News

Good Morning America: TurboTax vs Accountants

April 3, 2008

To see which method gives tax filers the “biggest bang for the buck”, ABC’s Good Morning America recently compared three popular tax preparation services: TurboTax H & R Block Personal accountant In declaring TurboTax the “winner”, the 4-minute video glossed over several important tax-related items. The first is that true tax planning cannot happen in a […]

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In 2008, Home Loans Are One Day Cheap And The Next Day Expensive

March 28, 2008

When mortgage rates change rapidly, it’s a fiscal challenge to shop for a home and/or home loan. Lately, mortgage rates have been especially volatile, mirroring the wild moves of the stock market. Here’s how up-and-down stock markets have been in 2008: Through last week, the S&P 500 Index changed more than 1 percent per day on […]

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Why “Median Sales Price” Reports Aren’t Helpful For Housing Markets

March 27, 2008

Each month, the Commerce Department and the National Association of REALTORS release national housing data. The former’s release is called the New Residential Sales report and the latter’s is called the Existing Home Sales report. Both reports highlight the “median sales price”, the point at which half of the homes in the U.S. sold for […]

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The Small Statistic Within Consumer Confidence That Didn’t Show Up On The News

March 26, 2008

Consumer Confidence fell to its lowest point in three years and anybody who watches the evening news can understand why. Each day, news programs barrage Americans with tales of economic woe and American Opinion is largely shaped by the media. After enough time, the reporting becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. But, in the Consumer Confidence report, there […]

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Looking Back And Looking Ahead : March 24, 2008

March 24, 2008

Conforming mortgage rates edged slightly lower for the second week in a row. Mortgage rates fell for two main reasons: The Federal Reserve offered fiscal support for troubled mortgage-backed securities A government group gave Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac permission to lend more of money to American homeowners These two actions combined to make mortgage-backed securities safer […]

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Looking Back And Looking Ahead : March 17, 2008

March 17, 2008

Mortgage rates fell last week on growing evidence of a recession, but far fewer Americans were eligible to take advantage. Mortgage lenders continue to reduce product menus and that is leaving homeowners with fewer mortgage financing options than before. As an added hurdle, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac recently added “risk-based” fees on all conforming […]

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Go Beyond The Headlines: Unemployment Data

March 12, 2008

The Unemployment Rate fell to 4.8 percent in February. This is 0.1% lower than from January and that’s confusing to a lot of people; it’s been highly publicized that U.S. companies shed 63,000 jobs last month. Americans are losing jobs at the same time that the Unemployment Rate is falling.  Seem strange? Well, it’s possible […]

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Recession or Inflation? Even Fed Members Don’t Know For Sure.

March 5, 2008

With Friday’s jobs report looming, mortgage markets are especially skittish about whether the economy is in a recession, or facing inflation. Four Fed speakers Tuesday did little to quell the debate: 9:00 A.M.: Fed Chairman Bernanke stayed on message that foreclosures and falling home values are dragging down the economy. 10:00 A.M.: Fed Vice Chairman […]

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Tuesday May Have Marked The Unofficial End Of Low Mortgage Rates

February 20, 2008

For homebuyers and homeowners expecting low mortgage rates this week, Tuesday marked the unofficial end to basement 30-year fixed mortgage rates. According to the market analysts at BestInfo, Inc., the 30-year fixed rate measured its largest one-day movement in more than 10 years Tuesday. Nationally, 30-year fixed mortgage rates increased 0.375%. Here is the “real […]

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Looking Back And Looking Ahead : February 19, 2008

February 19, 2008

Early last week, mortgage rates rose on strong consumer spending and Warren Buffett’s offer to assume $800 billion in debt from three major bond insurers. Both reports were interpreted as signs of long-term strength in the economy, leading mortgage rates higher for long-term products such as the 20- and 30-year fixed rate mortgage. Meanwhile, Fed […]

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What The New Conforming Loan Limits May Mean To You

February 14, 2008

The $168 billion economic stimulus plan signed Wednesday includes a temporary increase to conforming loan limits in some parts of the country. Currently, many homeowners whose loans exceed $417,000 are paying higher interest rates because their loans are not securitized the way that smaller loans are. The loan limit increase is intended to make housing more […]

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How Economic Stimulus Impacts Home Financing

February 13, 2008

President Bush is expected to sign the economic stimulus package today. The package includes tax rebates and incentives for business and its purpose is to jumpstart a stalling U.S. economy. If the package is deemed “effective” by Wall Street investors, we should expect the stock market to rally on the prospects of business growth. The […]

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Looking Back And Looking Ahead : February 11, 2008

February 11, 2008

Mortgage markets are conflicted about the U.S. economy and the confusion is impacting home buyers. If you’ve recently tried to lock a mortgage rate, you’ve probably experienced it personally. On one hand, reports of plunging sales suggest that the economy is slowing more quickly than expected. This is recessionary and tends to be good for […]

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Where Presidential Candidates Stand On Matters Of Money

February 7, 2008

In an election year, voting for a presidential candidate can be a lot like buying a home. Both require a fair amount of analysis but — in the end — the decision is still highly emotional. Using Bankrate.com’s side-by-side candidate comparisons, some of that emotion could be replaced by fact. In a gridded format, candidates are […]

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Help Your Home Emotionally Connect To Buyers

February 5, 2008

The end of the Super Bowl kicks off the Real Estate Spring Buying Season. As home sellers should prepare for the season’s upcoming homebuyers, they could do worse than to watch this four-minute home staging video from Barbara Corcoran. Barbara offer simple steps that “won’t cost you a lot of money but could make a […]

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Looking Back And Looking Ahead : February 4, 2008

February 4, 2008

We entered the New Year uncertain of the country’s economic future. With January over, it’s a little more clear. Last week’s data and events helped firm expectations. In the near-term, we can expect weakness: The economy is shedding jobs Consumer sentiment is low Home sales continue to slump nationally In the intermediate-term, however, the picture […]

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Homeowners Rejoice! New Homes Sales Data Is Weak.

January 29, 2008

If you only read headlines this past week, you may have missed two very important points. The first story relates to Housing Starts.  Housing Starts measure the number of new homes entering the construction phase.  The headline blared “Housing starts plunge to 16-year low“. If you are a homeowner, this is terrific news. Because home […]

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How The Stock Market Rally Was Terrible For Mortgage Rates

January 24, 2008

The Dow Jones Industrial Average surged 631.86 points in the last three hours of trading yesterday as traders piled into equities. Fueling the rally?  The bond market. For as much as stocks gained today, bonds lost.  Including mortgage bonds.  The dramatic sell-off created a huge swing in mortgage rates and erased nearly all of 2008’s rate improvements. […]

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It’s A Good Day To Have Your Mortgage Adjust

January 23, 2008

When the Federal Reserve lowered the Fed Funds Rate by 0.75% yesterday, it was in response to economic weakness that mounted since its last meeting December 11, 2007. By contrast, the mortgage markets meet every day. Because of this, mortgage rates had already “priced in” the weakness to which the Fed was reacting. This is […]

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The Week In Review (January 22, 2008) : What To Watch For

January 22, 2008

As promised, last week was heavy on data and on drama.  And mortgage rates continued their slide lower. This week, by contrast, is devoid of data and markets are already digesting the Federal Reserve’s surprise 0.750% rate cut this morning. Mortgage rates are falling in response, but not because of what the Fed did as much […]

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