Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac took action to prevent more than 63,000 foreclosures in the third quarter of the year, raising the total number of foreclosure prevention actions to more than 4.24 million since September of 2008, the Federal Housing Financial Authority reported on Thursday. Additionally, there were 2,159 completed short sales and deeds-in-lieu during the quarter, bringing the total Continue Reading
Wells Fargo computer glitch blamed as hundreds lose their homes
Wells Fargo says a computer glitch is partly to blame for an error affecting an estimated 545 customers who lost their homes. The giant bank filed papers with the Securities and Exchange Commission last month, revealing it incorrectly denied 870 loan modification requests. About 60 percent of those homeowners went into foreclosure. Legislators, housing advocates, regulators and most importantly, Continue Reading
Can Education Costs Spur More Foreclosures?
According to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York's Quarterly Report on Household Debt and Credit, U.S. student loan debt increased by $37 billion in Q3, up to a total of $1.44 trillion total as of September 30. A recent LendingTree analysis found that the median debt balance for millennials living in the 50 biggest U.S. cities is $23,064. This massive financial burden must inevitably send ripples Continue Reading
Worrying Delinquency Trends
Mortgage delinquencies rose more than 13 percent in September registering the largest single-month rise since November 2008 according to Black Knight's First Look at the mortgage performance data for September. Black Knight said that while September delinquency increases are quite common, three factors led to the large surge seen during the month this year. "Sixteen of the last 19 Septembers Continue Reading
The Ripple Effect of Foreclosures
A report by Zillow explains how the effects of the Great Recession were not just twofold but deeply profound—and also reveals how the crisis served to benefit those who bought foreclosed homes during that time. According to the report, nearly half (45.4 percent) of all homes foreclosed in the wake of the subprime mortgage crisis were valued in the lowest third of the U.S. housing market, Continue Reading
Helping Delinquent Borrowers Save Their Homes
For the GSEs, delinquency has dropped, according to the latest Foreclosure Prevention Report from the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA). According to data from the FHFA, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s overall delinquency rate fell in Q2, with the 60-plus-day delinquency rate dropping to 1.2 percent at the end of the quarter. However, the 30-59 days delinquent increased to 1.3 percent. The Continue Reading
A decade after the housing crash, a new story emerges
As many as 10 million Americans are believed to have lost their homes because of the financial crisis that erupted a decade ago, according to the St. Louis Federal Reserve. The crisis wiped out almost $8 trillion in household stock-related wealth and $6 trillion in home value after banks, mortgage lenders and financial companies provided loans to speculators, house flippers and people who couldn't Continue Reading
A Decade Later, What Has Changed in Housing?
Ten years after the financial crisis, Brookings Center on Regulations and Markets [1] looks back on the measures taken in the years since designed to prevent another crisis, both nationally and globally. Michael Calhoun, President of the Brooking Center for Responsible Lending, notes in his piece titled “Lessons From the Financial Crisis” that an important takeaway from the crisis was the role the Continue Reading
What’s Causing an Uptick in Foreclosure Starts?
As mortgages that went delinquent because of last year’s catastrophic hurricanes continued to cure, the U.S. delinquency rate plummeted to its lowest point since March 2006, according to Black Knight’s First Look for July, which parses monthly mortgage performance data for foreclosures and delinquencies. Simultaneous to that, foreclosure starts ticked up 11 percent over June’s dramatic 17-year Continue Reading
WELLS FARGO TO PAY $2 BILLION TO SETTLE FAULTY MORTGAGES CASE
Decision closes U.S. probe into actions that contributed to financial meltdown Ten years after faulty mortgages upended the global financial system, Wells Fargo & Co. agreed to pay $2.09 billion to settle a U.S. investigation into its creation and sale of loans that contributed to the disaster. The long-anticipated penalty, announced Wednesday, is in line with what some analysts had Continue Reading
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- Next Page »