DNSnews for Real Estate Defaults
| |
If governmental policy on foreclosure prevention does not change, 11.5 million borrowers are in danger of losing their homes, according to the analysts at Amherst Securities. That staggering figure equates to one out of every five borrowers - an astronomical 20 percent default rate. So how can the administration fix deficiencies in its loan modification program? Amherst analysts say the answer lies in cutting borrowers’ principal balances and boosting housing demand, including opening up financing channels for investors.
Pending home sales have increased for the second month in a row, the National Association of Realtors (NAR) reported Monday. The trade group’s index is a forward-looking indicator of home sales based on signed contracts. It rose 4.3 percent in August. Lawrence Yun, NAR’s chief economist, says a continuing rise in the pending sales index is to be expected from favorable affordability conditions and possible job creation, but he warns that a sudden rise in mortgage rates could stall the recovery.
The federal government’s often vilified $700 billion bailout program officially came to an end when the clock struck midnight on Monday. The Troubled Asset Relief Program’s (TARP) formal sunset date means that no new programs will be funded under the initiative and no more money will be doled out to prop up ailing banks. Initially, this monumental rescue effort was expected to cost taxpayers hundreds of billions, but Treasury says its latest estimates put the price tag at less than $50 billion.
