The Seattle Times: Real Estate



In just The past three years, for-profit apartment developers, often building in vogue neighborhoods, have received nearly $100 million in tax breaks. That isn't what The city intended when it created The program in 1998 to encourage new apartments in The city's poorest neighborhoods.
Developers cash in on tax breaks in vogue neighborhoods

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



In just The past three years, for-profit apartment developers, often building in vogue neighborhoods, have received nearly $100 million in tax breaks. That isn't what The city intended when it created The program in 1998 to encourage new apartments in The city's poorest neighborhoods.
Developers cash in on tax breaks in vogue neighborhoods

Read more...

The Seattle Times: Real Estate



In just The past three years, for-profit apartment developers, often building in vogue neighborhoods, have received nearly $100 million in tax breaks. That isn't what The city intended when it created The program in 1998 to encourage new apartments in The city's poorest neighborhoods.
Developers cash in on tax breaks in vogue neighborhoods

Read more...

The Seattle Times: Real Estate



In just The past three years, for-profit apartment developers, often building in vogue neighborhoods, have received nearly $100 million in tax breaks. That isn't what The city intended when it created The program in 1998 to encourage new apartments in The city's poorest neighborhoods.
Developers cash in on tax breaks in vogue neighborhoods

Read more...

The Seattle Times: Real Estate



When JoAnn Stear opened Eaton Hill Winery in The 1980s, she was among The pioneers of Washington's modern wine industry.
Retiring Washington winemakers find it tough time to sell

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



From her participation in The Tacoma unit of The Washington Park Arboretum to tending The gardener's own half-acre hillside in University Place, Paris' exuberance is unflagging.
Gardening is an athletic endeavor for Nan Paris

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



From her participation in The Tacoma unit of The Washington Park Arboretum to tending The gardener's own half-acre hillside in University Place, Paris' exuberance is unflagging.
Gardening is an athletic endeavor for Nan Paris

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



From her participation in The Tacoma unit of The Washington Park Arboretum to tending The gardener's own half-acre hillside in University Place, Paris' exuberance is unflagging.
Gardening is an athletic endeavor for Nan Paris

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



From her participation in The Tacoma unit of The Washington Park Arboretum to tending The gardener's own half-acre hillside in University Place, Paris' exuberance is unflagging.
Gardening is an athletic endeavor for Nan Paris

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Can The Internal Revenue Service handle tax-credit programs that pump out billions of dollars to homeowners and buyers? A new federal investigation...
Turning green over tax credits

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Starbucks has put up for sale two Pioneer Square office buildings that had been part of The coffee company's ambitious pre-recession expansion plans.
Starbucks seeks to sell Pioneer Square buildings

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Starbucks has put up for sale two Pioneer Square office buildings that had been part of The coffee company's ambitious pre-recession expansion plans.
Starbucks seeks to sell Pioneer Square buildings

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Starbucks has put up for sale two Pioneer Square office buildings that had been part of The coffee company's ambitious pre-recession expansion plans.
Starbucks seeks to sell Pioneer Square buildings

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Fixed mortgage rates hit The lowest point of The year for The third straight week.
Fixed mortgage rates fall to 2011 lows


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



More people bought new homes for a second straight month in April, a hopeful sign. Still, sales remain far below a pace that would signal a turnaround for The depressed housing market.
New-home sales up, but pace remains sluggish


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



More people bought new homes for a second straight month in April, a hopeful sign. Still, sales remain far below a pace that would signal a turnaround for The depressed housing market.
New-home sales up, but pace remains sluggish


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



More people bought new homes for a second straight month in April, a hopeful sign. Still, sales remain far below The pace that would represent a healthy housing market.
New-home sales up, but pace remains sluggish


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



More people bought new homes for a second straight month in April, a hopeful sign. Still, sales remain far below The pace that would represent a healthy housing market.
New-home sales up, but pace remains sluggish


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



The ninth annual Central District Garden Tour, on June 4, includes seven private gardens and seven public sites.
Seattle's Central District Garden Tour enchants

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



The ninth annual Central District Garden Tour, on June 4, includes seven private gardens and seven public sites.
Seattle's Central District Garden Tour enchants

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



The ninth annual Central District Garden Tour, on June 4, includes seven private gardens and seven public sites.
Seattle's Central District Garden Tour enchants

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



The ninth annual Central District Garden Tour, on June 4, includes seven private gardens and seven public sites.
Seattle's Central District Garden Tour enchants

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



The ninth annual Central District Garden Tour, on June 4, includes seven private gardens and seven public sites.
Seattle's Central District Garden Tour enchants

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



The Station at OThello Park is just The kind of redevelopment Seattle planners and politicians envisioned more than a decade ago, when They decided to run light rail down Martin LuTher King Jr. Way South.
New apartment complex a test of light-rail's lure

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Regence Blue Shield has put its 16-story Denny Triangle headquarters building up for sale, concluding it's now more cost-effective to lease than own.
Regence Blue Shield puts HQ tower up for sale

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Fixed mortgage rates fell this week to The lowest point of The year, offering incentive for homeowners to save money by refinancing Their loans.
Fixed mortgage rates touch new lows for 2011


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Fixed mortgage rates fell this week to The lowest point of The year, offering incentive for homeowners to save money by refinancing Their loans.
Fixed mortgage rates touch new lows for 2011


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Fixed mortgage rates fell this week to The lowest point of The year, offering incentive for homeowners to save money by refinancing Their loans.
Fixed mortgage rates touch new lows for 2011


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



The true cost of a mortgage should soon be easier to understand.
Mortgage disclosures getting anoTher revamp


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Seattle developer Schnitzer West has put its 1918 Eighth office tower up for sale, three months after it leased most of The 36-story building to Amazon.com. Also included in Schnitzer's offering: 818 Stewart, a 14-story building on The same Denny Triangle block.
Schnitzer West puts Denny Triangle buildings up for sale

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Leasing space to Amazon.com makes buildings attractive to investors.
Schnitzer West puts for sale sign on Denny Triangle buildings

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



While Amazon.com's move to spacious new digs in South Lake Union and The Denny Triangle has given The Seattle office market a huge boost, The relocation also has left some big holes to fill in downtown's more souTherly reaches.
Amazon's shift to South Lake Union leaves empty feeling

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



While Amazon.com's move to spacious new digs in South Lake Union and The Denny Triangle has given The Seattle office market a huge boost, The relocation also has left some big holes to fill in downtown's more souTherly reaches.
Amazon's shift to South Lake Union leaves empty feeling

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



U.S. homebuilders are concerned that The struggling housing market won't recover this year and some feel it may be getting worse.
US builders see little to like in housing market


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



In The Seattle metropolitan area, The amount for a FHA-backed jumbo loan is set to be reduced from $567,500 to $506,000 for a single family home.
Fed agencies may retreat from backing jumbo loans

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



In The Seattle metropolitan area, The amount for a FHA-backed jumbo loan is set to be reduced from $567,500 to $506,000 for a single family home.
Fed agencies may retreat from backing jumbo loans

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Architect Karen Braitmayer and David Erskine's Midcentury home on Magnolia was good enough. It came with a ramp in The garage and a wide front door, and that worked for Braitmayer and her daughter, who use wheelchairs. But it wasn't great. Until now.
Accessibly beautiful home in Seattle

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



As vacancy rates dip below 5 percent, landlords are not only raising rents, but They are offering fewer concessions, such as short-term and long-term leases.
Renters finding landlords have upper hand in this market

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



An administrative-law judge has upheld The state's decision to revoke The Real-Estate license of Pierce County broker Michael Hellickson, agreeing that he engaged in dishonest practices that took advantage of struggling homeowners.
Decision to yank Hellickson's Real-Estate license upheld

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Snohomish County had The largest shares of homes sold for a loss in March, according to Zillow: 44 percent, compared with less than 28 percent in King County and more than 32 percent in Pierce County.
One-third of home sellers in March lost money

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Snohomish County had The largest shares of homes sold for a loss in March, according to Zillow: 44 percent, compared with less than 28 percent in King County and more than 32 percent in Pierce County.
One-third of home sellers in March lost money

Read more...

The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Snohomish County had The largest shares of homes sold for a loss in March, according to Zillow: 44 percent, compared with less than 28 percent in King County and more than 32 percent in Pierce County.
One-third of home sellers in March lost money

Read more...

The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Snohomish County had The largest shares of homes sold for a loss in March, according to Zillow: 44 percent, compared with less than 28 percent in King County and more than 32 percent in Pierce County.
One-third of home sellers in March lost money

Read more...

The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Snohomish County had The largest shares of homes sold for a loss in March, according to Zillow: 44 percent, compared with less than 28 percent in King County and more than 32 percent in Pierce County.
One-third of home sellers in March lost money

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



WheTher it's an earthquake, a wildfire or flooding, being covered against severe damage to your home or business is essential.
How well are you insured against flooding?

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



WheTher it's an earthquake, a wildfire or flooding, being covered against severe damage to your home or business is essential.
How well are you insured against flooding?

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Former Real-Estate developer Michael R. Mastro has been ruled competent to testify in a trial stemming from his bankruptcy.
Mastro declared competent to testify in bankruptcy trial

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Buyers closed on 1,533 houses in King County last month, 6.6 percent fewer than in April 2010, The Northwest Multiple Listing Service said. Last month's median sale price, $349,950, was down 6.7 percent from April 2010's $375,000.
King County homes prices, sales in April slip from year ago

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Buyers closed on 1,533 houses in King County last month, 6.6 percent fewer than in April 2010, The Northwest Multiple Listing Service said. Last month's median sale price, $349,950, was down 6.7 percent from April 2010's $375,000.
King County homes prices, sales in April slip from year ago

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Portland-based developer Gerding Edlen has bought a half-acre property on Broadway near Seattle University, and says it plans to start construction...
Bellevue Towers developer plans apartment project near Seattle U.

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Portland-based developer Gerding Edlen has bought a half-acre property on Broadway near Seattle University, and says it plans to start construction...
Bellevue Towers developer plans apartment project near Seattle U.

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



The federal government sued Deutsche Bank Tuesday, saying The bank committed fraud and padded its pockets with undeserved income as it repeatedly lied so it could benefit from a government program that insured mortgages.
Feds sue Deutsche Bank, alleging mortgage fraud


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



The federal government sued Deutsche Bank Tuesday, saying The bank committed fraud and padded its pockets with undeserved income as it repeatedly lied so it could benefit from a government program that insured mortgages.
Feds sue Deutsche Bank, alleging mortgage fraud


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



A house in The Sunset Strip area of Los Angeles that actress Carole Lombard lived in during The 1930s was put on The market for $1.6 million, or for lease...
The house on Carole Lombard's street

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



A house in The Sunset Strip area of Los Angeles that actress Carole Lombard lived in during The 1930s was put on The market for $1.6 million, or for lease...
The house on Carole Lombard's street

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



"I tell my clients, architecture can't make you happy if you're not," says Seattle architect Amy Janof of Janof/Hald Architecure. "But if you are happy, a good house can make you joyous."
Seattle architect Amy Janof and her 'bliss' house

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Richmond parent company M.D.C. Holdings paid an undisclosed price in cash and $5 million in stock for The acquisition. The assets bought include vacant lots and homes in various stages of construction located in 11 communities from Kent to Olympia.
SDC Homes sold to national homebuilder

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



More Americans signed contracts to buy homes in March, but sales were uneven across The country and were not enough to signal a rebound in The housing market.
More people signed contracts to buy homes in March


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



More Americans signed contracts to buy homes in March, but sales were uneven across The country and were not enough to signal a rebound in The housing market.
More people signed contracts to buy homes in March


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



More Americans signed contracts to buy homes in March, but sales were uneven across The country and were not enough to signal a rebound in The housing market.
More people signed contracts to buy homes in March


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Bank of America announced Wednesday it had opened an office in Seattle to allow distressed homeowners whose mortgages it services to meet face to face with specialists and consider alternatives to foreclosure.
BofA opens office for foreclosure alternatives

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Prices in Atlanta, Charlotte, Chicago, Las Vegas, Miami, New York, Phoenix, Portland, Ore., Seattle and Tampa are all at Their lowest point since 2006 or 2007, at The height of The housing boom. The cities with The steepest declines from January were Minneapolis, San Francisco, Chicago and Miami.
Home prices falling in most major US cities

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Bankrupt Seattle Real-Estate magnate Michael R. Mastro and The trustee representing his creditors have settled a lawsuit in which The trustee...
Mastro agrees to $7.1 million judgment

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Nils Finne's new kitchen is contemporary, peaceful and elegant. A far cry from what was.
Achitect's own Seattle kitchen was in dire need of his services

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Nils Finne's new kitchen is contemporary, peaceful and elegant. A far cry from what was.
Achitect's own Seattle kitchen was in dire need of his services

Read more...

The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Nils Finne's new kitchen is contemporary, peaceful and elegant. A far cry from what was.
Achitect's own Seattle kitchen was in dire need of his services

Read more...

The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Nils Finne's new kitchen is contemporary, peaceful and elegant. A far cry from what was.
Achitect's own Seattle kitchen was in dire need of his services

Read more...

The Seattle Times: Real Estate



To avoid interest and penalties, The first property-tax payment must be paid or postmarked by May 2.
Property-tax deadline looms; need some help?

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



In King County's biggest Real-Estate deal so far this year, a Los Angeles Real-Estate investment trust has acquired a four-building Kirkland office complex.
Kirkland office complex sells for $100M

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



In King County's biggest Real-Estate deal so far this year, a Los Angeles Real-Estate investment trust has acquired a four-building Kirkland office complex.
Kirkland office complex sells for $100M

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



The rate on The 30-year mortgage fell last week, staying below 5 percent. But low rates have done little to lift The struggling housing market.
Rate on 30-year mortgage falls to 4.80 pct.


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Seattle developer Pine Street Group plans to break ground within days on a high-rise apartment complex in The Denny Triangle that would be The biggest new downtown construction project in 3 � years.
Hot market for rentals inspires twin towers

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Seattle developer Pine Street Group plans to break ground within days on a high-rise apartment complex in The Denny Triangle that would be The biggest new downtown construction project in 3 � years.
Hot market for rentals inspires twin towers

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



The bankruptcy trustee seeking millions from Michael R. Mastro and associates rejected a proposed agreement that The bankrupt developer owes $7.1 million but didn't do anything wrong.
Mastro bankruptcy trial opens with offer to settle

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Seattle online Real-Estate company wants to raise $51.7 million.
Zillow reveals financial details as it files to go public

Read more...

The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Seattle online Real-Estate company wants to raise $51.7 million.
Zillow files to become public company

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Homebuilders are more pessimistic about The housing market this month, a dismal sign at The start of The spring-buying season.
Builder outlook falls ahead of spring season


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Big plans are on The horizon for Black Diamond, a small town on Seattle's suburban fringe that has character and affordable homes.
Neighborhood of The week: Black Diamond is scenic, historic and quaint

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Big plans are on The horizon for Black Diamond, a small town on Seattle's suburban fringe that has character and affordable homes.
Neighborhood of The week: Black Diamond is scenic, historic and quaint

Read more...

The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Big plans are on The horizon for Black Diamond, a small town on Seattle's suburban fringe that has character and affordable homes.
Neighborhood of The week: Black Diamond is scenic, historic and quaint

Read more...

The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Big plans are on The horizon for Black Diamond, a small town on Seattle's suburban fringe that has character and affordable homes.
Neighborhood of The week: Black Diamond is scenic, historic and quaint

Read more...

The Seattle Times: Real Estate

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



The rate on The 30-year fixed mortgage rose for The fourth straight week, but still remains below 5 percent.
Rate on 30-year fixed mortgage rises to 4.91 pct.


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Gov. Chris Gregoire signed a bill Thursday that makes Washington The third state to adopt a foreclosure-mediation program, after Nevada and Maryland.
Homeowners facing foreclosure win right to mediation

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



The rate on The 30-year fixed mortgage rose for The fourth straight week, but still remains below 5 percent.
Rate on 30-year fixed mortgage rises to 4.91 pct.


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



The federal government on Wednesday ordered 16 of The nation's largest mortgage lenders and servicers to reimburse homeowners who were improperly foreclosed upon.
Gov't orders 14 lenders to reimburse homeowners


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



The trustee battling Michael R. Mastro in bankruptcy court questioned Monday wheTher The former Seattle Real-Estate magnate remains incapacitated, and suggested secrecy over his medical condition may be part of a plan to delay or disrupt an upcoming trial.
Chapter 7 trustee questions if Mastro is incapacitated

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



The trustee battling Michael R. Mastro in bankruptcy court questioned Monday wheTher The former Seattle Real-Estate magnate remains incapacitated, and suggested secrecy over his medical condition may be part of a plan to delay or disrupt an upcoming trial.
Chapter 7 trustee questions if Mastro is incapacitated

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



The trustee battling Michael R. Mastro in bankruptcy court questioned Monday wheTher The former Seattle Real-Estate magnate remains incapacitated, and suggested secrecy over his medical condition may be part of a plan to delay or disrupt an upcoming trial.
Chapter 7 trustee questions if Mastro is incapacitated

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



The trustee battling Michael R. Mastro in bankruptcy court questioned Monday wheTher The former Seattle Real-Estate magnate remains incapacitated, and suggested secrecy over his medical condition may be part of a plan to delay or disrupt an upcoming trial.
Chapter 11 trustee questions if Mastro is incapacitated

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



House lawmakers in Olympia on Saturday approved Their version of The next two-year state budget, voting 53-43 in favor of a proposal that would slash $4.4 billion in spending.
State House passes budget plan with $4.4B in cuts

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Some of The federal government's proposed new mortgage finance rules haven't gotten much attention, but They could prove troublesome for consumers.
Mortgage proposals contain harsh provisions

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Two commercial Real-Estate brokerages say The office-vacancy rate in Seattle dropped a little over The past three months. One says it inched up a bit.
Downtown office-vacancy rates heading down this year

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Fixed mortgage were essentially unchanged this week, as The average rate on The 30-year fixed loan stayed below 5 percent.
Rate on 30-year fixed mortgage rises to 4.87 pct.


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Fixed mortgage were essentially unchanged this week, as The average rate on The 30-year fixed loan stayed below 5 percent.
Rate on 30-year fixed mortgage rises to 4.87 pct.


Read more...

The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Fixed mortgage were essentially unchanged this week, as The average rate on The 30-year fixed loan stayed below 5 percent.
Rate on 30-year fixed mortgage rises to 4.87 pct.


Read more...

The Seattle Times: Real Estate



The number of homes sold in King County last month was down from The tax-credit-driven rush of March 2010, but sales and The median price both rose from February's lows.
More spring in local home sales, but too soon to call it a trend

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



An attorney and developer in Lynden, Wash., sold about $121 million in unregistered Real-Estate investments over two decades, The Washington Department of Financial Institutions alleged Tuesday.
DFI says Lynden developer sold $121M in unregistered securities

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



An attorney and developer in Lynden, Wash., sold about $121 million in unregistered Real-Estate investments over two decades, The Washington Department of Financial Institutions alleged Tuesday.
DFI says Lynden developer sold $121M in unregistered securities

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Since he left The Green Lake Tudor behind in 1977, Justen was not only a resident of The buildings he has lived in, he was also The developer and a leader in The push to build up and upscale in downtown Seattle.
Seattle's William Justen thrives on urban energy

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



The longtime owner of The old Carnegie Library building in Ballard wants to sell it, but to someone who will preserve it.
Next chapter for a landmark library building in Ballard

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Thirteen percent of loans modified through The Home Affordable Modification Program in The first half of last year were 60 days delinquent after six months, compared with 24 percent of loans in alternative programs.
Federal mortgage program has fewer defaults

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



In Washington's biggest bankruptcy case ever, Michael R. Mastro's lawyer and his guardian say They have different agendas because The incapacitated developer's past instructions may conflict with his current best interests.
Mastro bankruptcy case has a strange new twist

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Fixed mortgage rates rose slightly this week, but The average rate on The 30-year loan remained below 5 percent.
Rate on 30-year fixed mortgage rises to 4.86 pct.


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



In The Seattle metropolitan area, single-family home prices are back where They were in September 2004.
Home prices continue to fall in major U.S. cities

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



More Americans signed contracts to buy homes in February, but sales were uneven across The country and not enough to signal a rebound in The housing market.
More people signed contracts to buy homes in Feb.


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Homeowners facing foreclosure are slapping lenders with multimillion-dollar "sweat equity" claims promoted by shadowy consultants.
Borrowers facing foreclosure try dubious 'sweat equity' claims

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



One project at a time, a family makes room for books, art and music in Their Mount Baker home.
Seattle Contractor Joe McKinstry's own home is his lab

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



A growing number of The 18 million Americans living in The nation's 50,000 mobile-home parks are banding togeTher with neighbors to buy The land They rent in an effort to avoid getting priced out of Their community.
At mobile-home parks, neighbors band togeTher to buy a sense of security

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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



In suburban Chicago, it's paradise to be a homebuyer.
For Real Estate, a giant spring clearance sale


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Fixed mortgage rates edged up this week, but even 30-year rates below 5 percent have done little to boost home sales.
Rate on 30-year fixed mortgage rises to 4.81 pct.


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The Seattle Times: Real Estate



Sales of new homes plunged in February to The slowest pace on records dating back nearly half a century, a dismal sign for an already-weak housing market.
New-home sales plunged in February to record low


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New-home construction plunges in February

The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — 
Builders broke ground last month on the fewest homes in nearly two years and cut their requests for permits to start new projects to a five-decade low. The decline in construction activity is the latest evidence that the housing industry is years away from a recovery.
Home construction plunged 22.5 percent in February from January to a seasonally adjusted 479,000 homes, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. It was the lowest level since April 2009 and the second-lowest on records dating back more than a half-century.
The decline followed a surge in highly volatile apartment construction in January, which pushed the overall construction rate up to more than 600,000 units - the fastest rate in 20 months. Still, the building pace has been far below the 1.2 million units a year that economists consider healthy.
Single-family homes, which make up roughly 80 percent of home construction, fell 11.8 percent in February. Apartment and condominium construction dropped 47 percent, reversing much of January's gains.
Building permits, an indicator of future construction, fell 8.1 percent last month to the lowest level on records dating back to 1960. Permit requests for single-family homes saw the biggest decline. Apartments and condos remained flat.
Falling prices, sluggish sales and the weak construction rate all point to a housing market that is "stuck at a bottom of a steep hill," according to Moody's Analytics Economic Research.
"There are really large structural problems with the housing market," said Dan Greenhaus, chief economic strategist with Miller Tabak + Co. "This is not a run-up in oil prices. This is a multiyear build up in the housing market that is going to take more than several months or several quarters to get through."
For a housing recovery to take hold, the job market needs to improve and builders need to gain access to hard-to-get credit.
"Credit is flowing freely to large companies but not so much to the small builders," said Patrick Newport, U.S. economist for IHS Global Insight. "If builders cannot get financing to build new homes, housing will remain in the dumps."
Analysts said year-end building code changes in California, Pennsylvania and New York caused an artificial spike for permit requests in December and housing starts in January. Builders in those states rushed to file new permits before those changes went into effect.
Even with those gains, the housing market has struggled. Millions of foreclosures have forced home prices down and more are expected this year. Tight credit has made mortgage loans tough to come by. And some potential buyers who could qualify for loans are hesitant to enter the market, worried that prices will fall further.
The drop in home construction activity was felt coast to coast. It fell 48.6 percent in the Midwest, 37.5 percent in the Northeast, 28 percent in the West and 6.3 percent in the South.
The volatile housing market is weighing on the overall economic recovery. Each new home built creates, on average, the equivalent of three jobs for a year and generates about $90,000 in taxes, according to the National Association of Home Builders.
The trade group said Tuesday that its index of industry sentiment for March improved slightly to 17. That was the first gain in five months after four straight readings of 16. Still, any reading below 50 indicates negative sentiment about the housing market's future. The index hasn't been above that level since April 2006.

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Underwater mortgages rise as home prices fall

AP Real Estate Writer
Related
WASHINGTON — 

The number of Americans who owe more on their mortgages than their homes are worth rose at the end of last year, preventing many people from selling their homes in an already weak housing market.
About 11.1 million households, or 23.1 percent of all mortgaged homes, were underwater in the October-December quarter, according to report released Tuesday by housing data firm CoreLogic. That's up from 22.5 percent, or 10.8 million households, in the July-September quarter.

The number of underwater mortgages had fallen in the previous three quarters. But that was mostly because more homes had fallen into foreclosure.  Underwater mortgages typically rise when home prices fall. Home prices in December hit their lowest point since the housing bust in 11 of 20 major U.S. metro areas. In a healthy housing market, about 5 percent of homeowners are underwater.

Roughly two-thirds of homeowners in Nevada with a mortgage had negative home equity, the worst in the country. Arizona, Florida, Michigan and California were next, with up to 50 percent of homeowners with mortgages in those states underwater.

Oklahoma had the smallest percentage of underwater homeowners in the October-December quarter, at 5.8 percent. Only nine states recorded percentages less than 10 percent.  In addition to the more than 11 million households that are underwater, another 2.4 million homeowners are nearing that point.

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Reverse mortgages get more affordable, but be careful

Bankrate.com

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Before you borrow
IF YOU'RE in the market for a reverse mortgage, seek independent counseling before you even talk to a lender to learn about loan alternatives or tips on negotiating with a lender. Find a government-approved counselor near you at www.hud.gov/.
CHECK OUT the National Council on Aging's BenefitsCheckUp.org for assistance programs that could make a reverse mortgage unnecessary.

TO FIND OUT how much you can potentially receive through a reverse mortgage, check online calculators at aarp.org or reversemortgage.org.

CONSUMERS UNION offers tips about reverse mortgages on its website, www.consumersunion.org. The site's offerings include information about applying for government benefits for seniors, getting advice from local Housing and Urban Development counselors and seeking a so-called private reverse mortgage — a loan from a family member using the senior's home equity as collateral.

These loans, which allow seniors to spend their home equity without selling their home, have historically been cumbersome and expensive. But new options empower seniors to tap smaller amounts of equity in a more affordable way, according to Peter Bell, president of the National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association, a group that represents lenders and investors.

The biggest change is the introduction of a new reverse mortgage, called the Home Equity Conversion Mortgage Saver option, or HECM Saver. It has a cheaper upfront mortgage insurance premium, or MIP, compared with the traditional HECM reverse mortgage, now known as the standard option.
Mortgage insurance protects lenders from loan losses, though borrowers pay the cost. Most reverse mortgages are insured through the Federal Housing Administration.

The trade-off, due to the lower MIP and other program changes, is a 10 percent to 18 percent reduction in the maximum loan amount allowed on the saver option, and 1 percent to 5 percent on the standard option, depending on the borrower's age and interest rate, Bell says. The lower loan amount allowed on the saver option means the FHA's risk exposure is lessened.

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New-home sales in January drop 12.6 pct

AP Real Estate Writer
Related
WASHINGTON — 

Sales of new homes fell significantly in January, a dismal sign after the worst year for that sector in nearly a half-century.
New-home sales dropped to a seasonally adjusted rate of 284,000 homes last month, the Commerce Department said Thursday. That's down from 325,000 in December and less than half the 600,000-a-year pace that economists view as healthy.
Bad winter weather likely hampered some sales, although the industry has been struggling since the housing bubble burst in 2006.
Last year was the fifth consecutive year that new-home sales have declined after hitting record highs during the housing boom. Buyers purchased 322,000 new homes last year, the fewest annual total on records going back 47 years. Economists say it could take years before sales return to a healthy pace.
Builders of new homes are struggling to compete in markets saturated with foreclosures. High unemployment and uncertainty over home prices have kept many potential buyers from making purchases.
Poor sales of new homes mean fewer jobs in the construction industry, which normally powers economic recoveries. On average, each new home built creates the equivalent of three jobs for a year and generates about $90,000 in taxes, according to the National Association of Home Builders.
New-home sales were uneven across the country. In January, sales fell 36.5 percent in the West and 12.8 percent in the South. But they rose 17.1 percent in the Midwest and 54.5 percent in the Northeast.
The big declines in the West came after a huge increase in December. Buyers had rushed to take advantage of a state tax credit of up to $10,000 on new home purchases in California at the end of the month, said Joshua Shapiro, chief U.S. economist for MFR Inc.
"It would make sense that a surge in such activity took place in California during December and there was payback in January," he said.
Sales of previously occupied homes have not fared much better. While sales rose slightly last month, the seasonally adjusted annual pace of 5.36 million is still far below the 6 million homes a year needed to maintain a healthy market.
Mortgage applications are now near their lowest levels in 15 years.
The average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage this week dipped to 4.95 percent from 5 percent, Freddie Mac said Thursday. It hit a 40-year low of 4.17 percent in November, and has been trending upward since.
About 188,000 new homes were for sale at the end of January, the lowest level since 1967. The number of homes that have received permits to begin construction has held steady over the past year while the number of those under construction and finished has plummeted.
The median sales price of a new home sold in January was $230,600, down 1.9 percent from the month before. Given the pace of new-home sales, it would take nearly 8 months to clear them off the market. Economists say a six-month supply of homes is healthy.

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Investors snap up cheap homes, new buyers miss out

AP Real Estate Writer
Related
WASHINGTON — 

Home sales are starting to tick up after the worst year in more than a decade. But the momentum is coming from cash-rich investors who are scooping up foreclosed properties at bargain prices, not first-time home-buyers who are critical for a housing recovery.
The number of first-time buyers fell last month to the lowest percentage in nearly two years, while all-cash deals have doubled and now account for one-third of sales.
A record number of foreclosures have forced home prices down in most markets. The median sales price for a home fell last month to its lowest level in nearly nine years, according to the National Association of Realtors.
Lower prices would normally be good for first-time home-buyers. But tighter lending standards have kept many from taking advantage of them. With fewer new buyers shopping, potential repeat buyers are hesitant to put their homes on the market and upgrade.
Cash-only investors are most interested in properties at risk of foreclosure. They can get those at bargain-basement prices.
"The cash-rich investors can come in and get foreclosed properties at incredibly favorable prices," said Paul Dales, senior U.S. economist for Capital Economics. "The average Joe can't take advantage because they simply cannot get the credit to buy."
Sales of previously occupied homes rose slightly in January to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.36 million, the Realtors group said Wednesday. That's up 2.7 percent from 5.22 million in December.
Still, the pace remains far below the 6 million homes a year that economists say represents a healthy market. And the number of first-time home-buyers fell to 29 percent of the market - the lowest percentage of the market in nearly two years. A more healthy level of first-time home-buyers is about 40 percent, according to the trade group.
Foreclosures represented 37 percent of sales in January. All-cash transactions accounted for 32 percent of home sales - twice the rate from two years ago, when the trade group began tracking these deals on a monthly basis. In places like Las Vegas and Miami, cash deals represent about half of sales.
In the three states where foreclosures are highest, at-risk homes make up at least two-thirds of all sales. In Florida, 63 percent of sales in January involved homes that were at risk of foreclosure, according to a Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance survey. And in Arizona and Nevada, a combined 72 percent of sales involved those homes at risk of foreclosure.
A major barrier for first-time home-buyers is tighter lending standards adopted since the housing bubble burst. These have made mortgage loans tougher to acquire. Banks are also requiring buyers put down a larger down payment. During the housing boom, buyers could purchase a home with little or no money down.
The median down payment rose to 22 percent last year in at least nine major U.S. cities, according to a survey by Zillow.com, a real estate data firm. That's up from 4 percent in late 2006 - as the housing bubble began to burst. The cities included some of the nation's hardest hit markets - Las Vegas, Phoenix and Tampa, Fla. - as well as areas that are rebounding, including San Diego and San Francisco.
That has prevented many from buying, even when the median price of a home fell in January to $158,800. That's a decline of 3.7 percent from a year ago and the lowest point since April 2002.
"If you can get the financing, it's a great time to buy a home with prices this low," said Patrick Newport, U.S. economist with IHS Global Insight.
Many potential buyers who could qualify for loans are hesitant to enter the market, worried that prices will fall further. High unemployment is also deterring buyers. Job growth, while expected to pick up this year, will not likely raise home sales to healthier levels.
With mortgage rates rising, mortgage applications have been volatile. They're now near their lowest levels in 15 years. Economists say it could take years for home sales to return to healthy levels.
"Home prices continue to languish," said Steven Wood, chief economist for Insight Economics. "Any recovery will be difficult to sustain given the still-large supplies of homes for sale and distressed properties."
Last year, home sales fell to 4.9 million, the lowest level in 13 years. And even that number, some say, was overstated.
CoreLogic, a real-estate data firm in Santa Ana, Calif., said it's found that 3.3 million homes were sold last year, far fewer than the National Association of Realtors' 4.9 million figure. CoreLogic has suggested that the Realtors figure is too high.
Since 1968, the Realtors group has produced the monthly report on the number of previously occupied homes sold. The group serves as chief advocate and lobbying arm for real estate agents. It says it's reviewing its 2010 yearly estimate.
One obstacle to a housing recovery is the glut of unsold homes on the market. Those numbers fell to 3.38 million units in January. It would take 7.6 months to clear them off the market at the January sales pace. Most analysts say a six-month supply represents a healthy supply of homes.
Analysts said the situation is much worse when the "shadow inventory" of homes is taken into account. These are homes that are in the early stages of the foreclosure process but have not been put on the market yet for resale.
For January, sales were up in three of the four regions of the country led by an 7.9 percent rise in the West. Sales rose 3.6 percent in the South, 1.8 percent in the Midwest and down 4.6 percent in the Northeast.
The January increase was driven by a 2.4 percent rise in sales of single-family homes. It pushed activity in this area to an annual rate of 4.69 million units. Sales of condominiums rose 4.7 percent to a rate of 670,000 units.

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Home prices in Dec. hit post-bust lows in most big cities, including Seattle

The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Home prices in a majority of major U.S. cities tracked by a private trade group have fallen to their lowest levels since the housing bubble burst, and analysts expect further declines this year.
The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller 20-city home price index fell 1 percent in December from November. Prices fell in all but one of the metropolitan markets tracked.
The only city to see a gain was Washington, D.C., where hiring by the federal government has helped boost the region's job market.
Eleven of the markets, including the Seattle metropolitan area, hit their lowest point since the housing bust, in 2006 and 2007. The others were Atlanta, Charlotte, N.C., Chicago, Detroit, Las Vegas, Miami, New York, Phoenix, Portland and Tampa, Fla. In the Case-Shiller report for November, nine cities — again including Seattle — had hit their lowest levels since the housing bust.
The housing sector is struggling even while the rest of the economy is showing signs of a slow but steady recovery. The latest evidence of this divide came Tuesday when The Conference Board said its Consumer Confidence Index rose in February to its highest point in three years.
The index surveys how people feel about hiring and income, and how they see that changing over the next six months.
By contrast, the outlook for housing in 2011 is not promising. Construction of new homes has fallen to a rate of about 600,000 homes built per year. In a healthy economy, builders expect to construct about 1 million homes each year. Homeowner vacancy rates are near record highs and the creation of new households in the United States is at its lowest point in four decades.
"Despite improvements in the overall economy, housing continues to drift lower and weaker," said David M. Blitzer, chairman of the index committee at Standard & Poor's.
The damage from the real-estate bubble has spread well beyond the Sun Belt, where new homes cropped up at a frantic pace during the mid-2000s. In many places, prices are expected to keep falling for at least the next six months, and several analysts said they expect prices to fall at least an additional 5 percent.
Some of the worst declines are in cities hit hardest by foreclosures and high unemployment, including Detroit, Phoenix and Tampa. A home that sold for $250,000 in the Motor City in 2000 now sells for roughly $163,150, according to the housing report. Homes in Las Vegas and Cleveland now sell, on average, for less than they did a decade ago.
In the Seattle metropolitan area — King, Snohomish and Pierce counties — home prices still are about 39 percent higher than in January 2000, according to Case-Shiller. But prices have fallen 28 percent from their July 2007 peak and are at their lowest level since December 2004.
Nationally, a large number of homes that aren't selling are contributing to a second wave of price declines since the boom years. Many of them have been vacant for months.
In December, prices fell for the sixth straight month and for the eighth time in the past 11 months. Foreclosures are also expected to increase as the year goes forward.
"There's just way too many homes out there relative to demand, and we're not going to see that change anytime soon," said Joshua Shapiro, chief U.S. economist for MFR.
The housing recovery is uneven across the United States. Coastal cities in California and the Northeast are faring much better than the Midwest and Southeast. That's mainly because they benefit from expensive and somewhat recession-proof housing markets buoyed by low unemployment and limited new construction.
The Case-Shiller report measures home-price increases and decreases relative to prices in January 2000 and gives an updated three-month average for the metropolitan areas it looks at.

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Risk of foreclosure dips, but remains elevated

AP Real Estate Writer
Related
NEW YORK —
Fewer Americans fell behind on their mortgage payments in the final three months of last year, but foreclosures are still rising.
The Mortgage Bankers Association said Thursday 8.2 percent of homeowners missed at least one mortgage payment in the October-December quarter. The figure, which is adjusted for seasonal factors, improved from 9.1 percent in the previous quarter and from a high of more than 10 percent in the January-March quarter.
The worst delinquency rates were in Mississippi at 13.3 percent, Nevada at 12 percent and Georgia at 11.9 percent.  The percentage of homes in the foreclosure process rose to 4.6 percent from 4.4 percent, tying an all-time high for the survey. Foreclosures are expected to peak this year as 5 million troubled loans move through the process. Florida and Nevada had the highest percentage of homes in the foreclosure process at 14.2 percent and 10.1 percent.
California and Florida make up more than a third of all loans in foreclosure, which is down from nearly 40 percent a year earlier. Still, Florida's foreclosure crisis is one of the most pronounced in the country. Almost a quarter of Florida homeowners with a loan are behind on their payments or in the foreclosure process, the worst rate in the nation.
Typically, the percentage of seriously delinquent borrowers - those more than 90 days behind on their mortgages or in foreclosure - is just above 1 percent. In the fourth quarter, that figure was 8.57 percent.
An improving job market is behind the decline in the delinquency rate, said MBA Chief Economist Jay Brinkmann. He noted that the private sector added 1.2 million jobs last year and the number of people applying for unemployment benefits started to fall in the fourth quarter.  "It's a sign we've turned a corner, that's the good news," Brinkmann said. "The bad news is loans in foreclosure are still very high."
Foreclosures dipped in the July-September quarter as lenders addressed allegations of improper paperwork during the foreclosure process. But by the final three months of last year, many had resumed taking back homes.  Banks are on track to repossess more than 1 million homes this year, the most since the housing meltdown began, according to foreclosure tracker RealtyTrac Inc. That will drive home prices down because foreclosures are sold at deep discounts.
The foreclosure crisis started years ago when borrowers took out risky loans with adjustable interest rates that they couldn't afford. Many also qualified for loans without providing proof of income. The pain spread to homeowners with good credit who took out safe, fixed-rate mortgages, but are struggling in a weak economy.

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Slow death proposed for Fannie, Freddie

The Obama administration Friday released its long-awaited proposal for overhauling the mortgage market, calling for gradually shutting down...
Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration Friday released its long-awaited proposal for overhauling the mortgage market, calling for gradually shutting down bailed-out mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and reducing the government's now-huge role in housing finance.
The 32-page plan calls for phasing in an increase in the down-payment requirement for loans guaranteed by Fannie and Freddie to 10 percent, while reducing the maximum size of mortgages they can back — a move that would affect areas with high property values.
During the financial crisis, Congress boosted the limit on such loans to as much as $729,750. The administration said it supports letting the limit drop back to $625,500 as scheduled on Oct. 1.
The plan also calls for increasing mortgage fees to encourage more private investment while winding down the huge investment portfolios of Fannie and Freddie — whose bailouts have cost $150 billion so far — by at least 10 percent a year as the entities are slowly put out of business.
But demonstrating the complexity of pulling back government support from a still-fragile housing market, the plan offers Congress three options for long-term restructuring.
"This is a plan for fundamental reform of the housing market, but I want to emphasize we're going to proceed on this path of reform very carefully," said Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner. He said the plan would take five to seven years to enact.
Fannie and Freddie own or guarantee more than half of all U.S. mortgages and are vital players in the $11 trillion mortgage market.

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Just for laughs

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Try to Resist the Temptation to Over Improve

You have received some extra money! You want to remodel! If you are planning a major renovation, take a few sensible precautions before having plans drawn up and signing on the contractor's dotted line.

Any time you do any significant remodeling, you run the risk of over-improving your home. Please call or send an email if you are interested in a market analysis of what your home is currently worth. We can talk about neighborhood trends and discuss the recent sales of homes in your area.

If your neighborhood is experiencing healthy appreciation, making major changes to your home might make sense. However, if there is not much difference between the prices of remodeled homes and those which have not been renovated, expensive changes may be hard to recover if you sell your home soon. Please call or send an email to get help deciding if remodeling and renovations are in your best interest. grover@grovernet.com

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Debt could be a deal-breaker

By Kenneth R. Harney
Syndicated columnist


WASHINGTON — One loan officer describes it as a "financial colonoscopy" on your credit, and he suggests anybody applying for a mortgage be prepared for it.  What he's talking about is the combined effect of new credit-transparency standards imposed on lenders by mortgage giants Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae.

As of Feb. 1, Freddie Mac began requiring lenders to dig back 120 days into your credit-bureau files to detect any "inquiries" — signs of your applying for credit anywhere else — then to check out whether any applications were approved. If they resulted in significant new debts, your mortgage deal could be affected and your lender might have to revise the terms or the rate you're being offered.

Meanwhile, Fannie Mae is requiring lenders to track or review your credit behavior after you've been approved for a mortgage but haven't yet gone to closing. That period often extends for 60 days or more. If inquiries pop up on your files during this time, lenders must determine whether any new debt might require a re-underwriting of the originally quoted terms.

For example, if the mortgage quote is tied to specific debt-to-income ratio maximums — say 31 percent of monthly income for housing, 43 percent for total household debt — a new credit-card account with a $5,000 balance might require a new underwriting or even a higher rate.

If the new card account shows up late in the game — a day or two before closing, with moving vans on the way — you could face some serious problems.

"We now tell our customers that they need to be ready" for much more rigorous screening of their credit, said Matt Jolivette of Associated Mortgage Group in Portland, who made the reference to a "financial colonoscopy."

"They (Fannie and Freddie) want to know everything." This means full disclosure on any credit accounts, big or small, that consumers have shopped for in the months immediately preceding and following their application.

"Our advice is this: Don't buy cars, don't buy furniture or appliances on credit until we close," said Jolivette. "You don't own the house yet, so don't buy anything for it" unless you pay in cash.
The stricter credit-scrutiny rules from Freddie and Fannie have stimulated an explosion of new services and products to help lenders keep track of their mortgage clients' behavior.

For example, Experian, one of the three national credit bureaus, sells a "risk and retention triggers" system that functions much like the anti-identity theft services it markets directly to consumers. Lenders can choose from a detailed menu of trigger-event occurrences from the application date to the closing date. These include all new inquiries for credit cards, retail credit accounts, auto loans and even "over-limit" features they apply for on existing accounts. The monitoring is 24/7.

Equifax, another of the big three credit bureaus, offers a similar service called "Undisclosed Debt Monitoring." Steve Meirink, an Equifax vice president, said that because of Fannie and Freddie rule changes, there has been "a tremendous response" from banks and mortgage companies to sign up for its program.

Other players in the credit industry offer mortgage lenders customized "refresh" pulls of files and scores that compare a borrower's data at the application and just before the scheduled closing.
Marty Flynn, president of Credit Communications of San Ramon, Calif., urges clients to pull "triple merged" files from all three bureaus — TransUnion along with Experian and Equifax — because information on file can differ from bureau to bureau.

Freddie Mac's new 120-day look-back rule is designed to turn up situations where homebuyers apply for credit a couple of months before seeking a mortgage but the inquiry and new account haven't hit the national bureau files because of differing reporting schedules followed by creditors.

By scanning back 120 days — the previous standard was 90 days — virtually all inquiries made during the four months preceding the application should show up. If they're not caught then, they are certain to be identified during the scans or refresher reports obtained before closing.

The bottom line on all this: Be aware that more than ever, your credit files, not just your FICO scores, are likely being checked, rechecked and evaluated for the third of a year preceding a mortgage application and two to three months before closing.

The cleaner and simpler you keep the files, the easier your path to an on-time, uncomplicated closing should be.

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Rate on 30-year fixed mortgage rises to 4.81 pct.

The average rate on the 30-year fixed mortgage edged up this week as bond yields increased.
AP Business Writer
Related
NEW YORK —
The average rate on the 30-year fixed mortgage edged up this week as bond yields increased.
Freddie Mac said Thursday the average rate rose to 4.81 percent this week from 4.80 percent the previous week. It hit a 40-year low of 4.17 percent in November.
The average rate on the 15-year loan slipped to 4.08 percent from 4.09 percent. It reached 3.57 percent in November, the lowest level on records starting in 1991.
Rates have been little changed this year after spiking more than half a percentage point in the last two months of 2010. Investors sold off Treasury bonds during that time, driving yields lower. Mortgage rates tend to track the yield on the 10-year Treasury note.
High foreclosures, job worries and expectations that home prices will fall further have kept many potential homebuyers on the sidelines. Historically low mortgage rates haven't been enough to jumpstart the housing market.
To calculate average mortgage rates, Freddie Mac collects rates from lenders across the country on Monday through Wednesday of each week. Rates often fluctuate significantly, even within a single day.
The average rate on a five-year adjustable-rate mortgage fell to 3.69 percent from 3.70 percent. The five-year hit 3.25 percent last month, the lowest rate on records dating back to January 2005.
The average rate on one-year adjustable-rate home loans was unchanged at 3.26 percent.
The rates do not include add-on fees, known as points. One point is equal to 1 percent of the total loan amount. The average fee for the 30-year and 15-year loan in Freddie Mac's survey was 0.8 point. The average fee for the five-year ARM was 0.7 point, and the fee for the 1-year ARM was 0.6 point.

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The Seattle-area housing market's big plunge

Here's a snapshot of the market on its way up in 2005, near its peak in 2007, and three years after the fall in 2010.
Back in 2005, houses were selling like smartphones. Prices were climbing.
In some months you could count the number of homes repossessed in King County on your fingers and toes — with a pinkie or two to spare.  Prices peaked in 2007, but sales already had begun to tail off as the bow wave of the Great Recession slammed into Seattle. In 2010 the real-estate market still was struggling in its backwash, a new report from the Northwest Multiple Listing Service indicates.
Sales? Down 50 percent in King County from five years ago.
Prices? Still falling, although not as rapidly as in 2008 and 2009.
Here's a snapshot of the market on its way up in 2005, near its peak in 2007, and three years after the fall in 2010. 
Repossessed homes by month
Experts say peak still to come. Last September, lenders repossessed 819 homes in King County, more than in all of 2006 — in King, Snohomish, Pierce and Kitsap counties combined.   
Source: RealtyTrac
Total value of all houses sold in 2010 was 47 percent less than 2005's total.
Median sale price down 26 percent from 2007 peak, region's steepest drop.
Has experienced region's most dramatic drop in sales since 2005: 52 percent
Median price lower than 2005, but not down as much as Snohomish, Pierce counties
Accounted for 14 percent of 2010 King County home-sales dollar volume; largest in region.
2010 FACTOIDS
The median price of houses sold in King County was highest on the Eastside — $520,000 — and lowest in Southwest King County, $237,147.
Nearly 14 percent of houses sold in King County had two or fewer bedrooms. Eight percent had five or more bedrooms.
May and June — when federal tax credits for homebuyers were expiring — were the busiest months for home sales. January and February were the slowest months.
A total of 371 King County condos sold for more than $500,000. Almost all were in Seattle (250) or on the Eastside (118).
The median price of the 218 houses that sold on Mercer Island was $834,500, highest in the region.
Twelve houses on the San Juan Islands sold for more than $1 million. On Whidbey and Camano islands a total of eight fetched that price, while three houses sold for $1 million-plus on Vashon Island.

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December signed contracts for homes up 2 percent

The number of people who signed contracts to buy homes rose in December, marking the fifth increase in the past six months.

AP Economics Writer
Related
WASHINGTON — 


The number of people who signed contracts to buy homes rose in December, marking the fifth increase in the past six months.

The National Association of Realtors said Thursday that its index of sales agreements for previously occupied homes rose 2 percent last month. The index had posted a 3.1 percent increase in November.
Economists have cautioned that a big reason for the jump is that people are buying foreclosed homes. Still, the increase is likely to give the weak housing market a boost in the first few months of the year. That's because there's usually a one- to two-month lag between a sales contract and a completed deal.

The number of Americans who bought previously owned homes last year fell to the lowest level in 13 years, and economists say it will be years before the housing market fully recovers.
High unemployment and a record number of foreclosures are deterring potential buyers who fear home prices haven't reached the bottom. Job growth is expected to pick up this year, but not enough to raise home sales to healthier levels.

Contract signings in December were up in every region of the country except the West.  The gains were led by an 11.5 percent increase in the South. Signings were up 8 percent in the Midwest and 1.8 percent in the Northeast. However, they fell 13.2 percent in the West.

With the recent increases, contract signings are 24.1 percent above their low point in June. In that month, signings fell to the lowest level since the Realtors began tracking signed contracts in 2001.
Even with the gain in December, signings are 4.2 percent below where they were in December 2009.  At the end of 2009, the housing market got a boost as buyers rushed to close deals to take advantage of a federal home-buying tax credit that initially was set to expire in November.  The tax credit was later extended to April 30. After it expired, housing activity slumped.

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Welcome to Lakemont

The purpose of this blog is to allow people in the Serving Vuemont, Sky Mountain Lakemont, Talus, Montreux Neighborhoods other neighborhoods on Cougar Mt. to share things that concern the communities, talk about upcoming events and we will show the real estate trends in the neighborhood.
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