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Are You Thinking of Buying in the Port Charlotte or Englewood Florida Areas, Now may be just the time, Mortgage rates fall to lowest level of the year

Friday, May 28th, 2010

Mortgage rates fall to lowest level of the year

National average for a 30-year fixed loan slips slightly to 4.78 percent

30-year fixed mortgage rates chart

Turmoil in the stock market and the European debt crisis are making life easier for American homebuyers and families looking to refinance: Mortgage rates are inching closer to a record low.

The window of opportunity may close soon. Home loan rates will rise if investors grow more confident and shift money out of the safety of government bonds, which influence mortgage rates.

For now, though, rates are tantalizingly low. The average 30-year fixed-rate loan sank to 4.78 percent this week, the lowest this year and barely above the record of 4.71 percent set in December. And 15-year loans are at their lowest rates in two decades. 

“Strike now,” suggested Greg McBride, senior financial analyst at Bankrate.com.

Some homeowners are doing just that. Applications to refinance surged this week to the highest level in seven months, the Mortgage Bankers Association said.

Anxiety over the European crisis has caused global investors to snap up Treasury bonds, which they view as much safer than other investments. Treasury yields have fallen as a result, taking mortgage rates down, too.

When the crisis eases, and especially if the American economy recovery stays on track, expect investors to move out of bonds and back into stocks. That would make mortgages more expensive.

“If the economy finally really shows sustained improvement, rates are definitely going to go up,” said Fred Chamberlin, a consultant with Alpine Mortgage Planning in Eugene, Ore.

He suggests that homeowners looking to refinance move fast and not hold out for even lower rates. “If you want the bottom, the only way you’re going to know it is when you’ve missed it,” Chamberlin said.

As cheap as mortgages are these days, the number of loans being taken out to buy homes remains at its lowest point in more than 13 years. One reason is that a special tax credit for homebuyers expired last month. Many people had rushed to sign contracts by then.

Another obstacle: trouble qualifying for a mortgage. Borrowers need solid credit and a down payment of at least 3.5 percent. Banks tightened lending standards after millions of borrowers fell into default and foreclosure during the housing bust.

“They’re really looking with a magnifying glass,” said Steve Mevorah, a loan officer with Icon Mortgage Inc. in Las Vegas. “They’re trying to make sure that they are flawless loans.”

Analysts had expected mortgage rates to rise when the government ended a program designed to bolster the housing market. Instead, they fell because of fears that Greece would default on its debt.

Also keeping rates low is the government’s decision last year to provide unlimited support through 2012 for Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, which buy mortgages and package them into securities and help keep rates low.

It time to buy in Port Charlotte and Englewood, Mortgage Rates Drop, Some To Lowest Levels In Serveral Months

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

Mortgage interest rates slipped for the second week in a row last week, with some rates reaching 2007 lows. According to Freddie Mac’s Primary Mortgage Market Survey the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) averaged 6.18 for the week with an average of 0.4 point. The previous week it averaged 6.22 with 0.4 point. The rate is identical to the year’s low that occurred the week January 4. The 15-year FRM established a new low for the year at 5.92 percent, down five basis points from the previous week and two basis points lower than the first week of the year. Points were unchanged at 0.5. Five-year Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) also established a new 2007 low at 5.93 percent with 0.6 point. Last week it averaged 5.95 percent with 0.5 point which was the previous low for the year. The one-year Treasury-indexed ARM was unchanged from the previous week at 5.49 percent. Average fees and points did decrease to 0.6 from 0.7.

Foreclosures hit two-year lows in Charlotte and Sarasota Counties.

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

Foreclosures in Charlotte and Sarasota counties continued their downward trend in April, with both reporting their lowest monthly totals in more than two years.Charlotte had 220 initial foreclosure filings last month, a 24-percent drop from March and 47-percent slide from April 2009, according to figures released Monday by the Charlotte County Clerk of Courts.In Sarasota, the county reported 442 initial foreclosures filings in April, a modest 3-percent decline from March and 49-percent plunge from the same time a year ago, according to the clerk of courts.For both counties, it was the lowest post since September 2007.This is excellent news, and it really looks like weíve begun to turn the corner, said Bob Gray, president of the Punta Gorda, Port Charlotte, North Port Association of Realtors. We were the first in, and it looks like we will be one of the first out.Gray said declining foreclosures are restoring prices on traditional homes to more stable levels.Fewer foreclosures entering the market also will help deflate the areaís existing home inventory, giving new construction a needed push. At the current pace, the areaís down to about seven monthsí worth of inventory, he said.There are a lot of crazy wild cards, but I have a positive outlook, Gray said. We’ve got great weather, its a great place to live, taxes are low and prices are still affordable. How could you go wrong?Foreclosures in Charlotte have now remained below the 300 mark every month this year.Similarly, April was Sarasotas second consecutive month with foreclosure totals under 500 a first since fall 2007, the data shows.we’re seeing foreclosures trend downward, which has been positive over the last few months, said Jim Masch, chief deputy with the Charlotte County Clerk of Courts. I think were probably over the curve and headed downward. Right now, its looking good.Masch fears the area could see another surge of foreclosures later this year driven by double-digit unemployment rates.Many seasonal residents have also returned north, which could spur further job losses in the hospitality sector.RealtyTrac, an independent online database that tracks foreclosure activity, is scheduled to release its findings later this month. ìThe more foreclosures we get off the market, the better off weíll be,î Charlotte County Commissioner Dick Loftus said. We need to get people in those homes and get building again.

Pending Home Sales on an Upswing in Port Charlotte and Englewood Florida

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

RISMEDIA, May 5, 2010—Pending home sales increased again in March 2010, affirming that a surge of home sales is unfolding for the spring home buying season, according to the National Association of Realtors®. The Pending Home Sales Index (PHSI) forward-looking indicator based on contracts signed in March, rose 5.3% to 102.9 from 97.7 in February, and is 21.1% above March 2009 when it was 85.0; this follows an 8.3% increase in February. The data reflects contracts and not closings, which usually occur with a lag time of one or two months.

Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said favorable affordability conditions have been working with the tax credit. “Clearly the home buyer tax credit has helped stabilize the market. In the months immediately following the expiration of the tax credit, we expect measurably lower sales,” he said. “Later in the second half of the year, and into 2011, home sales will likely become self-sustaining if the economy can add jobs at a respectable pace, and from a return of buyer demand as they see home values stabilizing.”

The PHSI in the Northeast declined 3.3% to 75.1 in March but remains 27.2% higher than March 2009. In the Midwest the index increased 1.2% to 98.9 and is 18.5% above a year ago. Pending home sales in the South jumped 12.7% to an index of 121.2, which is 28.3% higher than March 2009. In the West the index rose 1.9% to 99.9 and is 8.8% above a year ago.

“Another encouraging sign is the improvement in the availability for jumbo and second-home mortgages,” Yun said. “As bank balance sheets strengthen, it is just a matter of time before lending of non-government-backed mortgages steadily opens up.”

The National Association of Realtors, “The Voice for Real Estate,” is one of America’s largest trade associations, representing 1.1 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries.

The Pending Home Sales 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.

The index is based on a large national sample, typically representing about 20% of transactions for existing-home sales. In developing the model for the index, it was demonstrated that the level of monthly sales-contract activity parallels the level of closed existing-home sales in the following two months. There is a closer relationship between annual index changes (from the same month a year earlier) and year-ago changes in sales performance than with month-to-month comparisons.

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.

Expiring Tax Credit Has Buyers Rushing to Sign Dotted Line

Monday, April 19th, 2010

By Chelsea Conaboy

RISMEDIA, April 19, 2010—(MCT)—Latasha Hall never envisioned herself a homeowner. But by the end of the month, she will be. Just in time.

With the soon-to-expire tax credit for first-time buyers as an assist, the single mother plans to close on a $166,650 three-bedroom house in Clifton Heights, Pa. “If it hadn’t been for the credit, I wouldn’t have done it,” Hall said.

To be eligible for the federal tax credits—up to $8,000 for qualified first-timers and up to $6,500 for certain repeat buyers—houses must be under contract by April 30, with settlement by June 30, 2010.

With those deadlines in sight, some real estate agents say they are relishing their first busy days in months.

For some buyers, a tax credit is an added perk in an already-friendly market with good inventory and low mortgage rates.

For those like Hall, who is working toward her bachelor’s degree in behavior and addictions counseling and who works two jobs, it’s the last piece that fits the puzzle. In January, Hall visited Weichert Realtors for help finding a rental home after her landlord’s lender foreclosed.

Steve Madonna, a loan officer with Weichert, looked at her income (about $54,000) and her credit score (which needed some work, but not much) and suggested she buy instead. Madonna connected Hall with a state loan program that would provide $5,000 of the $8,000 credit up front, for use on closing costs or maintenance on the house. Hall set to work paying off two past-due bills and bugging the credit bureaus—sending weekly faxes and calling often—to update her score quickly. “If I hadn’t heard about this credit, I wouldn’t have worked so hard to get it done,” she said. “This is my time to go out and do what I have to do. I kept thinking about my kids.”

The new Clifton Heights neighborhood is safer, she said, and it’s just two blocks from the school her 9-year-old son attends. The credit has been “a blessing,” Hall said.

To Realtors like Daren Sautter, it’s a relief. “It’s nice to be busy,” he said.

Sautter, of Prudential Fox & Roach in Cherry Hill, N.J., watched showings and Internet leads triple in the first three weeks of March.

He expects to be slammed through the April 30 deadline, then figures he’ll see a lull before the spring market picks up some. “If you don’t sell a house in April,” Sautter said, “you’re not selling it.”

Sellers likely will be thinking the same thing, Realtors said, and listing prices could drop this month.

Sautter recently helped Pat Poole price her four-bedroom Cherry Hill house to sell. At $290,000, it went after just one day on the market. Recently divorced, Poole was looking to downsize. She sold the house to a young couple who used the repeat-buyer credit. Her next task: finding a new house for herself and her 17-year-old son in time to secure her own tax credit. “I’m going to get in under the wire,” Poole said.

A flurry of activity is noticeable in areas with a strong inventory of homes affordable to young families, Realtors said.

But some brokers are seeing a “trickle-up” effect. Would-be buyers are able to sell their homes, aided by the rush for the tax credit, and upgrade to communities with better school systems or more historic charm.

In Haddonfield, N.J., the proximity to Philadelphia and access to the PATCO High-Speed Line were big draws for Jeff Minors and Amy Henry. Minors will commute to his job as a financial-news editor in New York City. The couple, longtime renters, were looking to move to southern New Jersey from Norwalk, Conn., with their 2-year-old son. They recently moved into a four-bedroom home in Haddonfield that cost about $575,000. The first-time-buyer credit was an added bonus, Minors said. “We were more concerned about finding the right house at the right price,” he said. “But it’s definitely a nice benefit.”

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