Finance - Real Estate, Updates, News & Tips

Couple Spats Common in Homebuying

Buying a home can be stressful on couples. Sixty-percent of millennial and Gen X couples say they disagreed occasionally, frequently, or “a lot” when buying a house with their partner or spouse, according to a new survey released by LendingHome. They surveyed 514 adults ages 25 to 45 who were in a relationship (engaged, married, or domestic partnerships) and purchasing a home within the past year.Couples who have been together a longer time t

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New-Home Sales Face a Setback

Sales of newly built single-family homes plunged 11.4 percent in April to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 569,000 units, the first time such sales have decreased this year, the Commerce Department reported this week. Still, builders are writing off the dip as a minor setback, instead focusing on the bigger picture."Despite some slowness this month, total new-home sales in 2017 are up more than 11 percent from this time last year, and builder

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Despite Equity, Trading Up Isn’t Easy

Trading up from a starter home to a larger home has proven to be increasingly difficult for a growing group of homeowners across the country. Sure, owners may be able to snag a record-high price for their current home, but high prices and the low inventory are making it tough for them to buy something better in a tight market, realtor.com® notes.“In today’s competitive landscape, moving up from [starter homes] to the white picket fence has b

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30-Year Mortgage Rates Hover Around 4%

For the fifth consecutive week, the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage remained around 4 percent."The 30-year mortgage rate fell 3 basis points this week to 4.02 percent,” says Sean Becketti, Freddie Mac’s chief economist. “However, this week's survey closed prior to Wednesday's flight to quality. The delayed impact of the associated decline in Treasury yields may push mortgage rates lower in next week's survey."Freddie Mac reports the following

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Rampant Refis Ignited Housing Crisis

Mortgage refinance activity may have been the true hidden culprit behind the housing crisis, according to a new report by the Urban Institute written by Laurie Goodman, codirector of UI’s Housing Finance Policy Center.Mortgage refinances were more likely to default than mortgages taken out to purchase a home “mostly because many people were treating their homes as ATMs through cash-out refinances,” Goodman notes.Eighty-four percent of gover

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Household Debt Hits New Record

Household debt is topping its 2008 peak prior to the housing crash. Total household debt has risen to $12.73 trillion in the first quarter, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York reported Wednesday.However, Americans are handling their debt—mortgages, credit cards, auto loans, and other forms of borrowing—much better, the report shows.Americans were delinquent on 4.8 percent of total debt in the first quarter. For comparison, at the end of 2009

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5 States With Highest, Lowest Cost of Living

Just how widely can the cost of living vary from state to state? Financial website GoBankingRates.com culled 2016 data from the Missouri Economic Research and Information Center, examining six categories of living expenses: housing, groceries, utilities, transportation, health care, and miscellaneous items. The site used the data to calculate each state's overall cost of living index.Hawaii is the priciest state to live in, where cost-of-living e

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Why Mortgage Rates Keep Owners From Selling

The median amount of time homeowners live in their home rose to about eight and a half years in 2016, the longest tenure since Moody's Analytics and First American Financial Corporation began tracking such data in 2000. Mortgage rates may be the reason owners refuse to move, which is keeping inventory stubbornly low. And economists predict homeowners will continue to lengthen their stay in a home through the next decade, The New York Times report

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Home Prices Will Only Get Higher

Home sales reached their highest pace in a decade in the first quarter of 2017 as property prices continue to escalate, according to the National Association of REALTORS®' latest quarterly report.The median price of an existing single-family home nationally was $232,100 in the first quarter, up 6.9 percent from the same time period a year ago. Home prices rose year over year in 85 percent of the 178 metro areas analyzed.The continued inventory s

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Housing Affordability Makes Slight Gains

Home prices are beginning to moderate, and national wages recently increased, helping to offset rising mortgage rates and buoy housing affordability in the first quarter of 2017, according to the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Opportunity Index.Sixty percent of new and existing homes sold between the beginning of January and the end of March were affordable to families earning the U.S. median income of $68,000, accordin

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