1. Homeowners Tap the Income in Their Homes
“Got a room above the garage? A furnished basement? A bedroom that a grown child has vacated?”
2. For rich people, mortgages are getting cheaper and easier
“For wealthy homebuyers, mortgages are getting cheaper and easier to come by.”
3. Gen Xers are poorer than their parents
“Gen Xers may be taking home bigger paychecks than their parents did at the same age, but they haven’t been able to accumulate nearly as much wealth.”
4. Existing-Home Sales Slightly Lose Momentum in August as Investor Activity Declines
“WASHINGTON (September 22, 2014) – After four consecutive months of gains, existing-home sales slipped in August as investors paying in cash retreated from the market, according to the National Association of Realtors®. Sales increases in the Northeast and Midwest were outweighed by declines in the South and West.”
5. Student loan debt curbs housing market by $83 billion, study says
“There’s been lots of debate lately in housing circles about the impact of student debt on home ownership.”
6. Can landlord require a non-refundable pet deposit?
“Question: A new job required me to relocate to a new area, and I decided to rent a room at a hotel designed for longer stays. I signed a month-to-month rental agreement and paid a half-month’s rent as a pet deposit for my small dog.”
7. Mortgage fraud is alive and well
“If you thought the bad guys had left the mortgage business for greener pastures, think again. The thieves are still out there, ready to separate you from your money. But at the same time, many of us are still not above stretching the truth a little when we are trying to obtain financing.”
8. Blemished credit? Congress weighs changes that could boost scores
“Do you think you’d have a better chance to qualify for a home mortgage if negative items in your credit files were erased in four years rather than the current seven?”
9. FHA Loans Plunge 19 Percent as Banks Haggle With Regulators
“Home loans to lower-income Americans are dwindling as Washington regulators and major banks continue to haggle over who pays when riskier mortgages go bad.”
10. Richmond Fed Chief Upset on MBS Policy Shift
“Jeffrey M. Lacker, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, has openly questioned a key aspect Wednesday’s decision by central bank’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) regarding the long-anticipated policy shift away from tapering.”
11. Reverse mortgages no fast ticket to retirement easy street
“You’re 62 or older, and life has derailed your plans.”
12. High-stakes debate over credit reporting
“Do you think you’d have a better chance to qualify for a home mortgage if negative items in your credit files were erased in four years rather than the current seven?”
13. Housing Holds Back Leading Economic Indicators
“Sept. 22, 2014–Sorohan, Mike msorohan@mba.org
The Conference Board Leading Economic Index for the U.S. increased by just 0.2 percent in August; analysts said despite a seventh straight month of gains, a sluggish housing market held back stronger growth.”
“Sept. 22, 2014–Sorohan, Mike msorohan@mba.org
The Senate Banking Committee holds the only hearing of note this week. On Tuesday, Sept. 23, the Banking Committee meets to consider nominations of Lourdes Maria Castro Ramirez as assistant secretary at HUD and Therese McMillan as federal transit administrator with the Department of Transportation.”
“Sept. 22, 2014–Tucker, Michael mtucker@mba.org
Property fundamentals and market conditions for major commercial mortgage-backed securities property types remain stable and some sectors–especially hotels–could see continued improvement, reported Fitch, New York.”
16. Dealmaker: KDH Secures $15.6M in Texas
“Q10 Kinghorn, Driver, Hough & Co., Houston, secured $15.6 million for an office building and an industrial building in Texas.
KDH Principal Ray Driver III and Associate Dave Holland secured a 10-year permanent loan to refinance a Class A multi-tenant office building in Katy, Texas. The Mission Cos., Houston, finished the 32,000-square-foot office, which serves as headquarters for Entrust Inc., last year.”
17. Mom-and-Dad Banks Step Up Aid to First-Time Home Buyers
“The Bank of Mom and Dad is playing a growing role as lender of last resort for a housing recovery struggling to provide more traction for the U.S. economy.”
18. Investors Unite: No, District Court ruling won’t affect GSE lawsuit
“A ruling late Friday with U.S. District Judge Amy Jackson holding that Fannie Mae shareholders cannot sue the Department of Treasury in a derivative action may not be the blow to the shareholder case against Treasury that HousingWire first cast it as.”
19. Financial Stability director: SIFI designation is not “too big to fail”
“The ability of the Financial Stability Oversight Council to designate nonbank firms as systemically important financial institutions has come under intense scrutiny in recent months.”
20. ABS East: Lawsky has legacy MSRs “at a standstill”
“If the last few months are any indication, Ocwen Financial (OCN) Executive Chairman William Erbey was slightly incorrect when he proclaimed that the entire mortgage servicing rights market was frozen after the by the New York Department of Financial Services, after the NYDFS, led by Superintendent Benjamin Lawsky, put a $2.7 billion MSR deal between Ocwen and Wells Fargo (WFC) on an indefinite hold.”
“Not that many years ago, subprime loans almost brought down the global economy. The financial world collectively vowed to never again go overboard advancing money to people considered unlikely to pay it back. But in the U.S., some forms of subprime are on the rise again, primarily in auto loans and also in small-business lending. That has some observers worried — and others calling for more such lending. Not all subprime loans are bad, they say, and it’s not just banks saying it. Consumer advocates want more people to have access to loans while economists see tight credit playing a big role in holding back economic recovery. Maybe subprime mortgages are the medicine the economy needs. Or maybe subprime is such a slippery slope that we’re better off not going there. Is it possible to do just the right amount of risky lending?”
22. Home Construction Returns to Inland Empire
“When the housing market imploded in 2006, it derailed housing developments nationwide, but nowhere was home building more affected by the downturn than the inland areas of Riverside and San Bernardino counties, Calif. After the bursting of the real estate bubble, housing developments stalled in Riverside, Chino, Temecula, Ontario, Banning, Coachella, Lake Elsinore, Murrieta, Rancho Cucamonga, San Jacinto and Redlands.”