Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke Wednesday blamed a weak housing market for restraining the pace of the economic recovery, saying residential real estate conditions have "firmed only a little" since mid-2009, despite homebuyer tax credits. The central banker also called the private label MBS market "nonfunctional," saying the "status quo" of using Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to provide liquidity via securitizations is not sustainable. The Fed chairman told the House Budget Committee the economy would nevertheless continue its slow expansion with the nation's gross domestic product growing at a 3.5% this year and 4% in 2011. He noted that housing "activity is being weighed down, in part, by a large, inventory of distressed or vacant existing houses and by the difficulty of many builders in obtaining credit." At the last meeting of the Federal Reserve's monetary policy committee, members expressed concerns that the recovery in housing had "stalled," according to the minutes of the April 28 meeting. Federal Open Market Committee members noted that house prices have stabilized in many parts of the U.S. However, some members see "elevated foreclosures as posing a downside risk to home prices," according to the minutes of the meeting. The next FOMC gathering is June 22. Bernanke did have some good news, noting that there is a "glimmer of hope" in the commercial real estate market. He said the Fed, as a regulator, is working with lenders to restructure troubled CRE loans.
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June could be the true test for delinquencies and how many distressed borrowers impacted by a shift in Federal Housing Administration rules will reperform.
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The Federal Reserve Board governor is the latest Fed official to embrace the prospect of tighter monetary policy in response to rapidly rising prices that have taken hold in recent years.
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All-cash home purchases hit a six-year March low of 28.9%, as a buyer-friendly market reduced the need to use cash to stand out, with sellers outnumbering buyers by a record-near margin, Redfin found.
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Property taxes are up 30% since 2019, driven by pandemic-era home value gains. Mortgage borrowers pay more than those without a loan, and experts say relief is unlikely anytime soon.
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The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said banks earned stronger profits and expanded lending in the first quarter of 2026, but at the same time margins shrank and unrealized losses have been increasing.
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The insurance giant accuses Nationwide Mortgage Bankers of profiting off its branding and of suggesting to consumers that it's tied to the firm.
May 27









