
Been shopping for a mortgage rate? You may want to lock something down. Tomorrow morning, mortgage rates are expected to change. Unfortunately, we don’t know in which direction they’ll move.
It’s a risky time for Worcester County area home buyers to be without a locked mortgage rate.
The action begins at 8:30 A.M. ET Friday. This is when the government’s Bureau of Labor Statistics releases its April Non-Farm Payrolls report.
The monthly Non-Farm Payrolls report is more commonly known as “the jobs report” and provides a sector-by-sector breakdown of the U.S. employment situation, including changes in the Unemployment Rate.
In March 2012, the government reported 120,000 net new jobs created — half the number created during the month prior, and the third straight month of declining job creation. The Unemployment Rate fell one-tenth of one percent to 8.2%. More… »
Posted by David at 7:45 am on May 3rd, 2012.
Categories: The Economy. Tags: Home Affordability, Jobs Report, Non-Farm Payrolls.
Last Friday, the Real Estate Bar Association of Massachusetts (REBA) filed an action in Suffolk Superior Court against a non-lawyer settlement service provider, National Loan Closers, Inc., and a number of Massachusetts lawyers who continue to perform “witness only” closings in violation of Real Estate Bar Ass’n for Massachusetts, Inc. v. National Real Estate Information Services, 459 Mass. 512, 946 N.E.2d 665 (2011). The filing followed a unanimous vote of the REBA’s Board of Directors.
“ ‘Witness only’ closings violate Massachusetts law prohibiting the unauthorized practice of law, place homebuyers and mortgage lenders at risk, erode the public’s confidence in the Commonwealth’s recording and registration system, and deprive the Massachusetts IOLTA Program of thousands of dollars of revenue,” said Chris Pitt, REBA’s President.
“Although most lenders, title companies, and title insurers now recognize that ‘witness only’ closings are not permitted in the Commonwealth, there are still some who persist,” said Tom Moriarty, Co-chair of the Committee on the Practice of Law by Non-Lawyers. “There is no justification for these unlawful practices to continue and title insurers, title companies and the attorneys who participate in ‘witness only’ closings should stop.”
For a copy of the complaint click here.
Posted by David at 10:23 am on May 2nd, 2012.
Categories: Uncategorized.
Posted by David at 7:45 am on May 2nd, 2012.
Categories: Housing Analysis. Tags: Case-Shiller Index, Home Price Index, HPI.
Despite an improving U.S. economy, the nation’s banks remain cautious about what they will lend, and to whom.
Last quarter, by a margin of 3-to-2, more banks tightened residential mortgage lending standards for “prime borrowers” than did loosen them.
A “prime borrower” is defined as one with a well-documented cre More… »
Posted by David at 7:45 am on May 1st, 2012.
Categories: Mortgage Guidelines. Tags: Federal Reserve, Homeownership Rates, Mortgage Approvals.

After a series of worse-than-expected data last month, the housing market appears to be back on track.
The Pending Home Sales Index posted 101.4 in March, a four percent gain from the month prior and the index’s highest reading since April 2010 — the last month of that year’s federal home buyer tax credit.
A “pending home” is a home under contract to sell, but not yet closed. The Pending Home Sales Index is tracked and published by the National Association of REALTORS® monthly.
The March report marks the index’s first 100-plus reading in nearly two years.
To home buyers and sellers throughout Worcester County area, this is statistically significant because the Pending Home Sales Index is normalized to 100, a value corresponding to the average home contract activity in 2001, the index’s first year of existence. 2001 was an historically-strong year for the housing market.
The March 2012 Pending Home Sales Index, therefore, puts current market activity on par with market activity from 2001. More… »
Posted by David at 7:45 am on April 27th, 2012.
Categories: Housing Analysis. Tags: Existing Home Sales, NAR, Pending Home Sales Index.
The Federal Open Market Committee voted to leave the Fed Funds Rate unchanged within its current target range of 0.000-0.250 percent Wednesday.
For the fifth consecutive month, the Fed Funds Rate vote was nearly unanimous. Just one FOMC member, Richmond Federal Reserve President Jeffrey Lacker, dissented in the 9-1 vote.
The Fed Funds Rate has been near zero percent since December 2008. It is expected to remain near-zero through 2014, at least.
In its press release, the Federal Reserve noted that the U.S. economy has been “expanding moderately” since the FOMC’s last meeting in March. Beyond the next few quarters, the Fed expects growth to “pick up gradually”.
This key phrase will likely be repeated by the press. It suggests that the economy is no longer contracting; instead moving along a path of slow, consistent expansion. More… »
Posted by David at 12:00 pm on April 25th, 2012.
Categories: Federal Reserve. Tags: Fed Funds Rate, FOMC, Inflation.
Sales of new homes ticked lower in March, unexpectedly.
Based on Census Bureau data, the number of new, single-family homes sold in March slipped 7 percent from February — the largest one-month drop in more than a year.
On a seasonally-adjusted, annualized basis, buyers in Worcester County area and nationwide purchased 328,000 newly-built homes last month. The decrease in sales from February to March can be attributed, in part, though, to a massive upward revision in February’s figures.
Last month, the Census Bureau had reported 313,000 new home sales in February on a seasonally-adjusted, annualized basis. This month, those sales were re-measured to be 353,000 — an increase of 13 percent.
January’s sales were revised higher, too.
The long-term trend in the market for new homes remains “up”. This is no more apparent than when we look at the available new home inventory.
At the close of March, just 144,000 new homes were available for purchase, down 2,000 from the month prior and representing the most sparse new home housing supply since at least 1993, the year that the Census Bureau starting tracking such data. More… »
Posted by David at 7:45 am on April 25th, 2012.
Categories: Housing Analysis. Tags: Census Bureau, New Home Sales, New Home Supply.

The Federal Open Market Committee begins a 2-day meeting today in the nation’s capitol. It’s the group’s third of 8 scheduled meetings this year. Mortgage rates are expected to change upon the Fed’s adjournment.
Led by Chairman Ben Bernanke, the FOMC is a 12-person, Federal Reserve sub-committee. The FOMC is the group within the Fed which votes on U.S. monetary policy. “Making monetary policy” can mean a lot of things, and the action for which the FOMC is most well-known is its setting of the Fed Funds Funds.
The Fed Funds Rate is the overnight interest rate at which banks borrow money from each other. It’s one of many interest rates set by the Fed.
However, one series of interest rates not set by the Fed is mortgage rates. Instead, mortgage rates are based on the prices of mortgage-backed bonds and bonds are bought and sold on Wall Street. More… »
Posted by David at 7:45 am on April 24th, 2012.
Categories: Mortgage Rates. Tags: Fed Funds Rate, Federal Reserve, FOMC.
In March, for the second straight month, home resales slipped nationwide.
According to the National Association of REALTORS®, March 2012 Existing Home Sales fell to 4.48 million units on a seasonally-adjusted annualized basis — a 3 percent drop from February.
An “existing home” is a home that’s been previously occupied or owned.
The weaker-than-expected Existing Home Sales data is the third such housing report this month to suggest a lull in the spring housing market. Earlier this week, homebuilder confidence slipped for the first time in three months and March Single-Family Housing Starts fell, too.
The news wasn’t entirely bad for home resales, however. Although total home units sold decreased, so did the number of homes available for sale. There were just 2.37 million homes for sale nationwide in March, a 2 percent drop from the month prior.
At the current pace of sales, therefore, the entire nation’s home resale stock would “sell out” in 6.3 months. This is the second-fastest pace since the housing market’s April 2007 peak. More… »
Posted by David at 7:45 am on April 20th, 2012.
Categories: Housing Analysis. Tags: Existing Home Sales, Existing Home Supply, NAR.

According to foreclosure-tracking firm RealtyTrac, foreclosure filings fell to 199,000 in March 2012, a 17 percent decrease from March 2011. Last month marks the first time since July 2007 that foreclosure filings numbered less than 200,000 on a monthly basis — a span of nearly 5 years.
The generic term “foreclosure filing” is used to group all types of foreclosure activity into a single reading. It includes default notices, scheduled auctions, and bank repossessions. More… »
Posted by David at 7:45 am on April 19th, 2012.
Categories: Housing Analysis. Tags: Distressed Homes, Foreclosures, RealtyTrac.