finance: How To Know If You're Eligible For A Making Home Affordable Refinance - 04/07/09 07:55 PM
April 4, 2009, marked the official start of the Making Home Affordable refinance program.
Expected to help 5 million homeowners, the Making Home Affordable program "looks the other way" with respect to falling home values, approving mortgage applications based on borrower payment history and benefit to the homeowner.
Not every homeowner
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finance: The Week In Review (September 24, 2007) : What To Watch For - 09/24/07 04:18 PM
In a semi-surprise move last week, the Federal Reserve lowered the Fed Funds Rate by 0.500%. The Fed wants to prevent a dramatic economic slowdown that started in the housing sector and appears to be spilling over into other sectors now, too. According to some pundits, the half-point FFR drop was
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finance: Want More Proof that the Fed Doesn't Control Mortgage Rates? - 09/21/07 09:08 AM
For more proof that the Fed does not control mortgage rates, consider this: In the immediate aftermath of the Fed's decision to lower the Fed Funds Rate by 0.50%, mortgage rates improved by about 0.25% on average. But, in the two days since, mortgage rates have not only given back those
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finance: How Prime Rate Relates to the Fed Funds Rate - 09/20/07 09:07 AM
Prime Rate is currently 7.750%. Prime Rate is the "shorthand" name for the Wall Street Journal Prime Rate, a variable interest rate that is used in pricing many types of consumer loans. These loans include: Home equity lines of creditCredit card loansAuto loans Prime Rate's variable nature is tied to the
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finance: Making English out of Fed-Speak (September) - 09/19/07 09:11 AM
The Fed lowered the Fed Funds Rate by 0.50% yesterday. A rate decrease was expected by most market participants, but the 50 basis points movement seemed to catch some players off-guard. Mortgage rates dipped in the wake of the announcement, but the real winners are homeowners with balances on their home
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finance: How the Fed Will Disappoint No Matter WHAT it Does Today - 09/18/07 08:54 AM
It's all eyes on the Fed today; the market anxiously awaits the central bank's 2:15 P.M. ET press release. Some of the market bias towards a 0.50% rate cut has decreased in favor of a 0.25% cut. This shift is largely psychological. Markets are trying to "get inside
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finance: The Week in Review (September 17, 2007) : What to Watch For - 09/17/07 09:17 AM
The volatile path of mortgage rates last week followed the changing expectations for Tuesday's Federal Open Market Committee meeting. The FOMC sets the Fed Funds Rate, a benchmark interest rate upon which Prime Rate is based. According to Federal Funds Rate futures, there is a 94 percent chance that the
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finance: What Would it Take for YOU to Feel the Pinch of Higher Gas Prices? - 09/14/07 08:48 AM
As crude oil crossed $80 a barrel Thursday, the Wall Street Journal ran an interactive poll with its readers. What sustained price for gasoline would cause you to cut back on other household spending? The graph above shows the on-going results of the non-scientific study. You can chime in, too, at http://forums.wsj.com/viewtopic.php?t=805.
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finance: What the Price of Gold Says about the Economy - 09/13/07 09:33 AM
Headlines today read that the value of gold is nearing its all-time high (adjusted for inflation). The lay people would ignore this story, but those in the know understand that the price of gold is usually reflective of the state of the global economy. The spot price of gold tells a lot
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finance: Why Mortgage Rates Fell BEFORE the September 18 Fed Meeting - 09/12/07 06:02 PM
Mortgage rates "come from" one place only: the prices of mortgage bonds as determined by investors. The higher the price, the lower the corresponding return, or rate. Bonds -- like stocks -- are traded as securities. An investor may buy Microsoft stock if he thought the company's future looked bright,
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finance: How Today's Jobs Report Impacts Mortgage Rates - 09/07/07 10:15 AM
This morning, the government reported that the U.S. economy lost 4,000 jobs in August. Led by losses in manufacturing and construction, this is the first time since 2003 that the economy has failed to add jobs in any given month. Markets had been expecting a job gain of roughly 110,000, but
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finance: Traders Predict The Fed Funds Rate Future Using Options - 09/06/07 11:10 AM
The Federal Open Market Committee meets September 18, and traders are aren't quite sure what to expect with respect to the Fed Funds Rate. Will the FFR stay unchanged? Will it FFR decrease? If it decreases, by how much? These are questions that are perplexing market participants. Luckily, we
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finance: An Appetite For Jumbo Loans Returns - 09/05/07 09:20 AM
Yesterday was a rather drab day in mortgage circles -- not much happened and mortgage rates idled. The bigger story was how liquidity appears to be slowly returning to some areas of the beaten-down mortgage market. Specifically, liquidity is returning to prime, fixed-rate, full documentation jumbo loans and pricing appears to
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finance: The Week In Review (August 27, 2007) : What To Watch For - 08/27/07 11:00 PM
This week is data-heavy so markets will finally get to focus on fundamentals instead of fear. For the past two weeks, uncertainty about the economy has led to psychologically-driven mortgage interest rate movements. Rising defaults devalue mortgage holdings and many investors are now expecting the defaults levels to rise
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finance: Why Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI) Is Suddenly Popular - 08/22/07 09:02 AM
Suddenly, Private Mortgage Insurance is back in vogue. If only by default. The story background is well-documented in this Bankrate.com article from 2002. The article is five years old, but it still raises some salient points. What the article doesn't highlight is that second mortgages such as home equity loans are
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finance: Like The Fed Funds Rate, The Fed's Discount Rate Does Not Control Mortgage Rates - 08/21/07 02:03 PM
Friday, the Federal Reserve lowered its Discount Rate by 0.50% in an effort to preserve liquidity among our nation's banks. This has nothing to do with mortgage rates that people like you and I get for our homes. Well, not directly at least. The Discount Rate is the rate at which
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finance: Why The Mortgage "Crisis" Is Not A "Crisis" For Everyone - 08/17/07 12:26 PM
Another day, another batch of Gloom-and-Doom stories in the news. Remember to keep a level head -- the media's job, in part, is to sell newspapers and capture eyeballs. Using the word "crisis" repeatedly is one way to meet that goal. A few facts to keep it all in perspective: There
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finance: The Fed Funds Rate Does Not Directly Impact Mortgage Rates - 08/14/07 10:28 AM
It's been on the news a few times lately, so let's address a key misconception about the Fed and its relationship to mortgage rates. The markets now anticipate that the Fed will lower the Fed Funds Rate within the next 45 days. As a mortgage rate shopper, there's not much reason
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finance: What's The True Risk In Mortgage Lending? It's Anyone's Guess Right Now. - 08/12/07 05:46 PM
Any security -- stock, bond, or otherwise -- has a specific risk associated with it. Based on that risk, an investor decides whether or not the price is worth paying. If the security is a "good value", an investor will buy it. If not, the investor will pass. Until recently, mortgage
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finance: Why Alerting Your Mortgage Lender About Bad News In Advance Is Better Than Surprising Them - 08/10/07 02:34 PM
Having trouble paying your mortgage? You aren't alone. According to RealtyTrac, 1 out of every 134 homes filed for foreclosure in the first half of 2007. More and more, though, mortgage companies are doing their best to work things out with delinquent homeowners. Loss of a job or a sudden medical emergency are
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