Homes and Foreclosures - Now Fixed Rate Loans too!!
First from today's NYT:
So TARP and PPIP have played out as far as helping the average Joe?!!? Hmmm ...About 5.4 million of the country’s 45 million home loans were delinquent or in some stage of the foreclosure process in the first three months of the year, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. About 12.07 percent of all mortgages were delinquent or in foreclosure, up from 11.93 percent at the end of 2008.
Temporary halts on foreclosures imposed by lenders and mortgage underwriters have mostly ended, and banks are moving quickly against delinquent homeowners.
What is interesting is that there was actually an INCREASE in prices last month!Housing specialists said the number of foreclosures would probably keep rising as more people lose their jobs or are forced to trade full-time work for part-time. Nearly six million jobs have been lost since the recession began a year and a half ago, and many economists expect the unemployment rate to rise to 10 percent from its current 8.9 percent.
More defaults by unemployed homeowners could shunt more houses onto an already saturated market, economists said, dragging prices down farther.
From Bloomberg.com:The figures released Thursday suggested that prime fixed-rate loans were supplanting risky subprime loans and rising adjustable-rate mortgages as the driving force behind the country’s foreclosure crisis.
The foreclosure rate on prime fixed-rate mortgages, the industry’s standard plain-vanilla loan, doubled in the last year, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association, and for the first time, those loans make up the largest share of new foreclosures.
The U.S. delinquency rate jumped to a seasonally adjusted 9.12 percent from 7.88 percent, the biggest-ever increase, and the share of loans entering foreclosure rose to 1.37 percent, the Mortgage Bankers Association said today. Both figures are the highest in records going back to 1972. Fixed rates rose to 4.91 percent, Freddie Mac said, and an increase in bond yields earlier this week shows rates may continue rising.
REPEAT - THE HIGHEST DELINQUENCY AND FORECLOSURE RATES BACK TO 1972 - WHEN RECORD KEEPING BEGAN!!!


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