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Sterling Residential, Realtors
Houston BBB Online Reliability Program Member.
Daily Real Estate News | The Associated Press, Jeannine Aversa | July 15, 2008
The Federal Reserve on Monday adopted rules designed to protect homebuyers from the kind of loans that drove many into foreclosure. The new rules apply to all lenders and not just to banks supervised by the Fed. Most are expected to take effect Oct.1, 2009. Escrow requirements won’t go into effect until April 1, 2010.
Here are the new requirements:
1 | Prevent loans made without documenting borrower’s income.
2 | Require lenders to escrow money to pay taxes and insurance for risky borrowers.
3 | Limit and in some cases ban prepayment penalties.
4 | Prohibit lenders from making a loan without considering a borrower’s ability to repay a home loan from sources other than the home’s value.
5 | Require mortgage advertising to contain information about rates, monthly payments and other features of the loan.
6| Insist lenders credit a mortgage payment to a home owner’s account on the day it is received.
7 | Brokers and others are forbidden from “coercing or encouraging” an appraiser to misrepresent the value of a home.
Today’s Houston real estate asking prices are derived from local market conditions based on comparable sales prices paid by home buyers in a particular neighborhood. Despite recent sales volume declines, prices are holding steady across Houston. While that may not be true for all Houston area neighborhoods, there hasn’t been an overall 15% drop in Houston home values. The housing supply is growing — tending to favor home buyers — but it hasn’t increased enough to force home sellers into large double-digit price reductions.
A Houston Chronicle Real Estate discussion posted a few weeks ago asked if Realtors share blame for the mortgage crisis unwinding across the country. Citing dual-licensed Realtors (those holding real estate and mortgage brokers licenses) as part of the problem, some forum participants pointed to the potential conflict of interest between real estate and mortgage brokerage as a reason for the mortgage crisis, while others stated that dual-licensed Realtors couldn’t adequately perform both jobs as agent and mortgage broker. Both could be valid points — yet, the number of Realtors holding a both a real estate and mortgage license isn’t large enough to have contributed to the mortgage crisis in a significant way.
While most housing market indicators have been tracking negative for months, Houston’s median home price for existing single-family housing is positively buoyant despite steady declines in sale volumes in recent months — the median price increased 1.5% in June 2008 when compared to last year. Houston’s residential real estate housing market sales were lower again in June 2008 with a year-to-year sales decline of 15.1% — the slowest June sales volume since 2004. Nationally, sales were down 15.5%. Sales declines were across most property and price classes with the single largest declines in homes priced between $80,000 and $200,000. Pending sales were down over 20% indicating that sales declines will continue. Inventory supply and DOM are up almost 10% in year-to-year comparisons.