Posted by LowCountry Joe® on January 29, 2012 at 06:39 AM in BloodyPoint.com "Birdie Tweets", Finance | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Holy Rate Drop Batman....The Feds cut the key interest rate again by some kind of "basis points".....What does that mean Batman???? Ya got me Robin.....all I know about "Prime" is that I like Prime Rib.....But Batman....why dont they explain things in regular peoples terms so we know if we can buy another bat cave in South Carolina and retire? Ya' Got me "Bat Boy"....but I just got a blog from my old Pal LCJoe in South Carolina. He works with Sue Anne Hess, a real finacial wizard from Wells Fargo that "tells it like it is" in human, or should I say "Bat Terms". That's great Batman.....do ya think we can share it with the rest of the folks out there that are havin' a tough time like us....Sure can "Bat Boy"......Just check out the following....
Rate Cut Explanation for friends of Batman and Robin (Bat Boy)
Hot on the heels of its surprise inter-session rate cut of 75 basis points last week, the Federal Reserve cut key interest rates again, the fifth straight cut since September 2007. In its statement last week, the Fed said it had decided to cut the federal funds rate "in view of a weakening of the economic outlook and increasing downside risks to growth." In other words, economic data suggests the
Who benefits from this cut?
If you have a loan that is directly tied to the Prime Rate, you will see an immediate benefit. Home equity lines of credit (HELOCs) and variable rate charge cards are the types of loans that will have an interest rate reduction on their next statement.
What does this mean for long-term rates?
Long-term mortgage rates, the lowest we've experienced in years, could actually increase after today's cut, based on historical performance and recent trends.
So if you're waiting for long-term rates to fall further, don't count on it. Your best chance to lock in the lowest rates since 2005 is now. Getting your application in process now will allow you to capture a great rate before it's too late.
What REALLY moves mortgage rates?
Fixed-rate mortgage rates aren't directly tied to Fed interest rate moves. Instead, they tend to follow in the direction of other long-term government bond yields, such as the 10-year Treasury, which historically moves in accordance with the economic outlook and in advance of Fed actions. The performance of Mortgage Backed Securities, issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, is what really determines long-term mortgage rates.
How does the economic stimulus package fit into the picture?
The economic stimulus package from Congress and the White House could be a double-edged sword for borrowers. Combined with recent Fed actions, the package could create inflation and bring about higher long-term interest rates.
On the positive side, conforming loan limits are likely to be raised from the current $417,000 to upwards of $625,000. This means great potential savings for purchase and refinance candidates who live in 20 high-cost areas across the country.
What should you do next?
If you're unsure how the rate-cut or the proposed legislation affects your mortgage, don't worry, you're not alone. There's no one-size-fits-all answer.
Posted by LowCountry Joe® on January 30, 2008 at 01:02 PM in Finance | Permalink | Comments (0)
If you have any type of real estate interest whatever, I highly suggest taking the time to read the included article about bias and sensationalism in today's media. Think about it....when is the last time you heard anything positive on Cable News or on the front page of your local newspaper. The included blames the media for focusing on sensationalism, which has always been a fact of life....Bad news sells for whatever reason and good news doesn't. Now I completely agree with everything stated but for political reasons, or whatever, they missed one very important point....BAD NEWS WILL DOMINATE THE HEADLINES IN 2008 MAINLY BECAUSE OF THE UPCOMING NATIONAL ELECTIONS. One does not have to be an Einstein to know the media are extremely Liberal in their views. That being said, they have their own agenda and will do everything in their power to make the news look as bad as possible to influence the elections......it's in their vested interest. This WILL be done even when it can be obvious to the most casual observer that the news may be good. Please reflect on this article if you are considering making a real estate purchase in 2008. LCJoe
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RISMEDIA, Jan. 3, 2008-The latest news on the real estate front was either calmly reassuring or deeply alarming, depending on your point of view.
The lead paragraph on the National Association of Realtors’ Nov. 21 release reported that home sales prices actually rose in most metropolitan markets. The Associated Press lead, however, emphasized the negative statistic that the number of home sales had fallen in 46 states during the third quarter. Both were correct.
The contrasting reports of NAR and the AP, gleaned from the same press release, reflect a fundamental divide between the real estate industry and the news business. Reporters and editors think the industry is out to spin the numbers to put a smiley face on a grim situation. Their function, as they see it, is to present the facts without such spin.
Spin Doctors or Objective Observers?
But which facts matter? By choosing one important set of data over another, the AP story painted a different, gloomier picture in the public mind, and that, industry critics say, can have dire consequences for the market and the economy in general.
“The biggest problem today is out-of-context reporting,” says NAR spokesman Walter Molony. “We have no issues with essential reporting of negative data. But when the media goes out of its way to find the most negative things to say about a statistical report, they’re creating fear that actually impacts the market.”
Ken Noblet, AP Business editor, says his reporters often have to dig deep in press releases to find the news. “They naturally have a marketing intent in their news releases; that’s what they’re for,” he says. “Ours is to find the news and report it fairly. We routinely find it somewhere other than in the first paragraph.
“The difference between their casting and ours is they have an interest in casting it as a good or healthy market; we don’t have interest in casting either way. That doesn’t mean we don’t ever get things wrong, but not with these stories.”
Still, Molony says, “The most frequent complaint from [NAR] members is the constant drumbeat of negative coverage is causing buyers to back out of transactions.” He says the market is “underperforming because of fear created by these negative headlines.”
Says Noblet: “Everybody who’s involved in a market knows psychology is an element. Our stories about the stock market dropping 300 points probably didn’t help market psychology. But were we supposed to find some positive spin on those days? That’s somebody else’s job.”
Adds Maryann Haggerty, real estate editor of The Washington Post: “There is no such thing as positive or negative news. My job is not to prop up the market and their business, but to do the best possible job reporting what’s going on and how it affects the readers.”
It’s All About Perspective
On the other hand, Haggerty acknowledges, what’s going on “depends on where you stand and how you look at it.” It is almost as if the media and the industry are on different planets. “It’s like ‘the press lost the war in Vietnam,’” says George Harmon, a business journalism professor at Northwestern University. “We all know people don’t get their information only from traditional media. You can drive down the street and see the ‘Reduced’ signs. If I never saw a newspaper, I’d think something’s going on. It’s convenient to blame the press, but the facts are the facts.”
In this tough environment, what can brokers do to counter what they consider negative coverage and convince consumers that now’s a good time to buy?
Ron Peltier, president of Minneapolis-based HomesServices of America, recommends promoting the “key pennants” people have long adhered to, “that housing is a good value, a good investment, a necessary shelter, a place to call home, and has significant tax advantages.”
Says Tom Kunz, President and CEO of Century 21: “Collectively, the news media, the real estate industry, and the mortgage industry need to work together to educate ourselves and the consumer. I think there’s an opportunity [to buy] right now I’d hate to see most consumers miss without at least investigating the possibilities.”
Kunz said it’s up to Century 21 as a franchisor to “educate our brokers, managers and agents as to some of the opportunities in the marketplace.” Kunz is less critical of the media than others in the industry, saying, “You guys are just reporting the facts. I don’t blame you.”
Fighting Back
The NAR, however, remains harshly critical of the media. “Sure, the media has their duty to report the news,” says Lawrence Yun, the association’s chief economist. “But I sense at times that some in the media are playing a game as opposed to just coming out with some newsworthy information beneficial to the consumer.” The NAR is not taking things lying down.
“To counter recent negative housing reports in the media,” NAR said, it has mounted a public awareness campaign, helping local Realtor associations “explain the real facts behind the real estate market in their area.” The campaign includes print ads, with local versions tailored to selected markets. Radio and television ads assert, “Interest rates are at historic lows, home choices have increased, and prices are favorable. Every market’s different.”
This sentiment reflects what brokers are also saying: Real estate markets, like weather reports, are necessarily local, so don’t be scared by national media reports.
“We’re not going to be able to dramatically change the manner in which the national media present information,” says Peltier. “But we can at the local level. You continue to provide editors and reporters with the information that tells the whole story.” In the Twin Cities, he notes, local newspapers have done “a reasonably good job” of covering “our market.”
Media critics see the more dramatic story leads as motivated not by facts but by a desire to sell the product, whether print or otherwise. In newspapers, however, there is traditionally a wall of separation between business and editorial decisions. There is, however, competition for what editors call the “prime real estate” of front page display. To attain such a coveted position, leads are sometimes sharpened, with nuance and context lost or downplayed.
“Clearly, the media has a profound ability to influence the market place, and I think they tend to be fueled by sensationalism, not the mundane,” says Peltier. “So we need to be cognizant and informed and able to communicate in every market that the message the media is delivering in many cases is an isolated or relatively myopic perspective. Where the media says prices are plummeting, that catches peoples’ attention, but they’re not plummeting everywhere.”
Ken Harney, a syndicated housing columnist and president of the National Association of Real Estate Editors, agrees with some of the criticism. “Every market is different. Local media ought to put some effort into what’s happening in the local market, definitely.” Harney recently wrote a column about what he termed “oases,” markets, such as San Francisco, where sales are down but prices are up. “There are just certain markets that need to be reported separately.”
But Because AP stories are so widely distributed, they have enormous impact. Local news outlets, for budgetary or other reasons, may limit their coverage to what they get from the wire service. For the real estate industry these days, that’s bad news.
The Effect on Consumers
“The printed word has a dramatic way of influencing people’s perspectives,” says Peltier, citing a Nov. 28 report on Bloomberg.com that existing home sales fell “to the lowest level in at least eight years as loan restrictions and the prospect of further price declines deters buyers.”
“You keep reading that, if you’re an intelligent buyer, that will cause you to sit on the sidelines,” Peltier says. “If they said sales were slower than expected but the industry is still on track to the sixth best year ever, that’s a way of not glossing over the slowdown but comparing it to the last six or seven years of a tremendously overheated marketplace.”
Critics tend to lump “the media” together, but the term has also come to include opinionated talking heads on cable and broadcast television. Stock guru Jim Cramer set off alarms when he advised viewers of NBC’s Today Show Sept. 26, “Don’t you dare buy now, don’t you dare buy a home now, you’ll lose money.”
Century 21’s Kunz reacted strongly. “I almost wanted to rip the TV off the wall,” he says. “What Cramer said was totally inaccurate and against what he preaches on his investment show, to buy low and sell high. I thought my wife was going to have to give me a tranquilizer. I was going nuts. This was one time, you know, let’s give the marketplace an even break here.”
However, Cramer accompanied the widely quoted warning with other statements, such as, “It is not freefall. There are still regions in the country where [the housing price is] only slightly down.” He also predicted that lower interest rates are in store and, a year from now, “we’ll be in much better shape…I can’t be as negative as a year ago.”
An ongoing tension between Wall Street and the real estate industry may be reflected in some of the coverage and commentary, Harney says, as both the stock market and housing compete for the same investor dollars. “I think the Realtors have been a bit sunnier on interpreting their numbers over past year than, say, Wall Street is,” says Harney. “Part of this is the glass half full or half empty syndrome.”
There is, conversely, the issue of how the press and the industry treated housing during the boom years, when some markets were flat. Says Northwestern’s Harmon: “Nobody complained about stories that said the housing market is great.”
It may all be a matter of emphasis. “I don’t have any specifics,” acknowledged Kunz. “But sometimes when I see something about foreclosure, they always tend to spotlight some guy who lost his shirt. There’s no question that I feel bad for these folks, but at the end of the day that’s not the majority of what’s going on here.”
Adds Peltier, “There’s a lot of anxiety in the marketplace. Over the next 12 months, a lot of that will be put to rest and we’ll see the beginning of new, more positive appreciation of housing. We hope the media will reflect that.”
Posted by LowCountry Joe® on January 03, 2008 at 10:27 AM in Finance | Permalink | Comments (0)
Thanks to Sue Ann Hess from Mortgages Unlimited/Wells Fargo for the following...
Today the Fed announced its second consecutive decrease in rates, cutting another 0.25% from the Fed Funds Rate. This change could directly impact millions of American borrowers.
Are you one of them?
Adjustable Rate Mortgages
If you currently have an ARM that is scheduled to reset in the next 14 months, then today's news is good for you. Now is the time to investigate your options. Even if you have a pre-payment penalty or you're behind in your payments, don't delay. There may still be options available to get you out of your ARM and into a mortgage you can afford, including FHA or the new FHASecure program introduced by the President.
Important: The FOMC does not meet in November, so ask yourself this: Can you really afford to roll the dice until its next meeting in mid-December?
Buying at the Bottom of the Market
If you're looking to invest in real estate in the next six to twelve months, and recent rate cuts have inspired you to start taking action, now is the time to prepare yourself for intense credit scrutiny. There are a lot of great real estate deals to be had today. But if your credit doesn't stand up in today's tight-fisted credit environment, then you could easily miss out on an exceptional opportunity.
What's the point of taking advantage of discounted home prices if you can't qualify for the right mortgage or interest rate that makes it all worthwhile? Get pre-approved now and know exactly what you can afford. And with the right REALTOR® on your side, you can have incredible negotiating power in a buyers' market!
Posted by LowCountry Joe® on November 01, 2007 at 07:02 AM in Finance | Permalink | Comments (0)
Included please find copy of an Inman News Blog on US Home Sales. I subscribe to Inman News and find it to be "Fair and Balanced" in reporting on real estate and real estate trends. LCJoe...
P.S. I took the included pic of this sad looking farm house on my last visit to Canada. I always wonder about homes like this. I think about the families, who they were, and what the siblings ae doing now. And I wonder why such beautiful historic homes like this one are left to fade into the sunset.
A forward-looking indicator based on pending sales of existing homes suggests the market may stabilize in the months ahead, the National Association of Realtors reported today.
Although the Pe
nding Home Sales Index, based on contracts signed in June, was still 8.6 percent lower than a year ago, it rose 5 percent to 102.4 from the downwardly revised May index of 97.5. This is the largest monthly gain in more than three years, since a 6.1 percent increase in March 2004, according to NAR. An index of 100 is equal to the average level of contract activity during 2001, which was the first year to be examined as well as the first of five consecutive record years for existing-home sales.
Between May and June, the index in the West increased 8.6 percent to 103.6; in the Northeast, it was up 3.1 percent to 96; in the South, it increased 4.7 percent to 111.6; and in the Midwest, the index gained 3.5 percent to 92.5.
Lawrence Yun, NAR senior economist, said it is encouraging that the increase occurred in all four major regions. "However, it is too early to say if home sales have already passed bottom," he said. "Still, major declines in home sales are likely to have occurred already and further declines, if any, are likely to be modest given the accumulating pent-up demand."
Despite the month-over-month gains, the indexes in all four regions were still lower than the same time last year, with the West 5.5 percent lower than June 2006, the Northeast down 2.4 percent, the South off 12.7 percent, and the Midwest lower by 8.2 percent.
The index is a leading indicator for the housing sector, based on pending sales of existing homes. A sale is listed as pending when the contract has been signed but the transaction has not closed, though the sale usually is finalized within one or two months of signing.
Annual changes in the index are more closely related to actual market performance than are month-to-month comparisons. As the relatively new index matures and seasonal adjustment factors are refined, the month-to-month comparisons will become more meaningful.
Posted by LowCountry Joe® on August 06, 2007 at 12:37 PM in Finance | Permalink | Comments (0)