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Home Prices Climb by at Least 5% for 6th Straight Month in April

The majority of metros covered in Zillow's Real Estate Market Reports saw home values inch up from March to April, the company reported Tuesday. Zillow's Home Value Index increased 0.5 percent month-over-month and 5.2 percent year-over-year. April marked the sixth consecutive month in which home values appreciated more than 5 percent on a yearly basis. According to Zillow, the last time national home values were at this level was in June 2004.

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Banks Provide $50.6B in Relief, Settlement Obligations Nearly Met

The five banks that took part in the national mortgage settlement are getting close to completing their consumer relief obligations a year after the landmark deal was reached. So far, the five banks--Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, and Ally Financial--have provided $50.63 billion in consumer relief to over 621,700 borrowers, according to an update from the settlement monitor Joseph A. Smith, Jr. The provided relief comes out to about $81,437 per borrower.

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Housing Groups Consider Impact of Immigration Reform

As Congress moves to consider immigration reform, the housing industry is also weighing in on how certain provisions will impact the market. According to the NAHREP, allowing a path for the legalization of undocumented immigrants could mean $500 billion in new real estate transactions. The NAHB also provided input on immigration reform and asked lawmakers to establish a ""fair and workable"" E-Verify system during a congressional round table discussion last week.

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CRL Warns Against Consumer Mortgage Choice Act

The Center for Responsible Lending (CRL) expressed opposition toward bill H.R. 1077, known as the Consumer Mortgage Choice Act, which would exclude loan originator salaries, insurance and taxes held in escrow, and loan level pricing adjustments by government agencies or GSEs when computing points and fees. In a letter to Congress, CRL argues that H.R. 1077 ""promotes steering borrowers into more expensive loans"" and ""creates new loopholes that would allow loans with higher costs and fees to improperly meet"" QM standards.

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MBA Proposes ‘Up-Front Risk Sharing’ Concept for Mortgage Market

The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) shared a proposal to bring private capital back into the mortgage market while decreasing costs for taxpayers and borrowers. In a recent paper, the MBA explained the up-front risking sharing concept, which calls for the GSEs to offer risk-sharing at the front end of transactions. The proposal also suggested Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac should accept loans with ""deeper levels of credit enhancement"" in exchange for reduced guarantee fees and other loan level charges.

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Fannie Mae: Economy Will ‘Reaccelerate’ in 2nd Half of 2013

Fiscal drags such as the sequester may have weakened economic momentum, but the economy should ""reaccelerate"" in the second half of this year as financial and housing conditions improve, according to Fannie Mae's Economic and Strategic Research Group. ""Employment numbers are getting better, albeit it at a relatively slow pace, and the April employment picture should help boost consumer sentiment toward the economy overall,"" said Doug Duncan, chief economist for Fannie Mae.

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OCC: More than 2.4M Foreclosure Review Checks Cashed

In its most recent update on the status of foreclosure review checks, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) announced more than 2.4 million checks valued at $2.2 billion have been cashed or deposited as of May 16. So far, Rust Consulting, the paying agent, has sent 3.9 million checks totaling $3.4 billion. About 4.2 million borrowers are eligible for relief as part of the foreclosure review settlement reached in January between federal regulators and 13 servicers.

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Commentary: Real World Experiments

Economists usually do it with models, so it's rare in economics to be able to conduct a laboratory experiment. Currently, though, we're watching two experiments in different corners of the world that support the idea that stimulus works to repair a troubled economy and austerity doesn't. Japan and the eurozone are, through their actions, demonstrating how economies can move in opposite directions with Japan's stimulus plan succeeding and the eurozone's austerity program failing.

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