2010 Jun 12th

The Latest from the BEA

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The U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) has released its first set of estimates of the major components of gross domestic product (GDP) for the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI). From 2002 to 2007, real GDP of CNMI decreased at an average annual rate of 4.2 percent. Don’t always believe what you hear. You can access these new GDP statistics yourself without the spin at
http://www.bea.gov/newsreleases/general/terr/2010/CNMI_060710.htm.

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2010 May 18th

Saw Tooth or Zig Zag Recovery ? ?

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Some housing experts now predict what one calls a “saw-tooth bottom” to the housing market, driven by a shadow inventory that could include up to 4.5 million properties.  This shadow inventory is more than just bank-owned homes not yet on the market. It also includes sellers who would like to sell but, fearing they can’t, are waiting for signs of a market bottom before putting their homes on the market. Some say this rush to sell will add inventory to the market and at least temporarily drive prices back down – hence, the “saw-tooth” description.  Years ago this was desribed as a “zig-zag” trend that if you average the past 6 months on a curve it will be as it really is…..slow but steady recovery.

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2010 May 17th

Mortgage Rates fell to the lowest this year !

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Mortgage rates fell this week to the lowest level of the year, as rates fell on U.S. government securities. Fixed mortgage rates closely track interest rates paid on long-term Treasury bonds. The average rate on a 30-year fixed rate mortgage dipped to 4.93 percent this week from 5 percent a week earlier. It was the lowest level since mid-December, when rates averaged 4.81 percent.

The drop came as investors shifted money from risky European debt to safer U.S. securities. Bond yields fell as a result, and that lowered mortgage rates. Freddie Mac collects mortgage rates on Monday through Wednesday of each week from lenders around the country. Rates often fluctuate significantly, even within a given day.

The average fixed rate dropped to a record low of 4.71 percent late last year, pushed down by a campaign by the Federal Reserve to reduce borrowing costs for consumers. The program ended this spring, but rates have remained low, especially after fears that Greece’s government would default shook world markets.

The last time rates for 30-year fixed mortgages averaged less than 5 percent was the week of March 25, when they were 4.99 percent.

This week, the average rate on a 15-year fixed-rate mortgage was 4.30 percent, down from 4.36 percent last week.

Rates on five-year, adjustable-rate mortgages averaged 3.95 percent, down from 3.97 percent a week earlier. Rates on one-year, adjustable-rate mortgages fell to 4.02 percent from 4.07 percent.

The rates do not include add-on fees known as points. One point is equal to 1 percent of the total loan amount.

The nationwide fee for loans in Freddie Mac’s survey averaged 0.7 of a point for 30-year loans 0.6 of a point for 15 year, 5-year and 1-year loans.

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2010 Mar 7th

Homeowners go legal for Loan Mods

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More frustrated homeowners turned to federal court this week for help with their mortgages, saying Bank of America and Wells Fargo failed to provide promised payment modifications.
The two cases, filed Tuesday in Massachusetts, seek class-action status.
Three specific families are identified, one with a loan serviced by Bank of America and two by Wells Fargo – the nation’s two largest mortgage servicers. They were granted trial modifications, according to court documents, but haven’t received long-term modifications despite having submitted all required documents and made timely payments for more than three months.
The claims are simple, the two filings say: “When a large financial institution promises to modify an eligible loan to prevent foreclosure, homeowners who live up to their end of the bargain expect that promise to be kept.”
The Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) is the main federal plan for reducing mortgage payments, part of a $75 billion plan to stem the national foreclosure crisis. The program calls for a three-month trial period, intended to give time for the homeowner to demonstrate an ability to keep up with the lower payments. However, there are growing reports of homeowners in trial plans ultimately being rejected for modifications despite making their trial payments or even being foreclosed on during the process.
The modification process has generated so many complaints that regulators and lawmakers are pressuring lenders to improve.
The Massachusetts cases, which are not open to borrowers in other states, say homeowners are “living in limbo” and spending scarce resources on payments that might ultimately not save their homes.
Earlier this month, 10 Ohio homeowners filed a civil case in federal court against Bank of America, also saying the bank broke promises to modify their payments.
The circumstances differ, in that the Ohio homeowners say they were promised modifications during a federally sponsored event last year. As of the filing date, they hadn’t received documents or had their payments reduced, meaning they are not as far along in the process as the Massachusetts families.

© 2010 The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.), Stella M. Hopkins. Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune News Service.

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2010 Feb 22nd

$1.5 Billion on it’s way to help those in a struggle !

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A plan to channel $1.5 billion to housing agencies in five states hit hardest by the real estate crash has Florida officials hopeful they can keep more people in their homes and out of foreclosure. President Obama announced the program Friday while in Nevada for a town hall meeting and campaign push for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. The states included in the new program are Nevada, California, Arizona, Florida and Michigan, all of which consistently rank high on any measure of mortgage woe. But with more than 20 percent of its home loans seriously delinquent or in foreclosure, Florida tops the nation for defaults, according to a Mortgage Bankers Association report also released Friday. Obama administration officials called the $1.5 billion “modest” considering the depth of the nation’s housing crisis but said they hope it will lead states to come up with innovative solutions tailored to their own needs. Those solutions are expected to plug holes in the administration’s earlier Making Home Affordable Program, which has struggled to help unemployed homeowners who don’t have the income to qualify for a loan modification. It also attempts to tackle one of the thorniest issues to come out of the market meltdown – how to cope with upside-down loans where the homeowner owes more than what the property is worth. About 41 percent of South Florida borrowers, and 55 percent of Treasure Coast borrowers were underwater in December, according to analysts at Zillow.com. The $1.5 billion in taxpayer money, which is coming from the federal Troubled Asset Relief Program, can be used to help negotiate with lenders to write down mortgages on underwater loans.
The money will be doled out to states based on a formula that considers home price declines and unemployment. Officials couldn’t say Friday how many people it might help. There was some optimism Friday that the national housing market has begun to make a turn for the better. The Mortgage Bankers Association survey showed that despite continued record foreclosures, there was a small decrease in the number of loans 30-days late in the last quarter of 2009. That means fewer homes entered the foreclosure pipeline.
Instead, national 30-day delinquencies fell from 3.79 percent to 3.63 percent. In Florida, the 30-day delinquencies fell from 4 percent to 3.67 percent. The drop off may also be attributed, in part, to foreclosure rescue plans such as the Making Home Affordable Program. The program offers incentives to banks to reduce mortgage payments by cutting interest rates or principal amounts, but has been panned by critics for not reaching enough people.
A year into the program, 116,297 permanent loan modifications, including 14,598 in Florida, have been completed. But that’s only a fraction of the estimated 3.4 million loans nationwide that are 60 or more days delinquent.

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