The Clear Capital Home Data Index Market Report shows a 1.7% national quarterly price gain for the 30-day period ended Dec. 24, 2009. Yearly national home prices went from a decline of over 20% on a year-to-year basis for 2008 to a much more modest decline of 1.3% for 2009. On a quarterly basis all four regions showed gains: at 4.1% in the Midwest, 1.2% in the South and the West and a modest 0.4% in the Northeast. What is remarkable about these gains, according to Clear Capital president Kevin Marshall, is that home prices for the nation as a whole were generally flat for 2009 despite yearlong volatility that included record declines early in the year, followed by the gains during the summer and fall. Also, by year-end the annual national real estate owned saturation rate dropped 16 percentage points to 25.5%. Some encouraging results came from several micro markets. For example, the Las Vegas metropolitan statistical area drilldown showed its first positive quarterly price gain in over three years at 1.1%, even though yearly price declines in the area remain high at -27.4%. According to Clear Capital, Las Vegas "is showing signs of transitioning from home-price free-fall, to more traditional trends."
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The FHA published a request for information in the Federal Register Friday, looking for stakeholder comment on how to improve and modernize property standards.
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Some international investors, who represent roughly 20% of Ginnie's market, are gravitating to real estate mortgage investment conduit securities.
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The total delinquency rate rose 0.2 percentage points annually in March, with the share of loans 90 days late rising out of the range they were in since 2024.
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The test of automated risk assessments for government-sponsored enterprise-eligible mortgages are designed to help determine when waivers might be possible.
2h ago - AB - Policy & Regulation
Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman said Friday that she believes price growth is still heading toward the central bank's 2% target when factoring out one-time shocks such as tariffs and elevated oil prices.
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Consumers sued 11 more industry players in the past two months over alleged unwanted contact, as the pace of spam call class action cases increases.
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