Source: http://blog.foreclosure.com/2011/11/rihannas-house-in-la-hits-the-short-sale-market-for-4-5-million/
Real Estate Vacation Properties Loans and Mortgages Household Moving
Source: http://blog.foreclosure.com/2011/11/rihannas-house-in-la-hits-the-short-sale-market-for-4-5-million/
Real Estate Vacation Properties Loans and Mortgages Household Moving
Source: http://online.wsj.com/video/wsj-house-of-the-week-which-property-will-win/27D...
Short Sale Waterfront Homes Real Estate Agent Foreclosure Homes
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TruliaBlog/~3/53QM6wDx2RU/
Real Estate Vacation Properties Loans and Mortgages Household Moving
Source: http://www.zillow.com/blog/2011-11-24/house-of-the-week-clock-tower-penthouse/
Short Sale Waterfront Homes Real Estate Agent Foreclosure Homes
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/inmannews/~3/8acQkl5mCgc/5-keys-buying-a-home-in-todays-market
Real Estate Vacation Properties Loans and Mortgages Household Moving
In September 2009, the President announced that – for the first time in history – White House visitor records would be made available to the public on an ongoing basis. Today, the White House releases visitor records that were generated in August 2011. This release brings the total number of records made public by this White House to almost 1.9 million records—all of which can be viewed in our Disclosures section.
Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/11/25/nearly-19-million-white-house-visitor-records-released
Sixteen House Democrats have asked the Federal Housing Finance Agency to justify its position on reducing principal on loans owned by Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. Elijah Cummings (D-MD), ranking member of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform and the 16 Democratic members of the committee sent a letter to FHFA Acting Director Edward DeMarco Wednesday seeking documents he promised the Committee regarding his analysis of programs to reduce mortgage principle.
DeMarco allegedly told members of the Committee at a hearing on November 16 "We have been through the analytics of the underwater borrowers at Fannie and Freddie, and looked at the foreclosure alternative programs that are available, and we have concluded that the use of principal reduction within the context of a loan modification is not going to be the least-cost approach for the taxpayer." When a committee member pointed out that several banks are already implementing principal reduction programs in an attempt to help delinquent or underwater homeowners and citing specific examples, DeMarco said "I believe that the decisions that we've made with regard to principal forgiveness are consistent with our statutory mandate." DeMarco then committed to providing documentation of that statutory authority to the Committee.
In a letter sent to DeMarco on Wednesday, the Cummings essentially reminded DeMarco of his agreement to provide the Committee with "(1) the specific statutory provision you believe prohibits the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) from allowing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to reduce mortgage principal in all cases; and (2) the analysis you conducted, including the data you examined, demonstrating that principal reduction never serves the long-term interests of the taxpayer when compared to foreclosure." DeMarco was asked to provide the information no later than December 9.
The letter cites specific instance of bank programs providing principal reduction. One program at Ocwen allows a servicer to reduce a loan to 95% of a home's fair market value, forgiving the excess principal over three years as long as the homeowner remains current on mortgage payments. When the home is sold or refinanced Ocwen receives a 25 percent share of any appreciated value. Wells Fargo has reportedly reduced the balances of 73,000 mortgages by an average of $51,000. Other banks cited as having principal reduction programs are JP Morgan Chase, Ally Financial and Bank of America.
Cummings said of the Committee members' request, "For too long now we have heard superficial excuses about why principal reduction programs are not feasible at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, despite a growing chorus of economists and other experts who believe these programs serve the long-term interests of taxpayers. Even though commercial banks have implemented their own principal reduction programs, FHFA stubbornly continues to favor massive waves of foreclosures. It's high time to see the actual data and analyses behind this policy, and to work towards new approaches that finally put American homeowners and our nation's economy first."
...(read more)Source: http://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/11302011_fhfa_administration.asp
Source: http://www.zillow.com/blog/2011-11-12/weekly-real-estate-roundup-111211/
Loans and Mortgages Household Moving House Plans Home Warranties
Freddie Mac Mortgage Crisis Real Estate Agents Housing Market
Source: http://blog.foreclosure.com/2011/10/find-foreclosures-for-sale-fast-free-listings-search/
Celebrity Foreclosures Most Expensive Homes Luxury Home Prices Mortgage Rescue Scams
Source: http://www.zillow.com/blog/2011-11-15/winning-a-new-home-would-change-my-life-because/
Commercial & Investment Homes Foreclosures Home Sales Outlook
Source: http://online.wsj.com/video/a-remodeled-home-in-colorado/4FA662E6-A397-4DD4-8...
Household Moving House Plans Home Warranties Commercial & Investment
In a few weeks House Republicans are expected to release their budget plan for the coming year. It is not 100% clear now whether it will include a comprehensive overhaul of entitlement programs like Medicare and Social Security. I am hearing that it will not.
However, Rep. Paul Ryan, the Chairman of the House Budget Committee is to be commended for his willingness to take on the issues that are central to our long-run fiscal imbalance -- Social Security and Medicare. More specifically, Medicare. Because health care spending is the biggest issue. You can read more about that in a previous blog post.
Ryan's solution to Medicare's funding problem is to transform the system into a voucher program.
Future retirees would get a voucher -- effectively a check -- to cover a portion of the cost of buying their health insurance. Those making more money would get a smaller voucher. Lower income beneficiaries would get a larger voucher. If the price of buying medical coverage rises faster than the voucher, beneficiaries would pay more out of pocket. Here is how the Congressional Budget Office described the impact in a letter to Ryan:
Beneficiaries would . . . face higher premiums in the private market for a package of benefits similar to that currently provided by Medicare. Moreover, the value of the voucher would grow significantly more slowly than CBO expects that Medicare spending per enrollee would grow under current law. Beneficiaries would therefore be likely to purchase less comprehensive health plans or plans more heavily managed than traditional Medicare, resulting in some combination of less use of health care services and less use of technologically advanced treatments than under current law. Beneficiaries would also bear the financial risk for the cost of buying insurance policies or the cost of obtaining health care services beyond what would be covered by their insurance.
This is a fundamentally different approach to Medicare, but one that holds the promise of trimming spending dramatically. If beneficiaries saw more of the true cost of their health insurance, they are likely to demand more cost savings from providers. Or they will trim spending on treatments they deem discretionary.
So why isn't Ryan likely to propose this plan next month? Because the public already doesn't want any part of it. A recent poll by the Pew Research Center found most Americans don't want Congress to cut spending on Medicare.
We're still caught in a world where the public sees the fiscal cure as being worse than the disease of living beyond our national means.
Source: http://www.pbs.org/nbr/blog/2011/03/vouchers_and_medicare.html
Source: http://www.zillow.com/blog/2011-11-28/basements-arent-much-more-costly-to-build-than-crawl-spaces/
Presidents have pardoned 24 Thanksgiving turkeys since President George H.W. Bush started the tradition in 1989, The turkeys are donated from turkey farms around the country, and after being spared from the dinner table, are sent to live out their days on a farm. In past years, pardoned turkeys have even traveled to California to serve as marshals in the Thanksgiving Day Parade at Disney Land.
President Obama pardoned both Liberty, this year's National Thanksgiving Turkey, and its alternate Peace. The birds were raised by four high school students on a farm in Willmar, Minnesota and sent to live in Mt. Vernon after the pardoning ceremony.
Want to know more? Read our definitive history of the Presidential Turkey Pardon.
Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/11/23/numbers-24
Commercial & Investment Homes Foreclosures Home Sales Outlook
Over the weekend, a report by the Associated Press detailed how the Affordable Care Act is dramatically reducing drug costs for seniors who hit the prescription drug coverage gap known as the donut hole. This year, seniors are benefiting from a 50 percent discount on brand-name drugs in the donut hole. And the discount and other provisions in the law are saving money for seniors. As the AP reported:
The average beneficiary who falls into the coverage gap would have spent $1,504 this year on prescriptions. But thanks to discounts and other provisions in President Barack Obama's health care overhaul law, that cost fell to $901, according to Medicare's Office of the Actuary, which handles economic estimates.
So far this year, more than 2.2 million people with Medicare have saved more than $1.2 billion on their prescriptions. The Associated Press spoke with two of them:
For retired elementary school teacher Carolyn Friedman, it meant she didn't need a loan to pay for drugs that keep her epilepsy under control.
"What a change for the better," said Friedman, 71, of Sunrise, Fla. "This year it was easier to pay my bills, whereas last year I had to borrow money to pay for my medications when I was in the doughnut hole."
…
Joan Gibbs thought her pharmacy had made a mistake. Her total cost for a brand-name painkiller in the doughnut hole came out lower than her co-payment earlier in the year, at a time her plan was picking up most of the tab.
"I reluctantly called the insurance company," said Gibbs, 54, who lives near Cleveland. "If they had made a mistake, I knew they would catch it sooner or later. I was very surprised that it turned out to be such a good discount."
Gibbs is on Medicare because of an auto-immune disorder and other medical problems that left her unable to work.
Thanks to the Affordable Care Act, seniors will receive bigger discounts in the years ahead. By 2020, the donut hole will be closed completely.
And even if you don’t hit the donut hole, there’s still good news for beneficiaries with Medicare Part D. Prescription drug premiums will not rise next year, and thanks to health reform, seniors can get preventive services like mammograms and other cancer screenings for free.
Nancy-Ann DeParle is the Assistant to the President and Deputy Chief of Staff
All across the country, thousands of Americans spend a great amount of time commuting to their jobs. This is precious time that could be spent with their families and not sitting in traffic. As our families grow and our lives get busier, living close to work becomes vital to our quality of life. We are constantly looking for a better solution, something to make things just a little bit easier.
Now, thanks to nearly $96 million in Sustainable Communities Awards announced this week, 27 communities and 29 regions across the country will be able to establish a more livable, equitable, and economically competitive future. These funds, awarded to two grant programs, are poised to help change the face of communities across the country.
The Community Challenge Grants aim to reform and reduce barriers to achieving affordable, economically vital and sustainable communities. Awarded to large and small communities, these funds will help address local challenges to integrating transportation and housing. Funds awarded to communities may also be used to retrofit main streets to provide safer routes for children and seniors and to preserve affordable housing and local businesses near new transit stations.
The Regional Planning Grants allows grantees to support efforts that integrate housing, land-use, economic and workforce development, transportation, and infrastructure developments. This will empower regions to consider how all of these factors work together to create more jobs and economic opportunities.
As a direct result of this funding thousands of jobs will be created and will impact the lives of 45.8 million Americans. This means that 45.8 million Americans will be able to spend less time in their cars and more time at home with their families.
Read a complete summary of each grant awarded funding today.
Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/11/22/more-sustainable-future
Luxury Home Prices Mortgage Rescue Scams Real Estate Vacation Properties
Over the weekend, a report by the Associated Press detailed how the Affordable Care Act is dramatically reducing drug costs for seniors who hit the prescription drug coverage gap known as the donut hole. This year, seniors are benefiting from a 50 percent discount on brand-name drugs in the donut hole. And the discount and other provisions in the law are saving money for seniors. As the AP reported:
The average beneficiary who falls into the coverage gap would have spent $1,504 this year on prescriptions. But thanks to discounts and other provisions in President Barack Obama's health care overhaul law, that cost fell to $901, according to Medicare's Office of the Actuary, which handles economic estimates.
So far this year, more than 2.2 million people with Medicare have saved more than $1.2 billion on their prescriptions. The Associated Press spoke with two of them:
For retired elementary school teacher Carolyn Friedman, it meant she didn't need a loan to pay for drugs that keep her epilepsy under control.
"What a change for the better," said Friedman, 71, of Sunrise, Fla. "This year it was easier to pay my bills, whereas last year I had to borrow money to pay for my medications when I was in the doughnut hole."
…
Joan Gibbs thought her pharmacy had made a mistake. Her total cost for a brand-name painkiller in the doughnut hole came out lower than her co-payment earlier in the year, at a time her plan was picking up most of the tab.
"I reluctantly called the insurance company," said Gibbs, 54, who lives near Cleveland. "If they had made a mistake, I knew they would catch it sooner or later. I was very surprised that it turned out to be such a good discount."
Gibbs is on Medicare because of an auto-immune disorder and other medical problems that left her unable to work.
Thanks to the Affordable Care Act, seniors will receive bigger discounts in the years ahead. By 2020, the donut hole will be closed completely.
And even if you don’t hit the donut hole, there’s still good news for beneficiaries with Medicare Part D. Prescription drug premiums will not rise next year, and thanks to health reform, seniors can get preventive services like mammograms and other cancer screenings for free.
Nancy-Ann DeParle is the Assistant to the President and Deputy Chief of Staff
Foreclosures Home Sales Outlook Housing Starts President Obama
Source: http://www.zillow.com/blog/2011-11-14/brooke-astors-new-york-estate-under-contract/
Commercial & Investment Homes Foreclosures Home Sales Outlook
Household Moving House Plans Home Warranties Commercial & Investment
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/inmannews/~3/qvIbvxiG6V8/zillow-releases-android-tablet-app
Source: http://www.zillow.com/blog/2011-11-22/30-year-fixed-rate-falls-to-lowest-rate-in-seven-weeks/
Sales of existing homes improved in October while inventories declined according to the National Association of Realtors® monthly report. Total sales increased 1.4 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.97 million in October from a downwardly revised (from 4.91 million) 4.90 million units in September. October sales were 13.5 percent higher than the 4.38 million annual rate one year earlier. Existing home sales include completed transactions on single-family, townhomes, condominiums, and cooperative apartments.
Single family sales rose from an annual rate of 4,310,000 in September to 4,380,000, an increase of 1.6 percent. Condo and coop sales were unchanged at 590,000. Single-family homes sales were up 13.8 percent on an annual basis and condo sales increased by 10.5 percent. Existing condominium and co-op sales were unchanged at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 590,000 in October but are 10.5 percent above the 534,000-unit level in October 2010.
Even more positive was the continuing decline in inventory. There were 3.33 million existing homes available for sale at the end of October, an 8.0 month supply at the current sales pace. This is a 2.2 percent decline from the number of homes for sale last month when the inventory stood at 8.3 months. Inventories have been gradually trending lower since setting a record of 4.58 million in July 2008.
Click Here to View the Existing Homes Sales Chart
The national median existing-home price for all housing types was $162,500 in October, which is 4.7 percent below October 2010 and the median existing single-family home price was $161,600, 5.8 percent below October 2010 and the condo price was $160,300 down 1.5 percent on an annual basis.
Distressed homes typically sold at deep discounts but the share of foreclosures and short sales slipped to 28 percent of sales in October from 30 percent in September. REO made up 17 percent of sales and 11 percent were short sales. Distressed homes held a 34 percent market share in October 2010.
Lawrence Yun, NAR Chief Economist said, "In some areas we're hearing about shortages of foreclosure inventory in the lower price ranges with multiple bidding on the more desirable properties. Realtors in such areas are calling for a faster process of getting foreclosure inventory into the market because they have ready buyers."
First-time buyers accounted for 34 percent of transactions in October compared to 32 percent both in September and a year ago. Investors purchased 18 percent of homes, down slightly from the 19 percent posted in both September 2011 and October 2010. Twenty-nine percent of purchases were all cash, virtually unchanged month-over-month and year-over-year. Investors make up the bulk of cash transactions.
Contract failures were again an issue. Cancellations caused by declined mortgage applications, underwriting problems due to appraised values, and other problems including inspection issues and job loses jumped to 33 percent in October from 18 percent in September and 8 percent a year ago. Yun said this was one factor holding back higher sales. "Other recent factors include disruption in the National Flood Insurance Program and lower loan limits for conventional mortgages, which paradoxically force some of the most creditworthy consumers to pay unnecessarily higher interest rates," Yun said.
In the Northeast region existing home sales were down 5.1 percent to an annual rate of 750,000 but were 1.4 percent above October 2010. The median price in the region was $224,400, down 5.5 percent from last year.
Existing-home sales in the Midwest rose 2.8 percent in October to a pace of 1.10 million and are 19.6 percent higher than October 2010. The median price in the Midwest was $132,800, which is 4.7 percent below a year ago.
Sales in the South increased 2.1 percent to an annual level of 1.94 million in October and are 14.1 percent above a year ago while the median price dipped 1.6 percent to $145,700.
In the West the pace of sales rose 4.4 percent to 1.19 million. This is 15.5 percent higher than in October 2010. The median price was $207,500, down 1.6 percent on an annual basis.
...(read more)Source: http://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/11212011_existing_home_sales.asp
Luxury Home Prices Mortgage Rescue Scams Real Estate Vacation Properties
Commercial & Investment Homes Foreclosures Home Sales Outlook
Real Estate Vacation Properties Loans and Mortgages Household Moving
Source: http://www.voanews.com/english/news/Europe-Fights-for-Euros-Survival---134671023.html
Celebrity Foreclosures Most Expensive Homes Luxury Home Prices Mortgage Rescue Scams
Source: http://www.homefinder.com/news/opening-doors/2011/10/06/five-seo-building-blocks-for-realtors/
Source: http://www.zillow.com/blog/2011-11-18/rent-some-elegant-views-with-oprahs-apartment/
Home Sales Outlook Housing Starts President Obama Hope for home owners
Source: http://www.homefinder.com/news/opening-doors/2011/10/06/how-to-prepare-your-home-for-winter/
Celebrity Foreclosures Most Expensive Homes Luxury Home Prices Mortgage Rescue Scams
Source: http://www.zillow.com/blog/2011-11-09/contents-of-michael-jacksons-final-home-up-for-auction/
Commercial & Investment Homes Foreclosures Home Sales Outlook
First Lady Michelle Obama is joined by Malia Obama and Sasha Obama for the presentation of the Official White House Christmas Tree at the North Portico of the White House, Nov. 25, 2011. The 19-foot-tall balsam fir came from Schroeder?s Forevergreens near Neshkoro, Wisconsin and will be displayed throughout the holiday season in the Blue Room of the White House.
Today, First Lady Michelle Obama received the official White House Christmas tree. The tree, a 19-foot balsam fir, arrived in a horse-drawn carriage and will be displayed in the Blue Room of the White House. It will be decorated in honor of military families.
This year’s tree came from Schroeder’s Forevergreens in Wisconsin, a member of the National Christmas Tree Association, and one of about 800 Christmas tree farms and lots around the country that donates free, full-grown trees to military families as part of the Trees for Troops program. This year, Trees for Troops hopes to deliver its 100,000th tree.
Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/11/25/white-house-christmas-tree-arrives
Commercial & Investment Homes Foreclosures Home Sales Outlook
Source: http://www.voanews.com/english/news/middle-east/Iranians-Storm-British-Embassy-134667333.html
Foreclosures Home Sales Outlook Housing Starts President Obama
Source: http://www.zillow.com/blog/2011-11-21/should-you-consider-listing-your-home-during-the-holidays/
Household Moving House Plans Home Warranties Commercial & Investment
Every four years -- count on it -- some political reporter will write a story about the odds of a brokered convention. You know, a deadlocked presidential nomination battle that ends when the winner emerges from a smoke-filled room only to find our intrepid reporter has already broken the story!
What could be better for a political reporter than that?
Never happens, but reporters can dream -- and write about it.
The economics reporter must settle for something less cinematic. Our version of the "Odds for a Brokered Convention" story is the "Grand Bargain Struck on Deficit."
There is no smoke-filled room in this narrative, merely a drab conference center at Andrews Air Force Base or some other location where reporters can be kept a respectable distance away. The parties emerge late in the evening to pronounce a deal that turns, not on promises to the Florida delegation, but on adjustments to inflation measurements in the Social Security formula that better reflect the actual rate of change in the cost of living.
(Can you imagine anything better? I thought you could.)
Still, I get excited about talk of Grand Bargains and the odds of this happening -- never good to begin with -- are getting better. The tide is moving to deficit reduction. The last-hour deal to avert a government shutdown can be read as a sign of seriousness and progress.
Next, the President will lay out his long-run budget plan on Wednesday. House Republicans have staked out their position. Our grand bargainers are setting the table.
Or not. The problem with Grand Bargains is that they are rare, in part because they ask too much. Problems are rarely solved in a comprehensive way by a small crowd at the table. More likely, Democrats and Republicans will gather for years at many conference tables, cutting many small and medium-sized bargains along the way. At the end of this -- three years? five? -- we'll look back and declare it adds up to a Grand Bargain. If that happens, it will still be a great story.
Source: http://www.pbs.org/nbr/blog/2011/04/brokered_conventions_grand_bar.html
Source: http://www.homefinder.com/news/opening-doors/2011/10/06/how-to-prepare-your-home-for-winter/
More than 1 million service members will return to civilian jobs as the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq wind down. Despite the fact these veterans have unique skills and experiences that make them excellent hires for any civilian business, their unemployment rate tops 12 percent.
President Obama believes that no veteran who fought for our country should have to fight for a job once they come home, and is working hard to help our nation’s heroes get back to work. Today, he signed two tax credits that encourage business to hire veterans. In addition to the 120,000 veterans hired by the federal government, he challenged the private sector to train or hire 100,000 veterans and military spouses. His Administration launched a host of online tools to help veterans in their job search, including a job bank with more than 500,000 listings for positions at companies looking to hire returning service members.
We’ve talked to a number of veterans who have experienced the difficulty of finding a job after returning to civilian life. Find their story below and click to read more.
Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/11/21/fighting-help-our-heroes-find-jobs
New homes sales in October rose to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 307,000 according to data released today by the Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development. This is a 1.3 percent increase from the downwardly revised estimate for September sales of 303,000 and 8.9 percent above the 282,000 pace of new home sales in October 2010. An estimated 25,000 new homes sold during the month.
Sales surged in the Midwest, up 22.2 percent month-over-month and 37.5 percent from one year earlier. The annual rate in the Midwest in October was 55,000. The West also performed well with a 14.9 percent increase over the September rate and 54.0 percent improvement since October 2010. Sales during the period were at a 77,000 annual rate. The rate of sales was unchanged from September in the Northeast at 22,000, a figure that was 26.7 percent below that of one year earlier while the South's rate of 153,000 was down 9.5 percent month-over-month and 5.6 percent year over year.
There were 162,000 homes for sale at the end of the October, identical to the number available at the end of September, an inventory of 6.3 months at the current pace of sales. An estimated 200,000 new homes were for sale one year earlier, an 8.5 months supply. Of the 162,000 available homes, construction has not yet begun on 28,000, 74,000 are under construction, and 60,000 are completed. Homes that sold during October were on the market a median of 7.4 month compared to 8.0 months in September and 8.1 months in October 2010.
The median sales price of new homes in October was $212,300 and the average was $242,300. In October 2010 the median price was $204,200 and the average was $254,400.
In a statement this morning the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) called the October report "the best pace of new-home sales activity since this May." Bob Nielsen, NAHB chairman said, "Builders have been seeing some marginal improvement in sales activity over the past few months, particularly in select markets where consumer confidence is higher due to improved economic conditions. While this trend is encouraging, overall sales activity is still well below normal due to the effects of overly tight credit conditions for builders and buyers, the continued flow of distressed properties on the market, and inaccurate appraisal values on new homes."
...(read more)
Source: http://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/11282011_new_home_sales.asp
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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TruliaBlog/~3/53QM6wDx2RU/
Interest Rates Celebrity Foreclosures Most Expensive Homes Luxury Home Prices
Celebrity Foreclosures Most Expensive Homes Luxury Home Prices Mortgage Rescue Scams
Source: http://www.zillow.com/blog/2011-11-22/30-year-fixed-rate-falls-to-lowest-rate-in-seven-weeks/
Mortgage Rescue Scams Real Estate Vacation Properties Loans and Mortgages
Through the course of the past decade, nearly 3 million veterans have transitioned back to civilian life. As the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan draw to a close, more than a million more service members will join them.
Each of these individuals is highly-trained, highly-skilled, and motivated. They represent some of the best America has to offer.
As a nation, we owe an obligation to these heroes, and it's easy to see how we'll benefit as much from their contributions to the civilian workforce as we have from their service in the military.
That's why creating jobs for veterans has been a major priority for President Obama.
Under his direction, the federal government has hired more than 120,000 vets. Joining Forces, led by the First Lady and Dr. Jill Biden, has organized an initative through which private businesses have pledged to hire an additional 135,000 servicemembers and military spouses. And the Obama administration has set up a series reforms and programs to help veterans get back to work -- you can learn more by visting whitehouse.gov/vets.
Today, President Obama will take another step to help fulfill our obligation to those who wear the uniform of the United States when he signs legislation to create a pair of tax credits for businesses that hire veterans.
Throughout the day, we'll share stories of veterans who will benefit from these measures. Be sure to check it out.
Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/11/21/standing-americas-heroes
Economy Interest Rates Celebrity Foreclosures Most Expensive Homes
First Lady Michelle Obama is joined by Malia Obama and Sasha Obama for the presentation of the Official White House Christmas Tree at the North Portico of the White House, Nov. 25, 2011. The 19-foot-tall balsam fir came from Schroeder?s Forevergreens near Neshkoro, Wisconsin and will be displayed throughout the holiday season in the Blue Room of the White House.
Today, First Lady Michelle Obama received the official White House Christmas tree. The tree, a 19-foot balsam fir, arrived in a horse-drawn carriage and will be displayed in the Blue Room of the White House. It will be decorated in honor of military families.
This year’s tree came from Schroeder’s Forevergreens in Wisconsin, a member of the National Christmas Tree Association, and one of about 800 Christmas tree farms and lots around the country that donates free, full-grown trees to military families as part of the Trees for Troops program. This year, Trees for Troops hopes to deliver its 100,000th tree.
Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/11/25/white-house-christmas-tree-arrives
Freddie Mac Mortgage Crisis Real Estate Agents Housing Market
President Barack Obama signs the Veterans Opportunity to Work to Hire Heroes Act of 2011 (VOW to Hire Heroes Act), that will provide tax credits to help put veterans back to work. First Lady Michelle Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and Dr. Jill Biden attend the ceremony in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building South Court Auditorium, Nov. 21, 2011. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)
This morning, President Obama signed the "VOW to Hire Heroes Act" into law, telling those in attendance:
Back in September, I sent Congress a jobs bill. And in it, I proposed a tax credit for any business that hires a veteran who’s been unemployed for at least four weeks. I proposed an even bigger tax break if a business hires a veteran who’s been unemployed for at least six months. And if a business hires an unemployed veteran with a disability related to their service, I proposed doubling the tax break that we already have in place.
Today, because Democrats and Republicans came together, I’m proud to sign those proposals into law. And I urge every business owner out there who’s hiring to hire a veteran right away.
The is just one of the intiatives the President has enacted in order to ensure that the country fulfills its obligation to our servicemembers and their families.
And it's just one part of the President's plan to put the American people back to work. At the bill signing, he told lawmakers that families all over the country are demanding the same kind of bold, bipartisan action.
"My message to every member of Congress is keep going," President Obama said, "Keep working."
Read more:
Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/11/21/president-obama-hire-veteran
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President Barack Obama makes a local stop at Julien's Corner Kichen in Manchester, New Hampshire, Nov. 22, 2011, to sit-down with the Corkery family to discuss the importance of extending and expanding the payroll tax cut. Chris Corkery is a retired colonel, having served 26 years in the United States Army. Chris has been a math teacher at Manchester Central High School for the past 12 years. His wife, Kathy, a small business owner, and their two sons, Andrew and Nicholas attended. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)
Right now, President Obama is going all out to extend the payroll tax cut for the middle class -- and expand it for 2012.
And that effort underscores an important fact: This President has proposed and enacted thousands of dollars of tax relief for American families and small businesses.
In his first year in office, President Obama cut taxes for 95 percent of working families through the Recovery Act with the Making Work Pay tax cut.
With that same piece of legislation, he created the American Opportunity Tax Credit -- which is currently helping more than 9 million families afford the cost of college.
The Recovery Act also lowered the threshold for refunds through the Child Tax Credit -- providing a tax cut to 11.8 million working families.
The President also expanded the Earned Income Tax Credit for families with three or more children -- giving them a tax cut of up to $640 this year.
President Obama has passed tax cuts for small businesses 17 times. These measures range from allowing corporation to expense 100 percent of their new investments until the end of 2011 to creating a new deduction for health care costs for the self-employed.
And just this week, the President also signed legislation to create tax credits for businesses that hire veterans.
If Congress passes the American Jobs Act, a typical family of four would see their taxes decrease an additional $2,325 -- bringing their total tax relief to about $5,425 for the President’s first term. That number goes up if the family is helping their kids pay college tuition.
That number goes up if the family is helping their kids pay college tuition.
This lower tax rate hasn't come about through happenstance. It's a product of hard work from President Obama. Those of us in the middle class have more money in our pockets because the President made it a priority.
And it's going to take more hard work between now and the end of the year to keep things that way.
Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/11/22/president-obamas-record-taxes
Home Sales Outlook Housing Starts President Obama Hope for home owners
Source: http://www.zillow.com/blog/2011-11-03/living-room-updates-for-under-500/
Source: http://online.wsj.com/video/helen-hunt-asks-28m-for-manhattan-apartment/5A1A5...
Source: http://www.zillow.com/blog/2011-10-28/insiders-guide-to-success-with-short-sales/
Luxury Home Prices Mortgage Rescue Scams Real Estate Vacation Properties
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TruliaBlog/~3/nOzhZEOKJ2M/
Luxury Home Prices Mortgage Rescue Scams Real Estate Vacation Properties
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/inmannews/~3/sukBDNese7U/foreclosure-activity-rises-in-october
Mortgage Rescue Scams Real Estate Vacation Properties Loans and Mortgages
The Obama administration has jumped into the never-ending debate between parents, children, and eyes that are too big for tummies. It is clear we are a nation of over-eaters. It begins in childhood, which is why the President wants to limit advertising of unhealthy foods to kids, putting at risk the job security of many an animated cereal mascot.
We live in an age of cut backs. Drive less, spend less, and now, with luck, our kids will eat less too.
To anyone following the debate over kids and food advertising, the discussion about the value of the dollar will sound familiar. For decades, our economic eyes have been too big for our collective tummies. Our trade deficits over the last 18 years total an obscene $7 trillion dollars.
What this means is that we have been living way beyond our means, buying from the rest of the world far more than we can afford. Just as those sugary cereal bowls adds up, so do the debts we have accumulated overseas.
Since things that can't go on forever stop, this too has to stop. But how? One way to stop our foreign buying binge is through protectionism. We can stop trading with the rest of the world. That's not in the cards considering how global markets are now, though polls show Americans are not eager to expand free trade deals. Another way to stop buying more than we can afford is to let our currency depreciate.
A weak dollar acts like a spending diet. The price of consuming foreign goods goes up. An instant economic diet. No advertising censorship needed. That's what is happening now.
The Federal Reserve gets a lot of heat for keeping interest rates low, a policy which discourages investment in the U.S. and weakens the dollar. But the latest readings on the economy show that we are not growing strongly enough now to tolerate higher rates.
The only choice is to go on a dollar diet. We have to live within our means again. That applies to cereal and sugar snacks as well as foreign vacations and fancy imports.
Source: http://www.pbs.org/nbr/blog/2011/04/the_dollar_diet.html
Real Estate Vacation Properties Loans and Mortgages Household Moving
Source: http://realestate.msn.com/slideshow.aspx?cp-documentid=31230445
Interest Rates Celebrity Foreclosures Most Expensive Homes Luxury Home Prices
Source: http://blog.foreclosure.com/2011/10/2011-halloween-costumes-ideas-from-foreclosure-com-staff/
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/inmannews/~3/tMxKxqMpw0s/qsc-inc-launches-agent-rating-site
Source: http://www.zillow.com/blog/2011-10-31/celebrating-halloween-zillow-style/
Commercial and multifamily mortgage originations turned sharply upward during the third quarter of 2011, rising 10 percent above levels in the second quarter and nearly doubling originations in the third quarter of 2010. Results of Quarter Three lending was released by The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) on Thursday in their Quarterly Survey of Commercial/Multifamily Mortgage Bankers Originations.
MBA said that the 98 percent overall annual improvement in commercial/multifamily lending was driven by increases across the board. When compared to the same quarter in 2010, loans for hotel properties increased by 406 percent; retail properties by 164 percent and office properties 103 percent. Loans for multifamily properties were up 39 percent. Offsetting these strong gains were losses of 3 percent and 8 percent for industrial property and health care property loans.
The increased originations are reflected in MBA's Originations Index which rose from 70 in the third quarter of 2010 to 126 in the second quarter of 2011 to 138 in the quarter just ended. The index peaked at 352 in Q2 2007 and bottomed out at 40 in Q1 of 2009.*
Originations increased across all lender types but lending by commercial banks soared, increasing 433 percent over lending one year earlier from an index of 32 to 169. Lending by conduits for commercial mortgage backed securities (CMBS) was up 169 percent (although levels are still low; the index is 42). Life insurance companies increased lending by 61 percent from an index of 176 to 282, and the GSEs Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae increased their lending by 47 percent from 120 to 176.
The average loan sizes also increased. For all loans the average was $14.9 million compared to $10.5 million in Quarter 3 of 2010. Loans from conduits averaged $40.5 million, unchanged year-over-year. Commercial bank loans more than doubled in size from $4.9 million to $11.8 million; life insurance companies lent an average of $20.5 compared to $15.5 million and Freddie and Fannies' average loan size rose from $12.6 million to $13.8 million.
"Lending on commercial and multifamily properties continues," said Jamie Woodwell, MBA's Vice President of Commercial Real Estate Research. "Mortgage originations by life company portfolios hit another new record in the third quarter, and lending by bank portfolios and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac also picked-up. Mortgage originations for the CMBS market, which was caught up in the global economic uncertainty of recent months, declined from last quarter, but were higher than last year's Q3 level."
Quarterly changes in originations were also impressive; retail property loans increased by 37 percent, office properties 8 percent, hotel properties 4 percent, multi-family properties 2 percent. The remaining two properties types fell in quarterly statistics as well as annual; industrial property originations were down 14 percent and health care properties 30 percent.
Among investor types, between the second and third quarters of 2011, loans for commercial bank portfolios saw an increase in loan volume of 55 percent, loans for GSEs 32 percent, and originations for life insurance companies 3 percent. Loans for conduits for CMBS decreased by 48 percent.
*The Index has a base of 100 = the average originations per quarter in 2001.
...(read more)Source: http://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/11032011_commercial_lending.asp
Housing Starts President Obama Hope for home owners Fannie Mae
Ed. Note: Cross-posted with the Small Business Administration blog.
Like many Americans in my generation, my father was a World War II veteran. My life has been shaped and influenced by his service. Now, as Deputy Administrator at the SBA, I am committed to supporting America’s veteran entrepreneurs and business owners as they grow their business and put America back to work.
Just yesterday, I hosted a forum for young veterans on the campus of San Diego State University as part of SBA’s Young Entrepreneurs Series and National Entrepreneurship Month. I was happy to meet so many young veterans who are using the skills and leadership they learned in the military to start and run a business.
We talked about a number of important issues facing veteran-entrepreneurs who are part of America’s small business community. We discussed important American Jobs Act proposals such as the call that President Obama made yesterday for Congress to provide large tax credits to businesses that hire veterans and service-disabled veterans. This is something that everyone can and should support.
Today, we’re putting forth even more ideas to support veteran business owners as they grow and hire with a report from the Interagency Task Force on Veterans Small Business Development, which the President created and I have the honor to chair. The Task Force came up with 18 recommendations across three priority areas: