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Tag Archives: HUD

Subtle Discrimination Endures Over Decades in Housing Market

When seeking a new home, minorities face subtle discrimination that could increase costs or prolong their home search, according to a report released Tuesday by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). While HUD's report reveals a downward trend in ""the most blatant forms of discrimination,"" such as refusing to meet with minority buyers, HUD found less obvious forms of discrimination persist. Among the types of discrimination studied, ""[m]ost important, minority homeseekers are told about and shown fewer homes and apartments than whites,"" HUD said.

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Housing Improves in Key Areas, but Homeowners Still Need Assistance

In the Obama administration's overall assessment on housing, the market was described as showing ""important progress across many key indicators"" but the millions of underwater homeowners still call for a need to provide homeowner assistance, according to the May housing scorecard released jointly by Treasury and HUD. For example, homeowners' equity grew by more than $815 billion in the first quarter of 2013. ""Despite the positive news, we have important work ahead since there are so many families and individuals still ‘underwater' with mortgage balances higher than their home's value,"" said Kurt Usowski, HUD deputy assistant secretary for economic affairs.

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Shadow Inventory Looms Large for GSEs, HUD

Shadow inventory held by the GSEs and HUD "vastly" outnumbers REO properties the groups maintain, according to a joint report from the Office of Inspector General for the Federal Housing Finance Agency and HUD. The report further warned HUD and the GSEs must pay close attention to shadow inventory, which threatens to increase their supply of REOs. For the GSEs, the ratio of shadow inventory to REO inventory was about 6-to-1, while shadow inventory for HUD was 19.9 times greater than REO inventory.

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Commentary: Housing Recovery? Hold the Champagne

Recent reports from the National Association of Realtors and the Census Bureau/HUD showed sharp increases in unit sales and prices, as well as increases in the inventory of homes for sale for April. Has housing turned the corner? Look again. Sales up, prices up, what's wrong with this picture? The last time both prices and sales of new homes increased in the same month was last September. In all of 2012, sales and prices moved in opposite directions in seven of the 12 months. What of course is missing from the two data sets is any indication of demand.

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New Home Price Hits Record High in April

The price of a new single-family home soared to a record high in April as sales jumped 2.3 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 454,000, the Census Bureau and HUD reported Thursday. The median price of a new home, according to the Census/HUD report, soared $20,900 (8.3 percent) in April to $271,600, the highest price on record. The inventory of homes available for sale rose to 155,000--the highest level since November 2011--translating to a 3.5 month supply, matching March for a record low.

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RealtyTrac: Building Permits Rise as Foreclosure Starts Decline

On a national level, the relationship between building permits and foreclosure starts resembled that of a seesaw in the first quarter, with an equal but opposite rise and fall, but in some markets, both permits and foreclosures are on the rise, according to a report from RealtyTrac. After analyzing data from HUD, the online foreclosure marketplace found single-family building permits increased 27 percent year-over-year in the first quarter to the highest level in five years, while foreclosure starts fell 27 percent during the same time period to the lowest level since the second quarter of 2006.

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Builder Confidence Shows First 2013 Gain

Despite still sluggish new home sales, builder confidence improved in May for the first time since December, the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) reported Wednesday. All three components of the HMI improved in May. The reading on current home sales increased four points to 48 from 44 (revised from the initially reported 45), the outlook for sales in the next six months rose to 53 from 52 (revised down from April's reading of 53), and the measure of buyer traffic rose to 33 from April's unrevised 30.

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New York Bound for Economic Recovery Despite Foreclosure Backlog

New York may be dealing with a heavy foreclosure burden, but the state is still bound for a strong economic recovery, according to a report released by HUD and Treasury. While foreclosures are improving across the country, New York has remained a concern due to its long foreclosure timelines and backlog of distressed inventory. Despite the obstacle, a report from the Obama administration highlighted factors that show how the market has proven itself in other ways. For one, the New York metropolitan area is the largest job market in the nation, and the area has shown economic resilience through the Great Recession.

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Commentary: Seven Little Words

""Fiscal policy,"" simply put, is the means by which a government adjusts its levels of spending in order to monitor and influence a nation's economy. At the heart of the spending/growth disparity is a philosophical debate over the role of government: those who believe government should be run like a business and avoid debt and those who see the role of government as spending counter-cyclically, that is increasing spending when the nation's economy is challenged to avoid further struggles. direct a country's economic goals.

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Report: Payment Reduction Key to Mod’s Sustainability

While the likelihood of re-defaulting on a HAMP modification is smaller compared to private sector modifications, borrowers can become disqualified from the program if they miss three consecutive payments. According to the most recent Making Home Affordable Program report for March released by Treasury, the key to strengthening the chances a borrower won't become disqualified is to provide a significant payment reduction. ""Payment reduction is strongly correlated with permanent modification sustainability,"" the report concluded.

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