![]() |
|
||||||
|
CATEGORIES ARCHIVES XML FEEDS CONTACT Send suggestions to:
Links
Powered by Movable Type 3.2 |
|
Recent ItemsBuy a Possible Foreclosure?
Suze Orman is asked how to buy a home when the buyer knows the homeowner is about to file bankruptcy. posted: July 16, 2008 in | Comments () | TrackBack (0) What's the Scope of Problems Facing Freddie Mac & Fannie Mae
Graphics from the New York Times: posted: July 12, 2008 in | Comments () | TrackBack (0) Selling Americana Piece By Peice
I think Rybololev overpaid by about 25mil. Nice work, Mr. Trump - sock it to those Russkies! posted: July 12, 2008 in | Comments () | TrackBack (0) Housing with no secondary market
From Bradley Inman of Inman News: 1. The capital that exists from direct lenders such as community banks, savings institutions and large commercial banks will fall short of potential demand and focus on bread-and-butter loans, leaving most borrowers out in the cold. 2. Exotic loans of any kind will be completely out of favor, leaving many borrowers and many properties unfundable. 3. Home sellers will become active lenders, but only those who have equity. Seller financing will help some transactions. 4. Second homes, expensive houses and certain types of investment property will be penalized and difficult to fund. 5. Small boutique lenders will enter the business, capitalizing on market voids, funding specialized but secure niches. 6. Investment banks will take care of unleveraged high-net-worth customers, but terms will be unfavorable so this market will further shrink. 7. Sovereign wealth funds are not the solution, because many were burnt on mortgage-backed securities. 8. Those that do lend will revert to back-to-basics underwriting: perfect credit, large down payments, proof of income, personal character and good family upbringing. 9. Housing industry lobbyists will make the mortgage liquidity problem their number one policy issue in the next two years. They will argue that the sky is falling and it is. 10. The trend will keep the housing market starved for capital, prolonging the slump. Like so many parts of our American culture, the accessibility to unlimited and poorly scrutinized debt helped turn Americans into a sloppy group of consumers, which spawned greedy Wall Streeters, out of control lenders and starry-eyed investors. posted: July 11, 2008 in | Comments () | TrackBack (0) A Perfect Storm Slams Freddie Mac & Fannie Mae
Are Freddie Mac & Fannie Mae heading toward a government conservatorship? This New York Time's article discusses the extreme market pressures bearing down on Freddie Mac & Fannie Mae. In a related article, market participants offer some comments that point to a very serious and potentially very expensive (for the tax payer) problem to fix. Some key quotes: “There is a real panic about these companies on Wall Street right now, and sometimes a blaze like that grows almost without reason,” said Tom Lawler, an economist" - “There wasn’t really any new news to set off this crisis. The stocks just started falling, and didn’t stop. “If people lose faith in Fannie and Freddie, then the whole system freezes up, and nobody can buy a house, and the entire housing market can crash,” said Paul Miller of the Friedman, Billings, Ramsey Group in Arlington, Va" - “There’s a fine line between having faith and losing it, and sometimes it’s unclear when it has disappeared. But when investors cross that line, bad things happen very quickly. Infographics on Freddie Mac & Fannie Mae from the New York Times: posted: July 11, 2008 in | Comments () | TrackBack (0) |
|
| ©2004–2005 Housing.com LLC All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | About Housing.com | Contact | Affiliate Program |
Partner sites: Homegain.com | PassChecking.com |