Today’s News Synopsis:
In a big news story, Freddie Mac reported 30-year mortgage rates are still at a low 4%, even after five weeks. Housing wire reported the number of people claiming unemployment has risen to 402,000. Despite this, CNN Money reported more young people are being hired. According to Bloomberg, spending on housing construction increased in October for the third month straight.
In The News:
Housing Wire - “Average time to foreclose sets new record of 631 days” (12-1-11)
“Mortgage delinquencies continued their decline in October and are nearly 30% off their January 2010 peak, but foreclosure inventories and the foreclosure process reached all-time highs during the month, according to Lender Processing
Services (LPS: 18.93 -0.16%).”
Los Angeles Times - “Freddie Mac: Mortgage rates stuck in low at 4%” (12-1-11)
“The mortgage engine seems stuck in low. For five straight weeks, Freddie Mac’s survey of the rates offered by home lenders has averaged at or below 4% for 30-year loans.”
CNN Money - “Young workers getting hired again” (12-1-11)
“Young workers are landing jobs again. Some 650,000 workers aged 16 to 24 found employment in the past three months, the biggest spike for that age group since the recession began, according to Labor Department statistics.”
Housing Wire - “Jobless claims edge up to 402,000″ (12-1-11)
“Jobless claims for the week ending Nov. 26 edged up as 402,000 new unemployment filings came in, an increase of 6,000 from the previous week.”
Bloomberg - “Construction Spending in U.S. Rose for Third Consecutive Month in October” (12-1-11)
“Construction spending in the U.S. rose in October for a third consecutive month on gains in housing and commercial projects like office buildings and power plants.”
Housing Wire – “FHFA begins development of new REO pilot programs” (12-1-11)
“The Federal Housing Finance Agency said it has begun to develop new pilot programs to more efficiently unload foreclosed homes held by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.”
Bloomberg - “BofA Joins Foreign Investors Fueling Record Ginnie-Fannie Gap in Bonds” (12-1-11)
“Home-loan securities guaranteed by Ginnie Mae are trading at about record premiums over Fannie Mae (FNMA) bonds as foreign investors target debt with the strongest backing from the U.S. and lenders including Bank of America Corp. seek notes considered the least risky by regulators.”
Bloomberg - “JPMorgan, BofA Sued By Mass. Over Foreclosures” (12-1-11)
“JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM), Bank of America Corp. (BAC) and Citigroup Inc. (C) were among five banks sued by Massachusetts for “unlawful and deceptive conduct” in foreclosures, according to the state’s attorney general.”
Inman - “Two MLSs hit with civil suits after FTC actions” (12-1-11)
“Two multiple listing services in Michigan and Pennsylvania that federal regulators had accused of anti-competitive practices have also become entangled in civil lawsuits seeking millions of dollars in damages on behalf of consumers.”
Looking Back:
Freddie Mac announced it would suspend foreclosure evictions from Dec. 20 to Jan. 3, 2011. Automatic Data Processing reported the U.S. economy added 93,000 private-sector jobs during November 2010. The Federal Reserve shared information about more than 21,000 individual transactions which provided $3 trillion in liquidity for market stabilization. According to the MBA, mortgage applications decreased 16.5% the previous week.
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