New Home Mortgage : New York, New Orleans, Arizona, Florida & Texas
A Source for New Home Mortgage Loans in New York, New Orleans, Arizona, Florida, Texas from New Home Mortgage Company
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Sep107 Comments
Number of new mortgages up less than 1% last week, survey says. Mortgage application volume rose less than 1% during the week ended Aug. 22, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s weekly application survey.The trade group’s application index rose to 421.6 during the week, from 419.3 a week earlier, which had been the lowest index level in nearly eight years. Refinance volume rose 0.3%, while purchase volume increased 0.6% during the week. Refinance volume accounted for 35.2% of all applications. Read the rest of this entry »
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Sep1012 Comments
Many empty-nesters assumed the grass will be greener in a smaller home. Not necessarily. Last year Rick and Suzanne Pepin moved from the four-bedroom 3,400-square-foot house in Minneapolis where they lived with their three (now grown) kids to a luxury condo that’s a third smaller and offers only a Murphy bed for guests. Still, the couple couldn’t be happier.
Downsize home downsize expenses
Here’s what a family of four could save annually by moving from a 2,800-square-foot home to a 1,800-square-foot one. Utilities savings Property tax savings Atlanta $1,217 $983 Boston 1,922 3,962 Chicago 1,281 4,545 Denver 1,179 1,779 Houston 1,755 6,162 L.A. 1,153 4,958 Miami 1,243 9,089 Philadelphia 1,665 1,159 U.S. Avg. $1,300 $2,597 -
Apr30
Bank of America to help Countrywide borrowers
Filed under: Bank of America, New Home Mortgages, Residential Mortgages; Tagged as: Affordable Housing5 CommentsBank of America Corp., seeking approval of its Countrywide Financial Corp. takeover, plans to modify at least $40 billion of mortgages during the next two years to keep customers in their homes. Bank of America said that it will locate its national consumer mortgage headquarters in Calabasas, Calif., once it completes its acquisition of Countrywide Financial Corp. Bank of America also plans to double its community development lending, which focuses on affordable housing, small businesses and people in low-income and minority neighborhoods, to $1.5 trillion over 10 years. To accomplish this, the company will offer borrowers several options, including loan modifications and payment forbearance. It will not charge borrowers in foreclosure new late charges, and, in some cases, will waive prepayment penalties. Critics have said that BofA needs to make a strong commitment to working with troubled borrowers and minority communities in the wake of the proposed acquisition, which would ostensibly create the nation’s largest mortgage banking operation.
