News

March 22, 2008

Movement may be seen on mortgage aid plan: Rep. Frank (Reuters)

Filed under: Real Estate — Admin @ 8:04 pm

U.S. Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA) holds a House Financial Services Committee hearing to address why a crisis originating from risky loans to less creditworthy buyers happened, on Capitol Hill in Washington, September 5, 2007. (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)Reuters - An influential Democratic
congressman said on Wednesday the Bush administration was
willing to discuss a bold plan he proposed to tackle the
nation’s worsening mortgage foreclosure crisis.

Judge clears New Century liquidation plan for vote (Reuters)

Filed under: Real Estate — Admin @ 8:04 pm

The signage and logo of New Century Financial Corporation are seen at the corporate headquarters in Irvine, California March 15, 2007. (Fred Prouser/Reuters)Reuters - A federal bankruptcy judge has cleared
the way for New Century Financial Corp creditors to
vote on a liquidation plan for the former subprime lending
giant, court papers show.

Dollar under pressure on rate cut, but helped by govt credit move (AFP)

Filed under: Real Estate — Admin @ 8:04 pm

Euro coins and one US dollar bill. The dollar continued to gain against the euro and the yen in Asian trade Thursday but the greenback's rebound is seen likely to be short-lived owing to lingering uncertainties over the US economy, dealers said.(AFP/File/Joel Saget)AFP - The dollar weakened against the euro Wednesday but drew some support from a decision by US regulators to make an extra 200 billion dollars available to the troubled US housing market.

US regulatory shift to add 200 billion dlrs to mortgage market (AFP)

Filed under: Real Estate — Admin @ 8:04 pm

A property for developement for sale in southern California. US regulators have announced a plan to allow government-sponsored mortgage firms Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to pump an extra 200 billion dollars into the troubled housing market.(AFP/File/Robyn Beck)AFP - US regulators announced a plan Wednesday to allow government-sponsored mortgage titans Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to pump an extra 200 billion dollars into the troubled housing market.

New York Feels the Crunch (BusinessWeek Online)

Filed under: Real Estate — Admin @ 10:05 am

BusinessWeek Online - It’s ugly on Wall Street. With the subprime mortgage meltdown, credit crunch, and falling stock market, investment bankers are facing the worst job losses since the months following September 11. In the wake of its near collapse last week, Bear Stearns is expected to lay off at least half of its 14,000 employees. Citigroup said on Mar. 20 that it plans to add 2,000 layoffs to the 4,200 it announced in January. And many bankers are wondering not only which firms will be hit next, but whether their own jobs are safe.

Pension plans take chance on mortgages (AP)

Filed under: Real Estate — Admin @ 10:05 am

AP - The subprime mortgage crisis has yielded at least one benefit for states: Mortgage-related investments have become so cheap that they are luring some pension funds to buy.

BoE denies mortgage security buyout plan (Reuters)

Filed under: Real Estate — Admin @ 10:05 am

The Bank of England building is seen in central London March 20, 2008. (Toby Melville/Reuters)Reuters - The Bank of England denied a report in
the Financial Times on Saturday that it was proposing using
public funds to make mass purchases of mortgage-backed
securities in order to ease the credit crisis.

Japanese property, financial stocks rise (AP)

Filed under: Real Estate — Admin @ 10:05 am

AP - Japanese shares rose Friday, buoyed by gains in property developers and financial issues.

Dems Step Up Push For Home-Loan Fix, Citing Fed’s Action (Investor’s Business Daily)

Filed under: Real Estate — Admin @ 10:04 am

Investor’s Business Daily - The Federal Reserve’s move to take on $30 billion in risky Bear Stearns holdings may turn out to be the political equivalent of crossing the Rubicon.

Smaller Banks Spared Subprime, But Credit Risks Still A Problem (Investor’s Business Daily)

Filed under: Real Estate — Admin @ 10:04 am

Investor’s Business Daily - Somewhere a kid is dumping nickels into a piggy bank, and she doesn’t care a whit about the subprime mortgage crisis.

Police: Client kills Wisconsin Realtor (AP)

Filed under: Real Estate — Admin @ 10:04 am

This photo, supplied by the Jefferson County Sheriff's office, shows James A. Hole, after his arrest Wednesday, March 19, 2008,  following the murder of a 71-year-old real estate agent who was found dead inside a home she had been showing in Oakland, Wis. Hole  was being held on a tentative charge of first-degree intentional homicide,the sheriff said Thursday.(AP Photo/ Jefferson County Sheriff's office)AP - A convicted sex offender was charged Thursday with killing a 71-year-old real estate agent whose body was found near a smoldering mattress in a home she had been showing him.

Citigroup cuts 2,000 jobs: source (Reuters)

Filed under: Real Estate — Admin @ 10:04 am

A Citibank branch is pictured in Singapore January 22, 2008. (Alywin Chew/Reuters)Reuters - Citigroup Inc is cutting about
2,000 more investment banking and trading jobs, a person
briefed on the matter said, as the largest U.S. bank moves to
lower costs after subprime mortgage and credit problems led to
a record quarterly loss.

Credit Suisse warns on first quarter, discloses trader ‘misconduct’ (AFP)

Filed under: Real Estate — Admin @ 10:04 am

AFP - Swiss banking giant Credit Suisse warned Thursday it could suffer a first quarter loss, citing exposure to the US subprime crisis, and said some of its traders had engaged in “intentional misconduct” and had been suspended.

Fannie and Freddie Set Free (BusinessWeek Online)

Filed under: Real Estate — Admin @ 10:04 am

BusinessWeek Online - Another stone fell into place in the federal government’s plan to build a path to credit market recovery. On Mar. 19, the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, or OFHEO, said it was reducing the amount of capital it requires Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to maintain on their balance sheets above statutory requirements. By reducing the capital surplus level from 30% to 20%, the regulator will provide up to $200 billion in immediate liquidity to the distressed mortgage-backed securities market.

More bad news at German subprime casualty IKB (AFP)

Filed under: Real Estate — Admin @ 10:04 am

The logo of the German bank IKB. Germany's IKB unveiled more bad news Thursday, suspending the sale of billions of euros (dollars) of risky assets tied to US subprime mortgages and revealing it was getting yet more state aid.(AFP/File/Barbara Sax)AFP - Germany’s IKB unveiled more bad news Thursday, suspending the sale of billions of euros (dollars) of risky assets tied to US subprime mortgages and revealing it was getting yet more state aid.

Few Banks Have Cut Dividends Despite Need For More Capital (Investor’s Business Daily)

Filed under: Real Estate — Admin @ 10:04 am

Investor’s Business Daily - Cash-strapped financial firms should rethink their hefty dividends during the subprime crisis to ease capital shortages, says Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson.

Treasurys rally on global economic fears (AP)

Filed under: Real Estate — Admin @ 10:04 am

AP - Treasurys staged a massive rally Wednesday, as fears about continuing fallout from the credit crisis prompted investors to seek safe assets ahead of a long holiday weekend.

Gov’t eases Fannie, Freddie restraints (AP)

Filed under: Real Estate — Admin @ 10:04 am

In this photo provided by FOX News, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson appears on 'Fox News Sunday'  in Washington, Sunday, March 16, 2008.   (AP Photo/FOX News Sunday, Freddie Lee)  MANDATORY CREDIT: FREDDIE LEE, FOX NEWS SUNDAYAP - The government on Wednesday relaxed capital requirements at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as part of a plan to quickly inject an additional $200 billion of financing for home loans.

Economy - Wednesday (Investor’s Business Daily)

Filed under: Real Estate — Admin @ 10:04 am

Investor’s Business Daily - The applications index fell 2.9% to 652 during the week ended March 14, the lowest in ‘08, said the Mortgage Bankers Association. Refinance volume slid 4.6%, while applications for buying a home fell 1%. The declines came despite a sharp drop in fixed-rate mortgage rates. Adjustable rates continued to soar.

Mortgage lenders to pump $200 billion into markets (Reuters)

Filed under: Real Estate — Admin @ 10:04 am

The headquarters of mortgage lender Fannie Mae in Washington, October 3, 2006. (Jason Reed/Reuters)Reuters - Two U.S. home financing heavyweights
won government approval on Wednesday to pump $200 billion more
into troubled U.S. mortgage markets, the latest step to
stabilize credit markets and avert a deep recession.

« Older PostsNewer Posts »

Powered by WordPress