Saturday, December 15, 2007

Treat Bankruptcy Symptoms Early

How do you know when you are at risk for bankruptcy?

Your failing financial health will exhibit symptoms similar to those homeowners experience when they contract the fear of foreclosure -- tightening in the household budget, shortness of cash, and a general feeling of financial malaise.

For non-homeowners the only pain missing is a mortgage interest rate adjustment which can be a real pain in the assets.

Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (BAPCPA), with its new counseling requirements and stiff rules helped reduce bankruptcies by 70 percent from a record high level in 2005.

Some of the decrease was due to the end of unusually high number of bankruptcies filed to beat the deadline on the newer, tougher rules, but some of the decrease also came from the counseling requirements.

Under the new law bankruptcy hopefuls must go through counseling before and after filing. Studies repeatedly reveal smarter consumers are better, more financially stable consumers than those less endowed with financial finesse.

Unfortunately, the law was passed just as the housing market -- and the benefits of counseling -- was thrown for a loop by an inordinate number of subprime and other nontraditional mortgages poorly underwritten for those who really couldn't afford the terms.

Homeowners, homeowners cum renters facing rising rents and others who, for whatever reason, just can't financially hack it, are beginning to bang at the double doors of bankruptcy court again, according to the Association of Independent Consumer Credit Counseling Agencies (AICCCA), a national organization of nonprofit agencies that advocate for debtors, counsel consumers and provide debt management services to consumers with excessive unsecured debt.

The American Bankruptcy Institute reported in May that bankruptcy filings increased 51.3 from May in 2006.

AICCCA says of 400,000 consumers it counseled since the new law went into effect in October of 2005, more than 95 percent of them went on to file for bankruptcy.

That's often because by the time consumers make it into counseling, their potential for bankruptcy already critical.

"If consumers recognized earlier the warning signs of serious financial problems, they would have more choices for a successful solution," said David Jones, president, AICCCA.

To help, AICCCA has developed warning signs that cash flow has become anorexic. Two or more require immediate remedial action. Unless the warning signs are treated, bankruptcy may be the only cure.

* Living paycheck to paycheck. A recent survey by American Payroll Association revealed that 65 percent of Americans report living paycheck to paycheck. Losing a job or a decrease in pay could be the final straw. Only a few months separates these consumers from a financial choke hold unless a quick change can be made to raise some dough or lower debt -- or both.

* No savings cushion. The average savings rate for Americans is slim to none. If you spend more than you earn, an unexpected costly change, say a divorce, major home repair or car expense, could cause severe financial trauma.

* Not adequately insured. Some studies suggest that 50 percent of bankruptcies involve medical debt. If you can't afford the cost of an insurable incident without insurance, get insurance. If you lack insurance you also lack the wherewithal to cover sudden medical debt, home or car expenses and those other unexpected events.

* A non-mortgage debt-to-income ratio that is more than 20 percent. The Center for American Progress reports in its May Economic Snapshot that by December 2006, household debt had risen to 132.4 percent of disposable income. For those who spend more than 20 percent of the net income (take home pay) for non-mortgage debt, again, without a drastic change financial frustration is chronic.

* Making only minimum payments on credit cards. More than 40 percent of people with credit cards carry a balance. Paying only the minimum amount due means staying in debt longer and at a greater cost than is prudent. Those unable to make more than a minimum payment are at the mercy of even the slightest change in their financial condition.

The AICCCA says if you experience two or more of those early warning pangs of bankruptcy pains you can't take two payday loans and call someone in the morrow.

"

Real Estate Designers offers totally innovative solutions for your software
development, Internet programming,

real estate web design
and hosting needs. Our service includes domain name
registration and real estate web design. Real Estate Designers provides the
complete solution including design, application development and marketing.

"

Real Estate Designers offers totally innovative solutions for your software development, Internet programming, real estate web design and hosting needs. Our service includes domain name registration and real estate web design. Real Estate Designers provides the complete solution including design, application development and marketing.



source: realtytimes.com

Smart Growth Awards Promote Smart Growth

Manhattan joined Portland, OR; Seattle, WA; Vermont and Barnstable, MA, as the nation's smart growth leaders for 2007.

The accolades, the 2007 National Award for Smart Growth Achievement, are granted for innovative community development that protects the environment, preserves community identity and expands economic opportunity.

The Environmental Protection Agency sparingly doles out the awards to promote smart growth strategies, because such efforts help communities enjoy cleaner air and water, open space and critical habitat preservation, and redevelopment of vacant land -- qualities that make for a nice place to live.

Smart growth efforts also preserves community identity and expands economic opportunity.

Winners were selected based on how effectively they used smart growth strategies to improve their communities and how well they engaged citizens and fostered partnerships.

The details are available online on the EPA's Smart Growth Achievement page, but here are some highlights revealing why the winning communities are smart growth leaders.

# The award for "Overall Excellence" went to the Housing Authority of Portland, OR. The agency created a public-private partnership to redevelop an isolated and distressed public housing site into New Columbia, where local residents engaged in design workshops and were employed for portions of the construction. The project increased the number of houses, including affordable units and maintained the neighborhood's ethnic diversity.

# For "Built Projects" the Seattle Housing Authority, similarly turned a dilapidated neighborhood into High Point, a mixed-use, mixed-income, and environmentally sensitive community. Using green building principles, High Point's more than 1,700 new units are expected to consume less water, electricity, and natural gas than the old community's 716 units. The new community includes new parks, a public library, and a health clinic. Retail space will come in 2009.

# The Vermont Housing and Conservation Board (VHCB) got the nod for "Policies and Regulations." The independent, state-supported agency, promotes compact settlements surrounded by countryside, pursues affordable housing, land conservation, and historic preservation initiatives. Since 2002, VHCB investments have supported developing more than 3,000 affordable homes, the preservation of 44 historic buildings, and the conservation of more than 37,000 acres of farmland, natural areas, and recreation lands.

# Barnstable, MA, created a development strategy for one of its seven villages, Hyannis, to encourage growth and development in the town center and reduce growth pressure on environmentally sensitive areas along the coast to win the "Waterfront and Coastal Communities" award. These policies have resulted in almost 100 new residential units (nine of which are for lower-income households), with nearly 150 more planned; 22,000 square feet of commercial space, with another 100,000 square feet planned; and more than 300 jobs.

# Manhattan shines in the area of "Equitable Development" thanks to its cooperative strategy to expand the housing and commercial options for central Harlem. Work in the Abyssinian Neighborhood Project area, once marked by vacant lots and abandoned buildings, employed comprehensive programs linked education, job training, and cultural enhancement; developed 200 affordable housing units, with an additional 200 planned; and created 15,000 square feet of commercial space for five local businesses. The project also increased access to public transit, created new green space, and minimized storm water runoff by reusing paved surfaces.

"

Real Estate Designers offers totally innovative solutions for your software
development, Internet programming,

real estate web design
and hosting needs. Our service includes domain name
registration and real estate web design. Real Estate Designers provides the
complete solution including design, application development and marketing.

"

Real Estate Designers offers totally innovative solutions for your software development, Internet programming, real estate web design and hosting needs. Our service includes domain name registration and real estate web design. Real Estate Designers provides the complete solution including design, application development and marketing.




source: realtytimes.com

Real Estate Outlook: A Mixed Message as Mortgage Rates Drop

The economy's messages for real estate in the past week have been just about as mixed as you can get.

On the one hand, mortgage rates dropped to their lowest levels in more than two years. Anyone with reasonably good credit and a downpayment can now qualify for a 30-year fixed rate loan for 5 percent … and a 15 year loan for 5 percent, according to the latest survey from the Mortgage Bankers Association.

These low rates, in turn, are stimulating a giant, end-of-the year rush to refinance-and should help pull at least some previously reluctant home buyers off the side lines and into serious shopping mode.

Also on the plus side: Big job growth numbers -- 189,000 new private-sector payroll jobs came online last month, far beyond what Wall Street analysts expected.

Add to that an impressive jump in U.S. employee productivity -- up by 6.3 percent in the third quarter, the largest increase in four years according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics -- and you've got a picture of a strong and growing national economy. It's a solid building block for real estate's long-awaited turnaround.

But there's a sobering flip side to all this: The national delinquency rate for U.S. home mortgages increased to 5.6 percent of all outstanding loans in the third quarter. That's the worst rate since 1986, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

The percentage of homes in the foreclosure process also rose -- to 1.69 percent -- the highest ever in the delinquency survey's history, which extends back to 1972.

There is no way to see the delinquency and foreclosure numbers as anything but grim. Perhaps the only spark of good news on this front came last Thursday, when Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson's plan to stimulate rapid, private sector relief for hundreds of thousands of financially-distressed subprime borrowers was unveiled.

The mortgage and bond industries estimate that this voluntary, non-governmental effort, including five-year interest rate freezes for between 350,000 and 600,000 borrowers heading for delinquency and loss of their homes-should sharply cut the foreclosure rate in the coming months.

That should relieve pressure on unsold real estate inventories, stabilize prices in some neighborhoods, and help local real estate conditions in dozens of local markets across the country.

"

Real Estate Designers offers totally innovative solutions for your software
development, Internet programming,

real estate web design
and hosting needs. Our service includes domain name
registration and real estate web design. Real Estate Designers provides the
complete solution including design, application development and marketing.

"

Real Estate Designers offers totally innovative solutions for your software development, Internet programming, real estate web design and hosting needs. Our service includes domain name registration and real estate web design. Real Estate Designers provides the complete solution including design, application development and marketing.



source: realtytimes.com

Long- and Short-Term Rates Reverse Trend and Rise This Week

McLEAN, VA -- Freddie Mac (NYSE:FRE) today released the results of its Primary Mortgage Market Survey (PMMS) in which the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) averaged 6.11 percent with an average 0.5 point for the week ending December 13, 2007, up from last week when it averaged 5.96 percent as well. Last year at this time, the 30-year FRM averaged 6.12 percent.

The 15-year FRM this week averaged 5.78 percent with an average 0.5 point, up from last week when it averaged 5.65 percent. A year ago at this time, the 15-year FRM averaged 5.86 percent.

Five-year Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) averaged 5.89 percent this week, with an average 0.6 point, up from last week when it averaged 5.75 percent. A year ago, the 5-year ARM averaged 5.92 percent.

One-year Treasury-indexed ARMs averaged 5.50 percent this week with an average 0.6 point, up from last week when it was 5.46 percent. At this time last year, the 1-year ARM averaged 5.45 percent.

"November's employment report showed stronger job growth, no change in the unemployment rate and a jump in wages, suggesting to some market participants that the probability of an upcoming recession might be lower than originally thought," said Frank Nothaft, Freddie Mac vice president and chief economist. "This led to a rise in interest rates for U.S. Treasury securities this week and mortgage rates followed."

"However, against that backdrop, serious delinquencies (90 days or more delinquent or in foreclosure) on prime conventional mortgages rose to 1.31 percent in the third quarter of 2007 from 0.79 percent in the same quarter in 2006. And serious delinquencies for subprime loans rose to 11.38 percent from 6.78 percent over the same period, so the housing segment of the economy still has a way to go before bottoming out."

"

Real Estate Designers offers totally innovative solutions for your software
development, Internet programming,

real estate web design
and hosting needs. Our service includes domain name
registration and real estate web design. Real Estate Designers provides the
complete solution including design, application development and marketing.

"

Real Estate Designers offers totally innovative solutions for your software development, Internet programming, real estate web design and hosting needs. Our service includes domain name registration and real estate web design. Real Estate Designers provides the complete solution including design, application development and marketing.



source: realtytimes.com

Going Green: Easier Than You May Think

Green may not be your favorite decorating color, but the concept of making your home environmentally green is growing in popularity as more homeowners realize that they can also save a little more green in their wallets.

The first thing to understand is that you don't have to buy a new, already green home or build a custom home to go green. There are everyday things that can be done that will not only save you some money in the operating costs of running your home but also may make your home more attractive when you want to sell it.

"Going green doesn't have to be painful. It doesn't have to cost you more money. It's more than just changing one fluorescent light bulb. It's an important consideration," says interior designer, Abbey Koplovitz.

"If you build from scratch, you're doing a residential renovation, and you build using green materials, it is going to cost you 20 to 30 percent more but again, you're already spending say $400,000, what's a little more," says Koplovitz.

But when it comes to making an existing home green, it's a lot cheaper since you often build that cost into the routine maintenance. Then the only thing is to routinely make your choice for materials be green.

"Buy a low-flow toilet. Buy a washer and dryer or a dishwasher that uses less water. A lot of my clients think about these things because they decrease the cost to run the home," says Koplovitz.

"So if you're going to buy stainless steel appliances to help sell your house because the kitchen might be a little tired, buy something that's Energy Star rated," says Koplovitz.

When you start your green-home project, first think about and identify what your priorities are. Is cost the main concern? Are you trying to eliminate a problem such as allergies by going green? Are you concerned about the environment and want to make sure the products you buy come from environmentally-friendly manufacturers?

"Typically you have to give something up. So I always tell my clients, 'What really is the most important thing to you?' If price-point is the most important thing to you, then that limits your choice of products. If color range of choices of flooring is really important to you, and you want to be environmentally green, you kind of go down different paths. So I think it's really important to identify what your goals are and how you want to be green," says Koplovitz.

She says that homeowners who have children with allergies will typically be concerned with air quality. So they'll go green by changing flooring or paint.

"You can get paints that are low or no Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC)," says Koplovitz.

But simple knowledgeable choices can keep you allergy-free and help the environment at the same time.

Koplovitz says avoid vinyl at all costs because it gives off toxic gasses. "If allergies are a concern, a really great product is linoleum; true linoleum doesn't increase your price-point very much and it's hypo-allergenic," says Koplovitz.

"If you have wood floors and you need to get them refinished or if you're putting in wood floors, you can go with latex finishes on them. Or, if you're doing carpeting, and you're not allergic to wool, there are many wool projects on the market that are made without a harsh chemical adhesive and harsh chemical processing," explains Koplovitz.

Most people paint their homes every five to 10 years. So one way that people can really contribute to the environment without spending a lot of extra money is by buying paints that have low or no VOC.

"Those are now readily available at all the major manufacturers of paint. So you don't even have to travel very far to get them," says Koplovitz.

To go green, you don't have to do it all at once. But as routine maintenance needs arise, think environmentally green when it comes to choosing materials and products and you'll likely save some money and take pride in doing your part to help protect the environment.

"

Real Estate Designers offers totally innovative solutions for your software
development, Internet programming,

real estate web design
and hosting needs. Our service includes domain name
registration and real estate web design. Real Estate Designers provides the
complete solution including design, application development and marketing.

"

Real Estate Designers offers totally innovative solutions for your software development, Internet programming, real estate web design and hosting needs. Our service includes domain name registration and real estate web design. Real Estate Designers provides the complete solution including design, application development and marketing.



source: realtytimes.com