By Matt Carter, Wednesday, July 30, 2008.
Author Archive for Jonathan
FHA changes make housing bill a ‘mixed bag’
Published by July 30th, 2008 in Housing Market - Nationwide. CommentsMarket Conditions: Las Vegas, Nevada
Published by July 14th, 2008 in Housing Market - Nationwide. CommentsMarket Conditions: Las Vegas, Nevada
Good News for the Contra Costa County Real Estate Market!
Published by July 8th, 2008 in Housing Market - Nationwide. CommentsThe Housing Crisis Is Over By CYRIL MOULLE-BERTEAUX Wall Street Journal:
Published by May 19th, 2008 in Housing Market - Nationwide. CommentsThe dire headlines coming fast and furious in the financial and popular press suggest that the housing crisis is intensifying. Yet it is very likely that April 2008 will mark the bottom of the U.S. housing market. Yes, the housing market is bottoming right now. How can this be? For starters, a bottom does not mean that prices are about to return to the heady days of 2005. That probably won’t happen for another 15 years. It just means that the trend is no longer getting worse, which is the critical factor. Most people forget that the current housing bust is nearly three years old. Home sales peaked in July 2005. New home sales are down a staggering 63% from peak levels of 1.4 million.
Second-home buyers flocking to Las Vegas
Published by March 15th, 2008 in Housing Market - Nationwide. CommentsNew environmentally sustainable hotel, residential project selling fast
Best and Worst Places to Buy a House
Published by March 15th, 2008 in Housing Market - Nationwide. Commentsby Danielle Babb
FHA Releases New Mortgage Limits for California Counties
Published by March 10th, 2008 in Housing Market - Nationwide. CommentsFHA Releases New Mortgage Limits for California Counties
Las Vegas is headed for a housing shortage by late 2009
Published by February 24th, 2008 in Housing Market - Nationwide. CommentsLas Vegas is headed for a housing shortage by late 2009 that will intensify the affordability crisis for a growing work force, a report from the Southern Nevada Home Builders Association predicts.
President Set to Sign Stimulus Package with Loan Limit Rise
Published by February 15th, 2008 in Housing Market - Nationwide. CommentsPresident Bush is expected to sign emergency legislation this week that would act to stimulate the sluggish national economy - including an increase in federal conforming loan limits - following the measure’s approval by the U.S. Congress last week. Under the bill, the limit on federally guaranteed mortgages will rise to nearly $730,000 in high-cost markets in California. Whether limits will rise above the current limit of $417,000 depends on area home prices. The measure provides that lenders earn a federal guarantee on loans up to 125 percent of a county’s median home price, not to exceed $729,750. It’s expected that 21 counties in California will see limits increase. While the change in conforming limits is expected to stimulate sales in sagging housing markets, it’s only temporary - it’s set to expire on December 31, 2008 - so NAR, CAR, and CBIA are gearing up for Round 2 of lobbying Congress and will be asking that the change be made permanent. Governor Wants Action to Revive Housing Industry this Year California homebuilders met with Governor Schwarzenegger last week to discuss actions that the state could take to help revive the sagging homebuilding industry. The Governor was briefed by the CBIA members in attendance on the depth and breadth of the current housing recession, including the economic and fiscal impacts of the slowdown. It was reported, for example, that the state lost an estimated $2 billion in tax revenues last year due to extremely low housing starts. All in attendance at the Capitol meeting agreed that the federal government’s pending increase in conforming loan limits would help, more could be done by the state, including an extension of expiring subdivision maps, authority to allow homebuilders to pay impact fees at close of escrow and relief from baseless CEQA lawsuits. In addition to those reforms, CBIA’s delegation suggested that a homebuyer tax credit - which served decades ago to pull the housing industry out of a similarly severe recession. The Governor suggested that a working group be formed to explore those and other reforms.
What’s up with the Bay Area Real Estate Market? A view from the battlefield
Published by January 29th, 2008 in Bay Area Real Estate. CommentsGeez, have you been freaking out about the bay area real estate housing market? With all the negative news, media pundits, newspaper doomsayer stories, worried neighbors, family and anybody with a mouth. The talk has been whether the bubble has burst on Bay Area real estate forever now! Ironically, I guess the war in Iraq does not make the evening news as much; starvation in the Darfur region; and the mindless stories about Britney Spears and Anna Nicole Smith have not taken real estate off the evening news yet!





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