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Secondary Market

eMortgage Logic Celebrates 10th Anniversary

eMortgage Logic, LLC is celebrating its 10th year in business. The company provides residential real property valuations, data, analytics, and customized solutions for mortgage lenders, servicers, and investors nationwide. The idea for eMortgage Logic originated with Ralph Sells during his tenure at Freddie Mac, after Sells revived a struggling internal broker price opinion company acquired by the GSE's HomeSteps division.

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Attorney Fined More Than $50,000 for Frivolous MERS Lawsuits

A Minneapolis-based attorney has been sanctioned by a federal judge for filing one, in what appears to be a series of nearly 30 lawsuits based on what the court says are frivolous show-me-the-note defenses designed to thwart foreclosure proceedings in Minnesota by calling into question the validity of MERS as mortgagee. William B. Butler of Butler Liberty Law, LLC has been ordered to personally pay $50,000 to the court and pay an additional undetermined amount of legal costs incurred by counsel for MERS and its co-defendants.

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Initial Unemployment Claims Jump to 10-Week High

First time claims for unemployment insurance jumped 13,000 to 380,000 for the week ended April 7, the Labor Department reported Thursday, the highest level since the end of January. At the same time the previous week’s report were adjusted upward by 10,000, wiping out what had been a four year low and showing an increase of 4,000 initial claims instead of an originally reported drop of 6,000 for the week ended March 31.

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Beige Book Cites Modest to Moderate Growth, Concerns About Gas Prices

The economy continued to expand at a modest to moderate pace from mid-February through late March, the Federal Reserve said Wednesday in its periodic Beige Book, reporting faster and solid growth in Kansas City and Minneapolis but moderate or modest growth in Boston, Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, San Francisco Cleveland and St. Louis. New York reported economic growth picked up somewhat while Philadelphia and Richmond cited improving business conditions.

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Lawmakers Say GSEs’ REO Rental Initiative Isn’t for California

Nineteen members of California's congressional delegation want to keep Fannie Mae's and Freddie Mac's ""for rent"" signs outside their state's borders. Led by Congressman Gary Miller, the group sent a letter to Edward DeMarco, acting director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, petitioning him to exclude the 600 homes in California slated for the pilot program of the REO Initiative, which aims to sell off homes repossessed by the GSEs and FHA to institutional investors who will turn the properties into rental homes.

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Economy Adds Disappointing 120,000 Jobs In March

The nation added 120,000 jobs in March, far below expectations of the fourth straight month of 200,000-plus payroll gains. Payroll gains for January and February were revised, adding 13,000 to the February numbers but subtracting 9,000 from January.

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J.P. Morgan Announces Sale of Securities Backed by NPLs

J.P. Morgan recently announced the issuance of $132 million in commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) backed by non-performing commercial real estate loans. According to the Wall Street Journal, the issuance is first time since the late 1990s. Prior to the securitization, the assets were owned by Rialto Capital Management, a real estate investment management company focused on distressed asset investment, management, and workouts.

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Little Change in Quarterly Performance of Loans, OCC Reports

Overall, little change was reported in the performance of first-lien mortgages serviced by national and federal savings banks during the 2011 fourth quarter, but the percentage of initiated foreclosures did see a steep drop, according to the Office of Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) Mortgage Metrics report. The percentage of current and performing loans decreased to 87.9 percent, a mere 0.1 percentage point drop from the previous quarter, but a 0.4 percent increase compared to the same period a year ago.

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Experts Expect to See Broad Improvements, Home Prices to Rise in 2013

The Urban Land Institute released its Real Estate Consensus Forecast Wednesday morning, and overall, the 38 real estate economists and analysts surveyed project broad improvements for the economy. With signs of improvement in the housing sector already emerging, participants expect to see housing starts nearly double by 2014, and project home prices will begin to rise in 2013. The average home price, which has declined somewhere between 1.8 percent and 4.1 percent over each of the past three years, according to FHFA data, is expected to stabilize in 2012, followed by a 2 percent increase in 2013, and a 3.5 percent increase in 2014.

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Case-Shiller Indexes Down for Fifth Straight Month

The Case-Shiller Home Price Indexes fell for the fifth straight month in January, with the 10- and 20-city composites each dropping 0.8 percent from December, Standard & Poor's, which compiles the indices, reported Tuesday morning. The 10-city index slid to its lowest level since May 2003 and the 20-city index dropped to its lowest level since December 2002. Home prices fell in 16 of 19 major cities during the month of January.

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