real estate

Nation’s 3rd Largest FHA Lender Closes Up Shop

August 7, 2009

Taylor, Bean & Whitaker, the nation’s 3rd largest FHA lender shut down Wednesday due to allegations of wrong doing from HUD.  This leaves thousands of home owners who thought that they had their mortgage all squared away for their upcoming purchase scrambling to find new financing. This is an interview I did with Peter Busch […]

Read the full article →

What’s Ahead For Mortgage Rates This Week : May 18, 2009

May 18, 2009

After a dreadful start to the month of May, mortgage markets improved last week, pushing mortgage rates lower overall. It was the first week since late-April in which mortgage rates fell. The biggest reason rates improved last week was because the economic optimism that was responsible for the stock market’s 30% gain since March faded somewhat

Read the full article →

Finding Yourself In A Multiple-Offer Situation? You’re Not Alone.

April 27, 2009

The days of rock-bottom housing prices may be reaching an end. According to the National Association of REALTORS, the number of Existing Home Sales fell by a modest 140,000 units last month. It’s the fifth straight month in which home sales straddled the 4.5 million mark.

Read the full article →

The Half-Truth Of The Headline “1 In 8 U.S. Homes Are Late Paying Or In Foreclosure”

March 10, 2009

USA Today ran this 2008 Foreclosures By State heatmap last week, reminding us of a simple truth: Headline statistics can be misleading. According to data compiled by RealtyTrac, 1 in 8 U.S. homes were in various stages of default or delinquency at the end of 2008

Read the full article →

How Prepaid Items Can Make Your “Closing Costs” Look Inflated

December 14, 2008

When buying a home, you pay for more than just physical property at the closing table.  You also pay a series of charges.  Commonly, homebuyers lump all of these charges under the heading of “closing costs”. That’s a miscategorization. Many changes on a HUD-1 Settlement Statement are specifically not closing costs. They are more appropriately […]

Read the full article →

Simple Real Estate Definitions : Refinance

December 12, 2008

A mortgage is a contract between a bank and borrower, defining the terms by which a home loan must be repaid. The paperwork, signed by both parties, includes provisions for things like: The interest rate The length of the loan The amount of money to be borrowed But, like all loans, a mortgage loan can be paid off at any time.

Read the full article →

How 78 Consecutive Days Of Falling Gas Prices Helps Sell Real Estate

December 4, 2008

For the 78th consecutive day, gas prices fell nationwide yesterday. At $1.81 per gallon, the average price at the pump is less than half what it was at its peak in July. And although gas prices vary by locale, the cost of a fill-up is worthy of national news. The main reason why national gas […]

Read the full article →

New Google App for iPhone Helps find Open Houses, Plan Routes

December 2, 2008

Although I don’t have one yet (my current contract is not up until May 09) the iPhone is my favorite technological innovation since broadband. Now, Google has introduced an app for the iPhone that allows realtors, house hunters and real estate investors find open houses. As if that was not cool enough, using the Google […]

Read the full article →

Existing Home Sales Are Relatively Unchanged Going On 14 Months Now

November 25, 2008

In real estate, the term existing home refers to a “used” property; one that can’t be classified as new construction. The number of existing homes sold each month is tracked by the National Association of REALTORS. The report is often used as a gauge for the health of the real estate market nationwide. In October, […]

Read the full article →

Plunging Housing Starts Is Bad News For Spring 2009 Home Buyers

November 20, 2008

When it comes to housing data, there are always two questions to consider: How does this impact buyers? How does this impact sellers? This is why housing data is rarely positive or negative on a universal level — one group of Americans is going to see benefit. Today, it’s home sellers. From the government, we […]

Read the full article →

Simple Real Estate Definitions : Amortization

November 18, 2008

In the widest definition possible, amortization (pronounced: am-ohr-tih-ZAY-shun) is the scheduled process by which a loan’s principal balance pays down to $0. The opposite of an amortizing loan is an interest only loan for which there is no scheduled principal repayment schedule. With respect to mortgages, amortization is what determines how much of a monthly […]

Read the full article →

4 States Account For 51 Percent Of The Nation’s October 2008 Foreclosures

November 15, 2008

Foreclosure is a hot topic among the press lately. It’s hard to turn on the television or open up a newspaper without seeing a story about it. But what’s most interesting about foreclosures is that they appear to be concentrated in certain areas of the country. According to the foreclosure-tracking service RealtyTrac, 4 states accounted […]

Read the full article →

Planning To Buy A Home In 2009? Expect A Tougher Mortgage Road Ahead.

November 15, 2008

The Federal Reserve confirmed what most of us already knew — getting qualified for a “prime mortgage” is increasingly more difficult. In a quarterly survey of 84 banks, 75 percent of respondent banks tightened mortgage guidelines over the last 3 months for the most qualified of home loan applicants. “Prime” is a vague term when […]

Read the full article →

Home Sales Are Up, Home Supply Is Down — This Is What A Recovering Market Looks Like

October 27, 2008

Statistics are what you make of them, but sometimes, they can provide good perspective. For example, from its peak in 2005 to its trough in late-2007, the number of “used” homes sold nationwide plunged. In 2005: Roughly 7 million homes sold annually In 2007: Roughly 5 million homes sold annually Through all of 2008, though, […]

Read the full article →

Home Sales Are Up, Home Supply Is Down — This Is What A Recovering Market Looks Like

October 24, 2008

Statistics are what you make of them, but sometimes, they can provide good perspective. For example, from its peak in 2005 to its trough in late-2007, the number of “used” homes sold nationwide plunged. In 2005: Roughly 7 million homes sold annually In 2007: Roughly 5 million homes sold annually Through all of 2008, though, […]

Read the full article →

Foreclosures Fell 12 Percent in September 2008

October 23, 2008

According to foreclosure-tracking service RealtyTrac, the foreclosure rate is falling nationwide. Versus August, foreclosures fell by 12 percent in September 2008 as more than half of the states showed month-over-month improvement. Most interesting in the data is that several states that led the foreclosure boom in 2007 now appear to be leading the charge out of it. For […]

Read the full article →

Simple Real Estate Definitions : Amortization

October 22, 2008

In the widest definition possible, amortization (pronounced: am-ohr-tih-ZAY-shun) is the scheduled process by which a loan’s principal balance pays down to $0. The opposite of an amortizing loan is an interest only loan for which there is no scheduled principal repayment schedule. With respect to mortgages, amortization is what determines how much of a monthly payment goes […]

Read the full article →

Foreclosures Fell 12 Percent in September 2008

October 10, 2008

According to foreclosure-tracking service RealtyTrac, the foreclosure rate is falling nationwide. Versus August, foreclosures fell by 12 percent in September 2008 as more than half of the states showed month-over-month improvement. Most interesting in the data is that several states that led the foreclosure boom in 2007 now appear to be leading the charge out […]

Read the full article →

Pending Home Sales Shows That More Buyers May Be Shopping For Homes Than You Thought

October 9, 2008

Buyers are returning to the housing market. Each month, The National Association of REALTORS® tracks homes under contract to sell, but whose closing has not yet happened.  It calls them “pending sales” and publishes a monthly report to quantify them. The Pending Home Sales report is important because it’s meant to predict future home sales activity.  […]

Read the full article →

What’s Good For Home Sellers Is Bad For Home Buyers : Builders Are Dialing It Back

September 18, 2008

In August, home builders broke ground on the fewest number of homes since January 1991. It was the 16th straight month in which Housing Starts declined. But, although the press labels these statistics indicative of a recession, home sellers nationwide quietly applaud them. With fewer new homes coming on the market, home sellers are finding that there’s […]

Read the full article →