If businesses had any reluctance to hire in December because of fiscal cliff concerns, they didn't make up for it in January: Payrolls expanded by 157,000, down from December, but the unemployment rate moved to 7.9 percent from 7.8 percent a month earlier, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported Friday.
Read More »Report: Treasury Failed to Plan TARP Exit Strategy for Ally
A taxpayer watchdog agency accused Treasury of lacking a concrete plan to help Ally pay back taxpayers and move toward financial stability. Although Treasury made three investments into Ally, totaling $17.2 billion, the report says Treasury never required the company to "spell out a plan" to address issues surrounding Residential Capital, Ally's mortgage arm that caused most of the company's losses.
Read More »Analysts Draw Uneven Price Picture for East, West Coasts
While home prices are expected to increase by 5 percent on the national level, analysts at Capital Economics say some regions are more likely to see little to no growth at all.
Read More »Churchill Mortgage Builds on Georgia Presence with New Atlanta Branch
Churchill Mortgage, a provider of conventional and government-insured mortgages, announced the opening of a new branch in Atlanta, Georgia. For the new opening, Churchill recruited Johnny Meany and David Carr, who together have more than 26 years of industry experience.
Read More »CFPB Announces Acting Deputy Director as Date Departs
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) announced Steve Antonakes will serve as acting deputy director while the agency continues searching for a replacement for departing deputy director Raj Date. CFPB announced in November that Date would depart at the end of January 2013.
Read More »Mortgage Rates Climb, Experts Split on Forecasts
Fixed mortgage rates took a major leap up last week amid news of a growing economy led in part by the recovering housing market.
Read More »Personal Income Jumps With Fiscal Cliff Dividends
Personal income jumped a staggering 2.6 percent in December, almost four times the 0.7 increase economists forecast, the Bureau of Economic Analysis reported Thursday. Part of the December increase, BEA said, was due to "accelerated bonus payments and other irregular pay in private wages in anticipation of changes in individual income tax rates." Personal consumption spending rose 0.2 percent, slightly below the expected 0.3 percent increase. The increase in personal spending--$22.6 billion --came primarily in spending on services.
Read More »Volatile First-Time Jobless Claims Jump Back Up
First-time claims for unemployment insurance jumped 38,000 to 368,000 for the week ending January 26, the Labor Department reported Thursday. Economists expected a smaller increase to 350,000 from the prior week's 330,000 initial claims. The weekly jump in initial claims was the first in three weeks. It reflected, in part, a drop in the seasonal adjustment factor the Labor Department applies to the raw data, which includes holiday workers whose jobs were eliminated.
Read More »Freddie Mac Records $28.8B in 2012 Multifamily Volumes
As the multifamily sector continues to flourish, Freddie Mac also announced it hit record volume for its multifamily business in 2012.
Read More »FHA Announces Imminent Reforms to Rebuild Capital
Federal Housing Administration commissioner Carol Galante announced Wednesday a series of changes to be issued this week that will allow the agency to better manage risk and strengthen its anemic Mutual Mortgage Insurance (MMI) Fund. The announced changes include consolidating FHA's reverse mortgage program, raising of mortgage insurance premiums, and requiring borrowers to continue paying annual insurance premiums for the entire life of their mortgage loans.
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