Housing Peaks at 60% Deflation

By Ryan Jackson Nevada has led the U.S. in foreclosures for more than five years straight and it has also suffered the highest loss in average housing deflation, according to an audit conducted by Housing Predictor. With Las Vegas at the center of action, Sin City has sustained 62 months as the nation’s foreclosure capital… Continue reading Housing Peaks at 60% Deflation

Home Values Rising in Hard Hit Markets

By Mike Colpitts A tighter inventory of homes listed on the market for sale are sending home values rising in some of the most unlikely U.S. housing markets, according to real estate research firm CoreLogic. Three states which cities have experienced some of the steepest deflation in home values in the nation are witnessing appreciation.… Continue reading Home Values Rising in Hard Hit Markets

Homeownership Falls Seventh Year

Troubled by a record foreclosure crisis and an economy hinging on an economic collapse, homeownership fell for the seventh straight year to the lowest level in more than a decade, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. The drop in the nation’s homeownership rate is evidence that government programs to increase the number of homeowners only… Continue reading Homeownership Falls Seventh Year

Underwater Mortgages Drop Slightly

By Mike Colpitts Homeowners with underwater mortgages or those who owe more on their homes than their properties are currently worth dropped in the third quarter in the U.S., according to real estate data firm CoreLogic. The decline, however, was marginal falling to 10.7-million residential homeowners, which is 200,000 less than the second quarter of… Continue reading Underwater Mortgages Drop Slightly

Homeownership Drops by Largest Amount Since Great Depression

By Jeanne Roberts It’s probably no surprise that the number of individuals owning homes has experienced its biggest drop since the Great Depression, an epoch usually defined as the decade between 1929 and 1939. The figures are from the U.S. Census Bureau, and show that the rate of homeownership fell to 65.1% in April 2010,… Continue reading Homeownership Drops by Largest Amount Since Great Depression

Mortgage Defaults Edge Up in August

Mortgage defaults were filed for the first time against the largest number of homeowners in more than four years in August as foreclosures surged higher for the month, according to RealtyTrac. Foreclosure auctions and formal lender repossessions were filed against 228,098 homes during the month. The figure represented a 7% surge in lender takeovers for… Continue reading Mortgage Defaults Edge Up in August

Homeowners Stuck With High Mortgage Rates

The over-whelming majority of homeowners with underwater mortgages are stuck with high interest rate loans and are unable to refinance their mortgages, according to real estate research firm CoreLogic. Some 10.9 million home mortgages were in negative equity in the second quarter of the year, and another 2.4 million were close or within 5% of… Continue reading Homeowners Stuck With High Mortgage Rates

Banks Demolish Thousands of Homes

By Mike Colpitts Swamped by foreclosures banks and mortgage lenders are demolishing homes in some of the hardest hit real estate markets in the U.S. after they foreclose on them in order to free up capital and get a tax write-off on the properties. JP Morgan Chase donated 1,900 homes since 2008 to be demolished… Continue reading Banks Demolish Thousands of Homes

Mortgage Rates Climb a Little

Mortgage interest rates climbed slightly for the week as fixed rates moved up a single basis point on 30-year and 15-year loans from a week earlier, according to Freddie Mac. The rates on adjustable mortgages moved slightly lower. The small climb in rates still keeps borrowing for those wanting to refinance mortgages near their historic… Continue reading Mortgage Rates Climb a Little