| Existing Home Sales Rose 5% in December:
Home sales rose in December to the highest pace in nearly a year. The gain coincides with other signs that show the troubled housing market improved at the end of last year. The National Association of Realtors said Friday that sales increased 5 percent last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.61 million, the best level since January 2011 and the third straight monthly increase. Sales are increasing at a time when the market is flashing other positive signs. Mortgage rates are at record-low levels. Homebuilders have grown slightly less pessimistic because more people are saying they might be open to buying a home this year. And home construction picked up in the final quarter of last year. The median sales price rose 2.3 percent to $164,500 in December. |
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What Happened to Rates Last Week?
Mortgage backed securities (MBS) lost -91 basis points from last Friday to the prior Friday which moved mortgage rates upward. |
| What to Watch Out For This Week:
The following are the major economic reports that will hit the market this week. They each have the ability to affect the pricing of Mortgage Backed Securities and therefore, interest rates for Government and Conventional mortgages. I will be watching these reports closely for you and let you know if there are any big surprises: Courtesy of Stephanie Halpin Fairway Mortgage |
Mortgage and Housing sales data update
Tags: banking, buy, buying, Cincinnati, Market data cincinnati MLS stats solds active pending, realestate interestrates financials
Monday Morning Real Estate Deals!
| 3762 CITATION WAY 1028, Myrtle Beach, SOUTH CAROLINA 29577 | |||
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Price: $85,000 Bedrooms: 3 Bathrooms: 2.00 |
VERY SPACIOUS THREE BEDROOM TWO BATH CONDO OVERLOOKING SMALL LAKE CENTRALLY LOCATED INMYRTLE BEACH AND VERY CLOSED TO THE OCEAN ANDBROADWAY AT THE BEACH. THIS UNIT HAS VERY NICE | View Details Save Property |
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Listing courtesy of Mike Thompson of Century 21 Hawkeye Realty
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| 401 Tree Top Court C, Myrtle Beach, SOUTH CAROLINA 29588 | |||
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Price: $44,800 Bedrooms: 1 Bathrooms: 1.00 |
For additional information about this property, please fill out the Request More Information form. | View Details Save Property |
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Listing courtesy of Donald Alexander of Century 21 Coastal Lifestyles
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| 6850 KING ARTHUR DR 103, Myrtle Beach, SOUTH CAROLINA 29588 | |||
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Price: $55,000 Bedrooms: 2 Bathrooms: 2.00 |
THIS IS A FIRST FLOOR TWO BEDROOM CONDO IN A GATED GOLF COURSE COMMUNITY WITH LOTS OF AMENITIES INCLUDING POOL, TENNIS, GOLF AND CLUBHOUSE. THERE IS A SCREENED PORCH OVERLOOKING A | View Details Save Property |
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Listing courtesy of Mike Thompson of Century 21 Hawkeye Realty
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©2011 Coastal Carolinas Association of REALTORS® MLS. All rights reserved. The data relating to real estate for sale on this website comes in part from the Broker Reciprocity Program of the Coastal Carolinas Association of REALTORS® Multiple Listing Service. Real estate listings held by brokerage firms other than Watermark Real Estate Group are marked with the Broker Reciprocity logo and detailed information about them includes the name of the listing brokers. The information provided is for consumers’ personal, non-commercial use and may not be used for any purpose other than to identify prospective properties consumers may be interested in purchasing. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed accurate, and should be independently verified.
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Tags: banking, buy, buying, gatlinburg, myrtlebeach, Real estate, realestate, tennessee
Criteria for buying a home after a short sale
Below are the waiting periods for borrowers who want to buy a home after they have had a short sale. These are conventional only, not FHA.
1. The new loan will be at 80% LTV or less – Must wait 2 years from SS settlement date.
2. The new loan will be at 80.01% LTV or Higher – Must wait 5 years from SS settlement date.
If you have any questions, please contact
Chris Johnstone
Home Loans Manager, Retail Mortgage Sales
Bank of America
christopher.johnstone@bankofamerica.com
513-582-2154
Tags: banking, banks, banks bank shortsale solds homes realestate, buying, Cincinnati
Mortgage Rates: Update
Critical Week for interest rates and we will keep you up to minute informed!
Minimum Credit score FHA 620
*4.375%
30 Year Fixed Rate
Normal Closing costs
*4.50%
30 Year Fixed Rate
$250 Closing Cost Special
*4.50%
No PMI with 15% down
30 Year Fixed Rate
Normal Closing costs
*3.0%
5 Year ARM
Normal Closing costs
*3.25%
5 Year ARM
$250 Closing Cost Special
*3.50%
15 Year Fixed Rate
Normal Closing costs
*3.75%
15 Year Fixed Rate
$350 Closing Cost Special
*4.25%
FHA/VA 30 Year Fixed
0 Points
Courtesy
TR Wise
Tags: banking, banks, buying, Cincinnati, realestate interestrates financials
Bill Calls for Extending Loan Limits
Courtesy of Realtor Magazine
Bill Calls for Extending Loan Limits
Daily Real Estate News | Monday, July 18, 2011
A bill introduced late last week calls for extending the current conforming loan limits on government-backed mortgages at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for another two years.
The bill, introduced by Rep. John Campbell, R-Calif., and Rep. Gary Ackerman, D-N.Y., would allow the government-sponsored enterprises and the Federal Housing Administration to guarantee or buy mortgages worth up to $729,750 in many neighborhoods.
The current loan limits are set to expire Oct. 1. If an extension isn’t granted, the maximum mortgage amount in high-cost areas will drop from $729,750 to $625,500 (however, that limit will vary throughout the country).
“With the economy remaining fragile and the housing sector still struggling to recover, now is not the time to make the cost of mortgages more expensive,” Ackerman said.
The National Association of Home Builders has said it fears more than 17 million homes nationwide will become ineligible for more affordable federal funding if the loan limit expires. However, last week, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke saidhe was confident that the private market, including investors and insurers, would fill the void if the conforming loan limits expired — although likely at a higher cost to borrowers.
Source:“Lawmakers Introduce Bipartisan Bill to Extend Conforming Loan Limits,” HousingWire (July 15, 2011)
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Tags: banking, buying, Cincinnati, finacials, realestate interestrates financials
Spike in Distressed Property Sales Is A Healthy Sign, Says Moody’s
Spike in Distressed Property Sales Is A Healthy Sign, Says Moody’s
May 25, 2011 10:14 AM, By Matt Hudgins, NREI Contributing Writer
An index of U.S. commercial real estate prices fell to a cyclical low in March that was down 47% from the peak in October 2007. So why should investors be happy?
The Moody’s/REAL National All Property Price Index measures price changes on completed sales of apartment, office, industrial and retail properties. A 4.2% decline in the index since February stems in part from a surge in transaction volume among distressed properties, which accounted for more than 30% of March sales.
Mushrooming trading of distressed assets means that investors and lenders are realizing losses on their distressed assets on a massive scale. Experts say that process is painful, but those price corrections must occur in order for the nation’s commercial real estate market to regain its footing and for overstretched property owners to de-lever and bring cash flows into positive territory.
“Importantly, we’ve now set a post-peak low in the all-property index simultaneously with a post-peak high in distress transactions,” observes Tad Philipp, director of commercial real estate research at Moody’s Investors Service, which publishes the index.
In other words, the decline in the all-property index doesn’t necessarily mean commercial real estate values are dropping. The recent dip is more a reflection of the larger proportion of transactions involving distressed assets, which bring down the average. Indeed, in primary markets where distress represents only a small fraction of transaction volume, asset values are well into a recovery cycle.
Primary price leaders
“The commercial real estate world in the five or six primary markets is as active as it has ever been in terms of desire for the properties and pricing, the backdrop being that interest rates are low,” says Bill Collins, an executive managing director who oversees the capital markets group at Cassidy Turley in Washington, D.C.
With risk-averse investors focused on a handful of gateway markets that include places like New York City, San Francisco and the nation’s capital, competitive bidding has been pushing up transaction prices in those metros for some time, Collins says.
“You’ve got a lot of capital looking to be placed,” says Collins. “The fact that there’s only 60% leverage available and 40% equity required to close a deal really doesn’t matter; people don’t need to stretch their dollars because they have this accruing pool of dollars they need to place.”
Indeed, Moody’s researchers found that average prices in the primary markets already show marked improvement. An index of non-distressed, trophy properties — those valued at $10 million or more and located in one of six major U.S. markets — in March showed property prices have risen 26.7% from a trough in December 2009.
(The six cities covered in the index are Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco and Washington.)
In fact, pricing gains are evident among trophy assets even when distressed transactions are included in the calculation. A separate Moody’s index measuring trophy property sales including distressed deals indicates that prices have risen 22.9% since that index bottomed in July 2009. “This is consistent with liquidity in the commercial real estate sector first returning to prime assets in capital-attracting cities,” says Philipp.
Crank up the volume
A recent pick-up in transaction volume is a sign that the U.S. commercial real estate market is on the mend, because moving distressed properties through the system sets the stage for recovery, according to Moody’s.
In March, there were 182 repeat-sales transactions totaling nearly $2.5 billion, a significant increase over February’s $1.26 billion volume and 115 repeat sales. March had the second-highest number of repeat-sale transactions since 2008, the total only exceeded by that of December 2010, which benefitted from being the end of the year.
Moody’s uses repeat sales, or multiple sales of the same property over time, to calculate price changes in its indices. Looking at the larger transaction spectrum, sales of U.S. commercial real estate valued at $5 million or more totaled more than $28 billion in the first quarter of 2011, up 77% from $15.9 billion one year earlier, according to Real Capital Analytics.
Moody’s national indices showed declining prices across property types in the first quarter. Industrial recorded the largest decline, falling 7.7% from the previous quarter to a post-peak low. Office was down 7.1% from the previous quarter but was up 1.9% from its low in the third quarter of 2009.
Apartments were down 4.7% from the fourth quarter of 2010, but were up 14.1% from that sector’s low in the third quarter of 2009. Retail was down 4.5% from the previous quarter but up 9.4% from a bottom in the second quarter of 2010.
Investors can expect the all-property price index to “bounce along the bottom” until more distressed assets move through the market, Philipp predicts.
On a positive note, the special servicers that handle distressed conduit loans in commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) are resolving those debts at a rate about equal to the pace of CMBS debts falling into delinquency. That is resulting in a fairly stable delinquency rate, which stands at 9.22%.
Taken together with swelling transaction volume, the commercial real estate industry appears to be making progress in dealing with distress, says Philipp. “The resolution process for this transaction cycle appears to be well under way.”
Tags: banking, banks, banks bank shortsale solds homes realestate, buy, buying, Cincinnati, commercialrealestate multifamily industrial office retail condo condominium real estate national, commericalrealestate residentialdevelopment realestate development localgovernment ohio UnitedStates
Breaking News- Financial Markets
Financial Market Update
Breaking News! The Treasury Department just announced they will begin selling some of their massive holdings of Mortgage Backed Securities to the tune of $10 Billion per month depending on market conditions. They say this is due to the stabilizing economy and market conditions that are ripe for selling. The Treasury acquired $142 Billion in debt during the financial crisis. News of this unloading process has immediately pushed Bond prices significantly lower as Traders try to get their own positions sold. It’s like musical chairs…no one wants to be the last one standing with a mitt full of Mortgage Backed Securities.
Tags: banking, banks, federal reserve, FHA, realestate interestrates financials
Creating leverage in the current Real Estate market (Jan 2011)
If you havent noticed through our media outlets, Cooper Consulting Group and The Home Finder Network have been slammed with Real Estate business recently. Clients by the dozens, of all kinds in all areas have been phoning and emailing us with requests for help. To paint a picture of why, is what we are here to examine and explain.
Historically the December market place is slow for many, for us it was a very busy time. We experienced 3 closings, 4 contract terms on our listings delivered, negotiated and slotted to close in the early 1st quarter of 2011. Over a half-dozen new buyers have jumped the over the fence, entered the shopping market and are prepared to deliver purchase terms within the month. All of this at once can be pointed to several market conditions.
Leverage for Sellers:
The position for sellers right now is the lack of inventory in our market place, especially through the months of December and January. Most sellers remove their properties from he market place during the Holiday season, leaving only distressed bank owned properties and highly motivated sellers. For those sellers that kept their homes active the low inventory helped a tremendous amount, lowing the buyers choices of homes. Turning our focus to the buyers side during this time-table, historically most buyers are not active during the Holiday or winter months either, however this season, the interest rates have creeped up, according to Ohiorealtors.org the rate have raised over 5% nearly a full point since November 2010. Buyers are listening to their financial and Real Estate professionals, now is finally the time for the best interest rate.
On Dec 31st, our local MLS experienced 1,136 expired listing, all in one day! Many of which were bank owned or distressed property inventory but not all. Sellers have called me wanting to plan for the spring time to list, ask yourself how many other home owners are waiting until spring? By March 2011, our inventory will grow, by April it will be close to a an annual high for 2011. What are you really waiting for? more buyers to be shopping, or more homes to be on the market? fortunately for sellers, it doesn’t take more buyers to draft terms on your house, it take 1 good ready willing and able buyer. Start planning now, invite us or your real estate professional to visit your home NOW! and do not wait until spring! List now, price it right, and hire the best marketing and negotiating expert you can hire! Highest price and shortest time starts now, your timing counts on it!
Tags: banking, buy, buying, Cincinnati, Market data cincinnati MLS stats solds active pending, realestate interestrates financials
The lastest Fannie Mae fallout- FIRST HAND!
Last last week several large financial institutions put on delay on up coming foreclosure actions, the details for reason can be viewed here in an article from the Washington Post. The article states “To be certain affidavits have followed the correct procedures, Bank of America will delay the process in order to amend all affidavits in foreclosure cases that have not yet gone to judgment,” spokesman Dan Frahm said in a statement. However I found out first hand this is affecting MORE then just foreclosures that have not yet gone to judgement.
3 weeks ago a client of mine drafted an offer to Fannie ”JP Morgan Chase” a bank that also put on this hold, and had it acceptedwith a closing date of next Thursday October 14th. The filing of foreclosure on the property took place in March of 2010 and was filed at the Hamilton County auditors office around the 20th of that same month. The foreclosure had already gone to judgement, then on Tuesday I receive an email from the sellers Fannie May via JP Moran Chase’s representatives that the close was on hold and needed to be extended until March 2011! My client, who was financing the purchase had locked in to an amazing interest rates and was beside themselves at what to do. The seller offered a full refund of the 5% down fee that collected on the contract agreement day and was in full understanding if the buyer wanted to walk away.
At this point I started to get down to business, not to focus on the problem but to uncover the solution!! I started by calling the County to make certain the title had been file, and recorded property and it was. I then called the title company assigned by the seller Fannie Mae via JP Morgan Chase. The closing coordinator assigned to our case was at a complete gasp, she had also be notified a the hold late in the day on Monday. She explain 45 pending closing on her desk had been put on hold, I respond ”shew only 45 that sounds like a lot”, she then said “NO not only 45, 4500!” I couldn’t believe it, the title company is exclusive to cases in Ohio for Fannie Mae and all there foreclosed upon PENDING sale contract cases had been put on hold. My next call was to the listing agent, a well-known REO agent in our area who specializes in this type of transaction. He himself is difficult to get a hold of and not 10 mins after I left a message he called me direct, in a frantic vibration. He described to me the issue, all his business was on HOLD, he explain I can’t close a thing, he said “most will close within 60 days that are already pending, but some it will be upwards of 6 months”. He told me this all came down between start of business Monday Oct 5th and mid day Oct 6th. Talk about losing your income for half a year.
I stayed positive and my final call went to my beloved title attorney here in Cincinnati. The man who has the right thing to say about any situation related to real estate. Like always when I call him, I explained my situation in detail, I explained what my research had uncovered. He described to me the directions he had been given about the situation “We were told it only affects future foreclosure, this is new to me”, keep in mind this is a real estate TITLE attorney who owns his own title agency. This news was fresh and still his, but what really caught me off guard what the advice he gave me to solve the problem “Kris, I apologize but you are helpless, there is no solution”.
And so we wait…..
Tags: apprasials realestàte fanniemae fha, bank of america, banking, banks, banks bank shortsale solds homes realestate, buy, buying, Cincinnati, closings, fall out, fannie, fanniemae, FHA, finacials, GMAC, jp morgan chase, leanding, loans, realestate, realestate interestrates financials
FHA Mortgage Insurance Premiums UPDATE
The new FHA MORTGAGE INSURANCE PREMIUMS go into effect for CASE NUMBERS
assigned on or after 10/4/10
NOW is the time to contact your potential FHA buyers & clients (especially
those possible FHA streamline refinances) and get word out. If they want a
choice of options, they need to get a purchase contract and/or a loan
application in NOW. The new MIP has merits in that it will be a lesser loan
amount financed and therefore less loan to pay off when people sell their
house. However, it causes a HIGHER PITI payment that may not be appealing
to people.
Current upfront mortgage insurance premium – 2.25 bps ~ On or after
10/4/2010 – 1.00 bps ~ LOWER!
Current monthly MIP – .55 bps ~ On or after 10/4/10 – .90 on LTV’s > 95%
~ HIGHER!
Take a look at the attached analysis here: FHA_Premium_Changes_Analysis[1] to see the significant difference this
change will make on a $150,000 purchase price. You will notice the lower
UMIP will mean an $1800 lower loan amount. But, the much higher monthly MIP
would increase the monthly payment $32! This is going to have an impact on
borrowers and their financing options. Call or email me with questions! We
are closing FHA loans in 30 days!
Courtesy of Kathy Lamb Union Saving Bank
Tags: banking, banks, fanniemae, FHA, housing, interest rates, PMI, realestate interestrates financials




