The Obama administration is looking into creating a plan where mortgage borrowers who have fallen behind on their payments may now have the United States government make the payments for them, and then pay the government rent in the process.
Read more »My Landlord is the United States Government?
Housing Troubles and Bubbles
Robert Shiller, Yale economics professor and the co-creator of the influential Case-Shiller Home Price Index, says another housing bubble could be looming.
Read more »Dropping home values crunch credit lines
As home values fall, home equity credit lines -- a favorite cash source for entrepreneurs -- are vanishing.
Read more »Obama mortgage plan needs work
Many borrowers are not getting help under president's modification or refinancing plan. Officials don't expect problems to be fixed until the fall.
Read more »Bob Shiller didn't kill the housing market
He just predicted its demise. Now he's seeing some tentative signs of hope.
Read more »Obama widens mortgage refi program
With home prices still falling, administration opens up rescue program to homeowners whose loans are 125% of their home's value.
Read more »Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies
A 44 page tome chocked full of data has been released by Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies. In their annual State of the Nation’s Housing report, Harvard’s JCHS doesn’t reveal anything earth-shattering. Crunching through the data from 2008 shows that the housing market . . . pretty much stinks.
Read more »90 Billion In Commercial Foreclosures - REITS and Vultures Racing In
As many real estate developers are losing buildings to the banks, a group of investors are about to pick over the failures and they are looking for deals. Commercial property values are dropping, refinancing capital is scarce, but there is one group that is raising money quickly. Real estate investment trusts.
Read more »Housing Market Disaster Worsens
The brief moment of hope that housing had hit a bottom and that both the rate of home sales and prices would improve is slipping away. The pressures that will push prices down, by another 20% in some markets, are rising interest rates and an unemployment rate that will almost certainly go over 10% and stay there for several quarters.
Read more »Where will housing be in 2012?
Americans have not seen a boring housing market since the last millennium. You know — the average, ordinary kind of market where supply just about matches demand, prices are steady, and real estate ceases to be a topic of daily conversation.
Read more »

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