the Obama administration will do relatively little to stop the ongoing wave of home foreclosures or to revive the deeply depressed housing market. The program would help some “underwater" homeowners but there are currently about 11 million borrowers with an average shortfall of roughly $65,000 — or a total of $700 billion — in “negative equity.”
Talks got underway more than a year ago after a series of private lawsuits focused national attention on an outbreak of “robo-signing” and other shoddy and fraudulent document processing practices by mortgage servicers foreclosing on homes. Among the abuses regulators found were so-called “dual track processing” in which lenders working with a homeowner to modify a mortgage would (on the side) continue with legal proceedings to foreclose. In other cases, lenders had foreclosed without properly showing they had the right to do so.
The deal would require banks to devote roughly $17 billion of the total settlement to various types of loan modifications for homeowners. Rather than paying that amount in cash, lenders would receive a series of credit toward that amount based on a complex formula that would assign different levels of credit to different types of modifications. Decisions about which loans to modify would be left to bankers.
The program would apply mostly to the relatively small universe of home loans owned outright by the five lenders, including Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citibank and Ally Financial (formerly GMAC). Loans held by government-controlled Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac — some 60 percent of the 31 million U.S. home loans outstanding — would not be covered in the deal.
Another $5 billion would be set aside to help support state foreclosure relief programs. A portion of those funds would be used to pay homeowners who can demonstrate they were victims of abusive or fraudulent foreclosure practices. Those awards would average about $1,800. The system for arbitrating those claims and distributing those checks has yet to be worked out.
Another $3 billion would be applied to a program to refinance mortgages at lower rates.
If enough states go along, lenders would emerge largely unscathed from the settlement, amounting to a slap on the wrist.
Critics have argued the proposal lets bankers off the hook too easily for the mortgage mess they created with sloppy underwriting during the housing boom.
Thursday, January 26, 2012
Sunday, January 22, 2012
Friday, January 13, 2012
The stats are in and we Have a Winner!
In the United States, last year, about 1.89 million properties received notices of default, auction or repossession. That's just one in 69 U.S. households. Foreclosure filings totaled almost 2.7 million, meaning some properties got multiple notices. More importantly, 804,000 + properties were actually seized by lenders last year.
Leading the pack (in foreclosure filings per household of 2011) as the Nation's highest rate for the fifth straight year, that's 1 in 16, it's Nevada again!
Lagging not fare behind, as #2 in agressive bank actions was Arizona with 1 in 24 households receiving a notice.
Rounding out the field for TOP 10 highest rates in 2011;
#3 California 1 in 31
#4 Georgia 1 in 37
#5 Utah 1 in 43
#6 Michigan
#7 Florida
#8 Illinois
#9 Colorado
#10 Idaho
In the category "Top 10 metropolitan areas with populations over 200,000" coming in first with 1 foreclosure filing per 14 households its -- wait for it ----- Las Vegas.
#2 Stockton
#3 Modesto
#4 Vallejo-Fairfield
#5 Riverside-San Bernardino
#6 Phoenix
#7 Merced
#8 Reno
#9 Bakersfield
#10 Sacramento
Stay tuned as Year 2012 is promising to have even bigger numbers. Banks are expected to seize more than 1 million U.S. homes this year (up 25%) even while settlement talks continue between the lenders and state attorneys general over robosigning.
Leading the pack (in foreclosure filings per household of 2011) as the Nation's highest rate for the fifth straight year, that's 1 in 16, it's Nevada again!
Lagging not fare behind, as #2 in agressive bank actions was Arizona with 1 in 24 households receiving a notice.
Rounding out the field for TOP 10 highest rates in 2011;
#3 California 1 in 31
#4 Georgia 1 in 37
#5 Utah 1 in 43
#6 Michigan
#7 Florida
#8 Illinois
#9 Colorado
#10 Idaho
In the category "Top 10 metropolitan areas with populations over 200,000" coming in first with 1 foreclosure filing per 14 households its -- wait for it ----- Las Vegas.
#2 Stockton
#3 Modesto
#4 Vallejo-Fairfield
#5 Riverside-San Bernardino
#6 Phoenix
#7 Merced
#8 Reno
#9 Bakersfield
#10 Sacramento
Stay tuned as Year 2012 is promising to have even bigger numbers. Banks are expected to seize more than 1 million U.S. homes this year (up 25%) even while settlement talks continue between the lenders and state attorneys general over robosigning.
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