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

Related
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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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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