Mortgage rates saw increases across the board after nearly two months in record-low territory, with Freddie Mac revealing in a weekly survey Thursday that the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage ticked up to 3.71 percent. The GSE found that the 30-year loan's increase ended a six-week streak of falling rates. At the same time last year, the fixed-rate mortgage averaged 4.50 percent. The 15-year FRM also slid up, averaging 2.98 percent (0.7 point). The average was 2.94 percent last week, according to Freddie Mac.
Read More »Two Arrested in $1.3M Ponzi Scheme Targeting Latino Investors
California Attorney General Kamala Harris announced Friday the arrest of Edwin G. Salazar, 34, of Downey, California, and Michael Z. Zuniga, 41, of Fullerton, California, in a $1.3 million Ponzi scheme that targeted Latino investors, many of whom were seniors. Salazar and Fullerton, who operated as OMEGA Investments Corp., were arrested on 57 counts of elder abuse, grand theft, and securities fraud. From January 2007 through June 2008, the licensed insurance agent issued more than $1.3 million in fraudulent securities to individual investors they befriended through their insurance business.
Read More »FHA to Go Forward With Delinquent Loan Sale to Investors
HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan and Federal Housing Administration Acting Commissioner Carol Galante announced in a press conference Friday FHA's program to sell mortgage loan pools to investors. The Distressed Asset Stabilization Program, designed to give homeowners with seriously delinquent loans a chance to avoid foreclosure, is an expansion of an earlier FHA pilot program that allows investors to purchase loan pools headed for foreclosure. Investors are then charged with the task of working to bring the loan out of default. The program starts in September 2012 with a sale of the loan pools.
Read More »Foreign Buyers Rush to Prop Up U.S. Housing Market: NAR
The combination of low housing prices and the comparative weakness of the dollar continues to push foreign buyers to the United States, raising international home sales to $82.4 billion up from $66.4 billion last year, according to the National Association of Realtors 2012 Profile of International Home Buying Activity. NAR conducted the survey and asked realtors to report their international business activities within the United States for the 12 months ending March 2012. Twenty-seven percent reported having worked with international clients this year.
Read More »New EVPs, Chief Risk Officer for SunTrust Mortgage
SunTrust Mortgage has appointed new leadership, with the announcement of two new executive vice presidents. Peter E. Mahoney will join SunTrust as the EVP of mortgage strategy, and Jack Wixted will become an EVP and the chief risk officer for the company.
Read More »Massachusetts Goes Ultra-Modern with New Waterfront Condos
For aspiring blue bloods, escaping to Cape Cod is a must during the summer season, and while the real estate market in The Cape boasts classic, shingled architecture in abundance, one cool development in Provincetown, Massachusetts, is breaking with tradition.
Read More »Initial Jobless Claims Climb for Fifth Time in Six Weeks
First time claims for unemployment insurance rose to 3086,000 for the week ended June 9, from the prior week's 38,000, the Labor Department reported Thursday. Economists had expected the report would show 3795,000 initial claims.
Read More »SIFMA Encourages Alignment of GSE Operations
In a letter filed Wednesday to FHFA, the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association expressed its view that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac should seek to align their operations as much as possible. The alignment would help set the stage and ease transition into the future for the GSEs, SIFMA suggests. Market performance shows a gap between the perceived and actual performance and liquidity of mortgage backed securities issued by the GSEs. The liquidity differential impacts the cost and efficiency of the GSE securitization process and the ability of the Enterprises to fund mortgage lending.
Read More »Group Files Suit Against CFPB Over Cordray’s Recess Appointment
Public interest group Judicial Watch announced Tuesday that it filed a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to obtain records detailing President Obama's "recess appointment" of CFPB director Richard Cordray. Judicial Watch, a group dedicated to investigating and fighting possible government corruption, says it submitted a FOIA request on January 12 to CFPB seeking access to records of communications between the bureau, the White House, the Executive Office of the President, the Treasury, and Congress concerning Cordray├â┬ó├óÔÇÜ┬¼├óÔÇ×┬ós appointment to his post.
Read More »CFPB Counters Trade Group’s Call for Date to Resign
In an exclusive interview with MReport Tuesday, Marc Savitt, president of the National Association of Independent Housing Professionals, divulged his intentions to call for the resignation of Raj Date from his post as deputy director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Following the interview, NAIHP released an official announcement calling for just that. We obtained comments from the consumer bureau countering criticism Date received for a speech Monday in which he faulted mortgage brokers for the housing crisis.
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