Working with lenders, moreover, with a third party of investor involved, may lead to an undesirable foreclosure that is surely surprising to homeowners.
Foreclosures that were previously caused by bad loans and poor payment management have shifted gear and are now driven by unemployment or lost of income.
Economic analysts expect a 1.5 percent decrease in the country’s economic growth this year. With rising inflation and unemployment, the housing crisis and foreclosure problem is expected to continue.
More than 50 percent of mortgage loans modified during the first and second quarters of 2008 have become delinquent in just six months, putting rescued borrowers back to foreclosures.
Let your bank owned property listing grow if you are underwater and the bank refuses to lower your principal and your monthly payments, according to University of Arizona law professor Brent White. The morality of deliberate defaults and the lender-borrower relationship are discussed.
Obama’s loan modification program is expected to fall short of its goal to reduce the number of foreclosure homes in California because nearly 30 percent of homeowners owed mortgages more than the market value of their properties.
Tom Suozzi, county executive of New York's Nassau County, has launched Long Island's Housing Crisis Task Force to stabilize the housing market and help prevent foreclosures.
The incoming administration of Barack Obama pointed to the foreclosure crisis as one of its priorities. But even with aggressive measures, why are there more homes being repossessed?
Many home owners across America have been wondering what will happen to their homes and mortgage loans should their bank fail. Many rumors abound but this article will put some fears to rest with some simple facts.
A $50 billion plan, designed to guarantee over $500 billion default mortgages will certainly improve the chances of the government to save the nation from the bludgeoning of the foreclosure crisis.
Despite the government’s and the housing industry’s efforts to curb rising foreclosure rate, there is still little change in market conditions. It is very likely that there are still other factors contributing to the mortgage mess.
In a bid to finally stem the tide of foreclosures, the government released a new modification plan aimed to rework loans handled by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
According to housing analysts, many troubled homeowners will not qualify for Obama’s plan. Among these are homebuyers whose homes have been foreclosed and have been tagged by lenders as cheap houses for sale.
Foreclosure crisis has grown more and more excessive that even attempts of the banks, community groups and government to address the problem are showing no signs of success.
Florida foreclosures in 2008 put the state second to California in a ranking of the ten U.S. states with the highest foreclosure rates, as surveyed by California tracking firm RealtyTrac.
The number of foreclosed homes increased by 25% to nearly 280,000 in October this year from October 2007, according to foreclosure tracking company RealtyTrac.
Fannie Mae, a large U.S. company dealing in mortgage financing, reported that they will permit tenants to stay in their properties and to prevent from being forced to leave despite the landlord’s building going to be filed for foreclosure.
When a foreclosed home or short-sale is sold in any neighborhood, a long term investment, school fund, or retirement plan hangs in the balance. You can stimulate the market and short-sale banks until the end the time, but how do you recover lost equity?
Real estate investors who were frustrated with the four-financed property limit will certainly be delighted to know that Fannie Mae has increased this limit to ten properties including homes in bank foreclosure listings.
Industry experts are expecting about 3.5 million new Denver foreclosed homes for sale in the next two years. They said that smart investors and first-time homebuyers could turn the current trend into an opportunity.