Mortgage Rates Fall Again But Unlikely to Help Housing

Fixed mortgage rates fell to at or near record lows. That’s good news for the few who can afford to buy a home or are able to refinance. But the rates have done little to lift the ailing housing market.

Mortgage Rates Fall Again But Unlikely to Help Housing

CNBC.com

Freddie Mac said Thursday that the average rate for the 30-year fixed mortgage fell to 4.32 percent this week from 4.39 percent. The 30-year loan hit a record low of 4.17 percent in mid-November.

The average rate on a 15-year fixed mortgage, a popular refinancing option, fell to a record low of 3.50 percent, from last week’s record rate of 3.54 percent.

Mortgage rates tend to track the yield on the 10-year Treasury note. A weakening U.S. economy has led many investors to shift money from stocks to bonds, which are seen as safer bets. That has pushed Treasury yields to historic lows.

In theory, low mortgage rates should provide a boost to the troubled housing market. But rates have been below 5 percent for nearly two years and haven’t helped home sales much. Rates on the 30-year fixed loan were near 6.5 percent five years ago and higher than 8 percent in 2000.

Sales of previously occupied homes fell in June for a third straight month to a seasonally adjusted 4.77 million. The pace is lagging behind the 4.91 million homes sold last year – the fewest since 1997.

New-home sales also declined in June and are trailing last year’s sales, which were the worst on records dating back nearly half a century.

Many people can’t take advantage of the low mortgage rates. Banks are insisting on higher credit scores and larger down payments from applicants. Others have too little equity invested in their homes to qualify for loans.

Historically low rates have helped fuel another boom in refinancing.

Applications jumped nearly 22 percent last week from the week before, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. Refinancing made up more than 75 percent of all mortgage activity, the group said. That’s up from 70 percent the previous week and the highest level of refinancing this year.

Still, a higher number of refinancing applications is unlikely to have much economic impact. Many people have little or no equity in their homes. So they are not pulling money out when they refinance for home-improvement projects or other big expenditures. And many people already refinanced last year, when the 30-year loan fell to a record low.

To calculate average mortgage rates, Freddie Mac collects rates from lenders across the country on Monday through Wednesday of each week.

The average rate on a five-year adjustable-rate mortgage fell to 3.13 percent, its lowest level on records that go back to January 2005. Last week’s reading of 3.18 percent also was a record low.

The average rate for one-year adjustable-rate loans plunged to 2.89 percent from 3.02 percent last week. That’s a record low dating back to 1984.

The rates do not include extra fees known as points. One point is equal to 1 percent of the total loan amount.

The average fees for the 30-year and 15-year fixed loans was 0.7 point and the five-year and one-year adjustable-rate loans was 0.5 point.

© 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Mortgage Rates Fall Again But Unlikely to Help Housing

Mortgage Rates Fall Again But Unlikely to Help Housing

Mortgage Rates Fall Again But Unlikely to Help Housing

Tags:mortgage rates, mortgage bankers association

Island Enclaves for Sale

Photo: Niki Higgins, Listing Agent & Photographer, Seaside Properties Grouptoptenrealestatedeals.com

Price: $5.195 millionBedrooms/Baths: 4/5 full, 2 half    Square Footage: 5,500Acreage: UnavailableThis Mediterranean(-ish) house is one of the 12 estates on Fisher Island, located just south of Miami Beach, which is only accessible via helicopter, seaplane, or a private ferry that runs on the quarter hour. The house, which is being sold with its furnishings, has pillars and archways, a wood-paneled study, a pool and hot tub, a master bath with his and her sinks, and dual walk-in showers. Views include a golf course, South Beach, and Government Cut.


Island Enclaves for Sale

Fallout 3 – Broken Steel: Blowing up Enclave Mobile Base (Contains Spoiler)

I wasn't aware you could upload encoded videos from xfire straight to youtube so i guess that's pretty cool. Also this may be considered a spoiler to some people who have not reached this part so watch at your own risk.

Tags:enclaves, seaside properties

John Smoltz’s Wyoming Lot Headed to Foreclosure

John Smoltzs Wyoming Lot Headed to Foreclosure

Source: Netbrawl.com

Here’s a headline that raised a few eyebrows recently: Former Atlanta Braves pitcher and Cy Young Award winner John Smoltz faces foreclosure on property he owns in Wyoming.

According to the Jackson Hole News & Guide, Smoltz owes the lender approximately $1.6 million on a lot he purchased in December 2005 in the Snake River Sporting Club, which has been embroiled in a major bankruptcy case and has changed ownership several times since 2004.  Smoltz’s lot, which is in the Jackson real estate market, is set to go up for auction on Aug. 23.

This news comes somewhat as a shock for the mere fact that Smoltz made about $135 million in his career and is presently a broadcaster for TBS, which can only mean he could be doing a strategic default, perhaps due to the troubled financial situation of the Snake River Sporting Club.

Baseball fans will likely remember Smoltz as the bearded starter (and later, closer) on one of Major League Baseball’s most dominant rotations. The threesome of Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine and Smoltz gave the Braves a formidable rotation for seven consecutive seasons (1993-1999), but they only produced one World Series title. Go figure.

Individually, Smoltz won a Cy Young Award (1999), was an eight-time All-Star selection and was the 1992 National League Championship Series MVP. Although he did not reach 300 careers wins due to an elbow injury, he recorded 213 wins and 154 saves- a strong argument to land in Baseball’s Hall of Fame.

According to BND.com, county leaders have foreclosed on $6 million worth of bonds related to the Snake River Sporting Club site because developers failed to install infrastructure and roads as promised. And perhaps Smoltz, who knows a thing or two about throwing, knew throwing good money after bad was a losing proposition.

> See more celebrity foreclosures

[Source]

Can Direct-Mail Keep More Customers Than Groupon?

Consumers have gotten savvier about finding good bargains, so businesses have to work harder to build customer loyalty. Offering them one-time deals doesn’t work anymore.

Siri Stafford | Digital Vision | Getty Images

Popular daily-deal sites LivingSocial and Groupon have exploded, but clients of Welcomemat Services, a direct-mail marketing company, say those customers are only as loyal as the coupon’s expiration date.

This can make short-term deals the wrong strategy for local businesses that need more than a temporary boost in sales to survive.

Started in 2003, Welcomemat targets people moving into a new home with a packet of coupons for free services from local businesses. And while home buying is still down, the increase in renting is keeping business booming.

Whether it’s finding a place to get a haircut, wash the car, or dry clean a shirt, new residents  still need these services-even in a bad economy.

“New movers are this gem for local businesses,” said President and founder of Welcomemat Services Brian Mattingly.

Rich Chey, the owner of Chinese and Italian restaurants in Atlanta and Charlotte, N.C., said looking at the low rate of repeat customers from daily-deal services convinced him that offering a free entrée through the Welcomemat model was the way to go.

“I looked at the data for those deal services and wasn’t impressed,” said Chey. “Offering something for free seems like more of a risk, but if we can get people in the restaurant, we usually do a pretty good job of getting them to come back a second time.”

The difference isn’t just that the services are free and targeted to new movers. A special bar code on the coupon allows Welcomemat to know when a customer has redeemed a coupon. Customers then get a thank-you note in the mail from the local business, often with further discounts.

“We still go to some of the places we found,” said Mary Petermann, who moved into a house in the Atlanta area in 2008 when she got married and got a coupon packet from Welcomemat. “It made it an easy decision, because you want to find all these things. It’s the little things you don’t necessarily think about, like ‘Where do I get my hair done?’”

She said the daily-deal coupons don’t necessarily make her a loyal customer.

“You get coupons in the mail all the time, so you might go somewhere and then try a different place the next time,” she said.

Welcomemat reports back to the local business on what types of customers have redeemed coupons-including income level, where they live and their gender.

“The more savvy businesses understand that they need tools to market themselves during the recession,” said Mattingly, whose local business clients report the data have given them a better picture of their target audience, and even in some cases, emboldened them to expand into areas where they are now confident they can appeal to the residents.

And the pool of new movers isn’t likely to shrink anytime soon, even if the housing market remains weak.

Can Direct-Mail Keep More Customers Than Groupon?

AP

And the nation’s ever-changing demographic shifts will continue to fuel the business of marketing to new movers regardless of housing trends.

The increasing Hispanic population is more likely to rent and tends to move more often, research from marketing services firm Epsilon shows. The Hispanic population grew 37.4 percent from 2000 to 2010, while the total population grew only 9.1 percent, according to 2010 U.S. Census data.

Mattingly said Welcomemat doesn’t target residents based on any factor other than their recent move to the community, but Hinman expects targeted marketing services will take a closer look at how to appeal to Hispanics once the boost in new movers from foreclosures wears off.

“Regardless of whether they’re renting or owning, there’s a lot of discussion about how you reach out to them,” said Hinman. “Marketers just have to get smart about using the data they have.”

Foreclosures are also expected to peak this year as the final wave of five-year adjustable-rate mortgages comes due. Epsilon expects an estimated 1.5 million foreclosures to be the main driving force behind new moving this year.

“People are still moving,” said Don Hinman, a senior vice president at Epsilon. “The difference is they were moving up-now they’re moving down a bit.”

Questions? Comments? Email us at . Follow Andrea Ludtke on Twitter @andrealudtke.

© 2011 CNBC.com

Can Direct-Mail Keep More Customers Than Groupon?


Can Direct-Mail Keep More Customers Than Groupon?

“The Mail Room II”

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Tags:mail, services from local businesses

5 Home Projects to Finish Before Labor Day

If the back-to-school radio or television commercials haven’t clued you in yet, summer is nearly over and with that, so will be the longer days and warmer temperatures.

Now is the time to finish up those home improvement projects sitting at the top of the to-do list before Labor Day and the beginning of fall.

Curb Appeal Projects

Get going on outdoor projects that can increase your home value and up your curb appeal, such as exterior painting, landscaping or installing a new front door. Paint won’t cure in cold or wet weather, so tackle this big project before the weather takes a turn.

Clean and Caulk Windows

Make things a bit clearer by taking time to clean the outside of your windows. While you clean them, take note of any cracks or any places that may need caulking. Sealing your windows (and doors) well will ensure your home stays warmer and your utility bill stays lower during the colder winter months.

Scrub and Seal Your Deck

Your deck gets a beating year-round from rain and snow and freezing temperatures during the winter and sun and dry air during the summer. Give it a scrub with approved deck cleaner to get rid of mold, then apply a stain or sealant to protect it from rain and snow during the upcoming months.

Clean out the Garage (or other spaces)

It’s no fun to labor in a garage in the dead of winter, so get de-cluttering and organizing now when the weather is nicer. Donate unwanted items to charity or host a garage sale.

Seal the Driveway

If you’re seeing cracks or holes in your driveway this summer, they will most likely get worse with winter weather. Seal or repair your driveway to prevent further damage. Additionally, asphalt pavement doesn’t cure as well in cold weather; if you are considering a paved driveway, summer is the time to do it.

[Source]

Buyer, Beware: Some Real Estate Deal Breakers

Travel Ink | Gallo Images | Getty Images

The emotional travail and stress of buying a house are well known.

A big contributor to this stress is when hope for nesting gold is dashed into disappointment. Usually a real estate listing doesn’t spell out the big problem(s) that will drive away potential buyers.

Sometimes a house’s serious issues are implied between the lines of the “For Sale” listing. Everybody knows to beware of the “handyman’s special,” but it might be wise to heed phrases like “for the right buyer” with caution as well.

Other times, however, there’s no clue. Homebuyers just have to go see, and then flee, for themselves.

What are some common examples of these deal breakers-the immediate turnoffs that cause homebuyers to strike a house from their list of candidates?

Outdoor Issues

Charlie Young, CEO of ERA Real Estate, said among the typical deal breakers are a house’s proximity to high-tension wires – the radiation from power lines has been claimed to cause serious health problems – whether the house is near a commercial zone or in a new development where construction has stalled.

Not all of these will turn off all homebuyers.

“There are things that can be good or bad depending on the needs of the client,” Young says. “Being close to a commercially zoned area could be undesirable for someone looking for peace and quiet but really attractive to someone who likes to walk to the coffee shop or library.”

When a house is located on a high-traffic street, it’s often a significant enough safety concern for parents of small children or families with pets that it is a deal breaker. Busy streets also create a noise issue. However, that doesn’t rule out busy streets for everyone. “A busy road could be a turn off for someone with small children, but a real benefit to someone who needs access to public transportation,” says Young.

Other significant causes for concern he lists include old roofs, dated central air conditioning units, septic tanks or in-ground oil tanks. Fumes, smells, and possible toxic seepage can turn off buyers, as it did with one woman who said via Twitter that a gas station right behind the back yard once caused her to dismiss a house.

Another classic make-or-break issue is the quality and safety of the surrounding area. Writer Suzi McGowan remembers dismissing one house because “we had to go past a sex shop and billboards for escort services to get to the house.”

Indoor Problems

Just because you’ve made it inside a house that’s for sale doesn’t mean you’re out of the woods. Water issues are notorious deal breakers, and homes in flood plains are more difficult to sell. Peter Dolch, who is looking for a house in Westchester County, New York, is vigilant for dampness in basements, and he views dehumidifiers and sump pumps as warning signs.

Bad odors have also driven many a potential homebuyer away. Dolch has walked right out of open houses that had strong pet odors.

The cost of utilities can be prohibitive for the informed buyer as well. Electric heating was a deal breaker for Zele, a professional organizer who goes by one name, who is closing on a condo at the end of this month. “I live in Nebraska and it’s too expensive to have electric heat.”

McGowan recalls the worst place she saw while house hunting: “There were hundreds of huge dead cockroaches inside the door. My son was afraid to go upstairs.”

Intangibles

It’s not always problems that can be seen that can knock a house out of consideration.

Owners being evasive can mean they have something to hide. Amy de la Fuente of Chicago said via Twitter that it was a deal breaker for her when the home sellers would not answer questions about flooding in the basement, tree roots being close to water lines and other maintenance performed on the home such as heat, air conditioning, and electric. 

Some deal breakers can’t be explained. Zele mentions getting “the heebie jeebies” while checking out two apartments was enough reason to leave immediately.

Now Go Make a Deal

Having a list of deal breakers means knowing what to watch out for to head off safety issues, money drains and other future headaches. Denise Porter in Baton Rouge, La.,  mentioned via Twitter the learning curve between buying her first home and buying her second one.

The first time, she says, her considerations were “affordable and is it cute?” With the second home, she was watching out for its foundation, electrical system, old trees, HVAC age and quality, and termites, among other practicalities.

“The real takeaway here is that consumers need to work with a good real estate agent that understands their unique needs and can identify listings that are in line with those needs,” says Young. He advises visiting the home at various times before buying and to look for homes that already come with a home inspection report or a home warranty.

© 2011 CNBC.com

Buyer, Beware: Some Real Estate Deal Breakers


Buyer, Beware: Some Real Estate Deal Breakers

Dating Deal Breakers (3)

What's YOUR deal breaker? I want to know. I want to point out that my “new” video icons are not “new” at all. They're 100% soundlyawake inspired…..um. Not inspired. Stolen. They're stolen. And they look nice. Like him.

Tags:deal breakers, public transportation

Housing Collapse: Malibu Style

So you bought a house a few years ago, and now you want to move. You’re not behind in your mortgage payments, not underwater, this isn’t a distress sale, you just want to sell, like people used to do back in 2007.

Good luck.

Housing Collapse: Malibu Style

Source: Zillow.com

Even if your house is a castle sitting on its own 150-foot long stretch of Malibu beach, you may have a hard time getting many nibbles.

Next month, the most expensive home ever to be auctioned in the U.S. is going on the block in California, with a minimum bid of $22 million.

That’s a lot of money, right?

Not when you hear that the original asking price was $65 million.

According to Forbes, the 10,500 square foot home is owned by William J. Chadwick, a managing director at a real estate investment banking firm. A realtor says the family is moving out of state. Yes, California is probably not the best place to be in real estate investment banking. He put the house in the market for $65 million in 2008, but since it failed to sell the traditional way, Chadwick has opted for the auction route. The minimum bid is a 65 percent haircut, and that hurts, even in Malibu.

Details of the auction on September 18 are here.

You can see more pictures of the house on Zillow.

Neighbors reportedly include Paul Allen, Larry Ellison, Jeffrey Katzenberg and David Geffen (what is THAT block party like?). The mansion comes with all the usuals, including a $1.5 million home theater and the mandatory “tequila tasting room.” The 75-foot two-lane lap pool is “the biggest ever permitted to be built in Malibu,” the patio alone is 4,500 square feet, blah blah blah.

But this caught my eye.

The home’s foundation goes down 47 feet into bedrock. That thing will survive The Big One. Yours could be the only mansion in Malibu still standing after an earthquake. Imagine the view then.

© 2011 CNBC.com

Housing Collapse: Malibu Style


Housing Collapse: Malibu Style

Economic Collapse — Why It Won't Be Stopped

The hard truth as to why we as a society can not stop the economic collapse. My interpretation and creative license used in adapting an very good article called The Shape of Things To Come written by Charles Hugh Smith My Blog www.newamerica-now.blogspot.com The Shape of Things To Come http

Tags:collapse, real estate investment banking

Nasdaq stocks posting largest percentage decreases

NEW YORK – A look at the 10 biggest percentage decliners on Nasdaq at the close of trading:

57th Street General Acquisition Corp. fell 35.7 percent to $7.40.

Southwall Technology Inc. fell 21.3 percent to $9.83.

AsiaInfo-Linkage Inc. fell 13.7 percent to $11.09.

1st Constitution BanCorp. fell 11.9 percent to $6.98.

Greene County BanCorp. Inc. fell 11.3 percent to $17.29.

Nobility Homes Inc. fell 10.5 percent to $7.15.

Stratus Properties Inc. fell 10.4 percent to $11.15.

BG Medicine Inc. fell 10.2 percent to $6.72.

Oak Valley Bancorp fell 9.0 percent to $5.34.

Progenics Pharmaceuticals Inc. fell 8.7 percent to $5.75.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Nasdaq stocks posting largest percentage decreases


Nasdaq stocks posting largest percentage decreases

06/13/2011 Oscar Carboni Says Nasdaq Still has Room To Move Lower

TV INTERVIEWS: livewithoscar.com Click here to sign up for OMNI CAMP: livewithoscar.com Visit our Website: www.LiveWithOscar.com Open a Trading Account with Oscar livewithoscar.com Follow Us on Twitter: www.Twitter.com Add us on Facebook: www.facebook.com Upload your charts to: www.ChartUpload.com Tags futures options broker online trading managed bestdirect CTA charts commodities commodity daytrading forex on line software simulated electronic eminis free oscar live with omni bull bear finance economy bernanke cramer cnbc bloomberg fed buffett financial wall st business cbot nymex nybot comex amex sec securities etrade scottrade account currencies etf stocks emini s&p fx nasdaq nq qqqq aapl goog alpha market mkt bullish bearish stock-market analysis indicators technical gold investment

Tags:nasdaq stocks, progenics pharmaceuticals inc

Mortgage Applications Rose Last Week: MBA

Applications for U.S. home mortgages rose last week as interest rates fell to their lowest level this year, an industry group said on Wednesday.

Jeffrey Coolidge | Photodisc | Getty Images

The Mortgage Bankers Association said its seasonally adjusted index of mortgage application activity, which includes both refinancing and home purchase demand, rose 21.7 percent in the week ended August 5.

The MBA’s seasonally adjusted index of refinancing applications rose 30.4 percent to its highest level this year, while the gauge of loan requests for home purchases fell 0.9 percent.

The refinance share of mortgage activity increased to 75.6 percent of total applications from 70.1 percent the previous week.

Fixed 30-year mortgage rates averaged 4.37 percent in the week, down 8 basis points from the week before.

Mortgage Applications Rose Last Week: MBA

Mortgage Applications Rose Last Week: MBA

Mortgage Applications Rose Last Week: MBA

Tags:mortgage applications, mortgage bankers association

Housing: A Silver Lining

Wed 10 Aug 11 | 02:40 PM ET

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Wed 10 Aug 11 | 02:40 PM ET

Discussing whether now is the time for homeowners to refinance their mortgages, with Scott Sambucci, COO, Altos Research COO, and Ylan Mui, Washington Post financial reporter.

Housing: A Silver Lining

Housing: A Silver Lining

Tags:silver lining, financial reporter