Potential homebuyers and homeowners looking to refinance are still
seeing a window of opportunity as mortgage rates mostly held steady in
the past week.
30-year fixed-rate mortgages averaged 3.93% with
an average 0.6 point for the week ending Aug. 20, 2015, according to
Freddie Mac’s weekly market survey. A year ago, the rate averaged 4.10%.
15-year fixed rates slipped to 3.15% with an average 0.6 point. The same term priced at 3.23% a year ago.
5-year adjustable-rate mortgages were 2.94% with an average 0.5 point. Last year at this time the same ARM averaged 2.95%.
“There
was little movement in financial markets this week as the 30-year fixed
mortgage rate remained steady, dropping only 1 basis point to 3.93%,”
Sean Becketti, chief economist for Freddie Mac, said in a release.
“Housing markets have responded positively to low mortgage rates — the
30-year fixed mortgage rate has been below 4% for five consecutive
weeks. Overall housing markets remain on track for the best year since
2007.”
Homeowners refinance amid favorable rates
As
mortgage rates remain in the neighborhood of 4%, borrowers are taking
the opportunity to refinance higher-rate home loans. The Mortgage
Bankers Association reports refinance applications were up 7% from the
previous week, through Aug. 14. Demand was particularly driven by jumbo
loan refinancing.
Overall mortgage application volume gained 3.6%.
New housing starts highest since 2007
The
housing inventory shortage may be soon be seeing some relief. New
construction is gaining momentum, as single-family housing starts rose
12.8% in July, according to the National Association of Home Builders.
That’s the fastest pace of new home starts since Oct. 2007.
“Our
builders are reporting more confidence in the market, and are stepping
up production of single-family homes as a result,” said Tom Woods, NAHB
Chairman, in a release. “However, builders are still reporting problems
accessing land and labor.”
The recovery varies widely by region,
however. Combined single-family and multifamily new construction starts
rose in the Midwest (+20.1%) and South (+7.7%) but fell in the Northeast
(-27.5%) and West (-3.1%).
read more: http://www.nerdwallet.com/blog/mortgages/mortgage-rates/mortgage-roundup-820/
Blog maintained by me, Greg Callegari, about anything I find interesting online. So I Gregory Callegari will be looking for sports, news, crazy things and sharing with you.
Friday, August 21, 2015
Monday, August 17, 2015
Tech takes paperwork out of home mortgages
Doug Johnson serves as the chief financial officer of two hospitals
in the Wisconsin-Minnesota border area but doesn’t consider himself to
be especially tech-savvy.
Nevertheless, he was able to complete the entire mortgage-application process for an Arizona vacation home that he and his wife wanted to buy, entirely online. That included shopping for interest rates and terms, inputting personal information and uploading the required supporting documents, including copies of income-tax returns, pay stubs, bank statements and more.
“It went without a hitch,” said Johnson, 47, who admits he was initially concerned about online security. “If you have access to the Internet and a cheap scanner, that’s all you need.”
Johnson did the mortgage-application process through Guaranteed Rate, a national residential mortgage lender based in Chicago. The company’s software guides applicants through the loan-shopping exercise and lets them input personal data, see their credit scores, upload key documents through a private and secure system and receive online approval. Applicants going through the company’s all-digital route currently can qualify for a $250 credit on closing costs.
Guaranteed Rate claims it has the first all-digital mortgage, but many competitors also are going in the same direction, letting customers apply for mortgages, process much of the paperwork and do related tasks day or night, using a desktop computer, tablet or smartphone.
No longer such a slog
Applying for a mortgage and supplying supporting documents — traditionally one of the most time-consuming, paperwork-intensive and frustrating financial exercises around — increasingly is being automated. That means applicants will find the process easier, faster and, possibly, less expensive than before.
Americans already have embraced online interactions for other financial products and services. They pay bills online, check credit card transactions, buy and sell stocks, adjust 401(k) balances and pull up their credit reports. The vast majority of taxpayers file their tax returns online.
Five years from now, digital applications and document submission for home loans might be just as prevalent, though it isn’t quite there yet.
“It’s not as widespread as you might think,” said Rick Hill, vice president of industry technology for the Mortgage Bankers Association. Many people still prefer to meet face to face with a loan officer, especially first-time home buyers.
read more: http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/personalfinance/2015/08/14/digital-breakthroughs-improve-home-mortgage-process/31182619/
Nevertheless, he was able to complete the entire mortgage-application process for an Arizona vacation home that he and his wife wanted to buy, entirely online. That included shopping for interest rates and terms, inputting personal information and uploading the required supporting documents, including copies of income-tax returns, pay stubs, bank statements and more.
“It went without a hitch,” said Johnson, 47, who admits he was initially concerned about online security. “If you have access to the Internet and a cheap scanner, that’s all you need.”
Johnson did the mortgage-application process through Guaranteed Rate, a national residential mortgage lender based in Chicago. The company’s software guides applicants through the loan-shopping exercise and lets them input personal data, see their credit scores, upload key documents through a private and secure system and receive online approval. Applicants going through the company’s all-digital route currently can qualify for a $250 credit on closing costs.
Guaranteed Rate claims it has the first all-digital mortgage, but many competitors also are going in the same direction, letting customers apply for mortgages, process much of the paperwork and do related tasks day or night, using a desktop computer, tablet or smartphone.
No longer such a slog
Applying for a mortgage and supplying supporting documents — traditionally one of the most time-consuming, paperwork-intensive and frustrating financial exercises around — increasingly is being automated. That means applicants will find the process easier, faster and, possibly, less expensive than before.
Americans already have embraced online interactions for other financial products and services. They pay bills online, check credit card transactions, buy and sell stocks, adjust 401(k) balances and pull up their credit reports. The vast majority of taxpayers file their tax returns online.
Five years from now, digital applications and document submission for home loans might be just as prevalent, though it isn’t quite there yet.
“It’s not as widespread as you might think,” said Rick Hill, vice president of industry technology for the Mortgage Bankers Association. Many people still prefer to meet face to face with a loan officer, especially first-time home buyers.
read more: http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/personalfinance/2015/08/14/digital-breakthroughs-improve-home-mortgage-process/31182619/
Wednesday, August 12, 2015
IJReview, The News Startup Next Door To A Political Consulting Agency, Wants To ‘Win 2016’
The right-leaning news startup Independent Journal Review has one declared goal: to be the media’s “breakout star” of this election cycle. “The key thing for us is to win 2016,” Executive Editor Michelle Jaconi told International Business Times Monday.
The site, founded by a former media director for the GOP and once hailed as “the right-wing Upworthy” -- a shorthand the company dislikes -- is riding high after scoring airtime on each of the cable networks last week for its slick videos featuring Republican presidential candidates during the buildup to the GOP’s first debate in Cleveland.
Like BuzzFeed’s recent foray into collaborations with candidates, the videos get chummy with the politicians, in order to “tell their amazing stories,” according to Jaconi. Last week’s standout, a black-and-white video hyping the GOP candidates’ debate rituals, looks like an ad for Grey Goose vodka or Guess jeans, blaring game-time music as the contenders moodily stare into the camera and share their inner thoughts. (Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker embarks on an Olympic jog filmed in slow motion.)
It’s a good example of the site’s grasp on how to make hip, polished and viral videos designed to go wild on Facebook. Combined with its curiosity gap-exploiting headlines and sleek, mobile friendly site design, it’s easy to see how IJReview cornered the market of Internet-savvy conservatives. All the exposure during the manic debate coverage seems to have broken the once-obscure site into the mainstream.
Humble Beginnings
From a small band of 10 employees in 2013, IJReview -- which will soon be rebranded simply “IJ” -- now boasts more than 60 editorial staffers, having poached the likes of reporter Hunter Schwarz from the Washington Post and Jaconi herself from CNN. It just brought on a new chief operating officer, former Google and DoubleClick executive Brandon Paine. The heads of IJReview told IBTimes that the site currently enjoys upwards of 35 million unique visits a month. (Quantcast gives it 22 million.)
Other “wins” abound: IJReview will be partnering with ABC in February to produce one of the Republican debates, and unlike the bombastic Breitbart News or Tucker Carlson’s Daily Caller, the site has earned enough love from liberal journalists to merit an admiring profile at MSNBC. Jaconi asserted that IJReview is now the “third-biggest news company in the U.S.,” according to Quantcast data.
read more: http://www.ibtimes.com/ijreview-news-startup-next-door-political-consulting-agency-wants-win-2016-2048720
The site, founded by a former media director for the GOP and once hailed as “the right-wing Upworthy” -- a shorthand the company dislikes -- is riding high after scoring airtime on each of the cable networks last week for its slick videos featuring Republican presidential candidates during the buildup to the GOP’s first debate in Cleveland.
Like BuzzFeed’s recent foray into collaborations with candidates, the videos get chummy with the politicians, in order to “tell their amazing stories,” according to Jaconi. Last week’s standout, a black-and-white video hyping the GOP candidates’ debate rituals, looks like an ad for Grey Goose vodka or Guess jeans, blaring game-time music as the contenders moodily stare into the camera and share their inner thoughts. (Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker embarks on an Olympic jog filmed in slow motion.)
It’s a good example of the site’s grasp on how to make hip, polished and viral videos designed to go wild on Facebook. Combined with its curiosity gap-exploiting headlines and sleek, mobile friendly site design, it’s easy to see how IJReview cornered the market of Internet-savvy conservatives. All the exposure during the manic debate coverage seems to have broken the once-obscure site into the mainstream.
Humble Beginnings
From a small band of 10 employees in 2013, IJReview -- which will soon be rebranded simply “IJ” -- now boasts more than 60 editorial staffers, having poached the likes of reporter Hunter Schwarz from the Washington Post and Jaconi herself from CNN. It just brought on a new chief operating officer, former Google and DoubleClick executive Brandon Paine. The heads of IJReview told IBTimes that the site currently enjoys upwards of 35 million unique visits a month. (Quantcast gives it 22 million.)
Other “wins” abound: IJReview will be partnering with ABC in February to produce one of the Republican debates, and unlike the bombastic Breitbart News or Tucker Carlson’s Daily Caller, the site has earned enough love from liberal journalists to merit an admiring profile at MSNBC. Jaconi asserted that IJReview is now the “third-biggest news company in the U.S.,” according to Quantcast data.
read more: http://www.ibtimes.com/ijreview-news-startup-next-door-political-consulting-agency-wants-win-2016-2048720
Friday, August 7, 2015
Moss Adams Merges in Curtis Consulting Group
Top 100 accounting and business consulting firm Moss Adams announced it has agreed to combine with boutique IT consulting firm Curtis Consulting Group (CCG) to expand the firm’s IT consulting and software development capabilities.
Issaquah, Wash.-based CCG offers services in business process improvement and business process automation and develops custom solutions that integrate these processes and technology. The solutions include operational business applications with connections to large enterprise-wide systems like SAP and People Soft.
The merger will bring CCG’s professionals into Moss Adams’ IT consulting practice, creating a team of 45 to be led by CCG founder Mark Curtis in the role of partner. The team’s expertise as programmers and project managers was especially attractive to Moss Adams, which ranked No. 15 in Accounting Today’s Top 100 Firms with $429 million in annual revenue. Tom Krippaehne, managing partner of Moss Adams Advisory Services and director of the IT consulting group, helped initiate the eight-month process of combining the firms based on his relationship with Curtis.
“It’s a big opportunity we see to build out our cybersecurity capabilities,” said Moss Adams chairman and CEO Chris Schmidt, explaining that CCG’s expertise will augment the firm’s current services in IT security assessments and penetration testing. “And with clients, to make their systems talk together better—most middle-market clients are fighting that fight. Then downstream we can build up our cybersecurity practice.”
The CCG team will work symbiotically with Moss Adams’ various practice leaders, Schmidt explained, especially the firm’s healthcare and financial services practices requiring greater security and privacy compliance. Across all industries, Schmidt expects the team’s capabilities in systems integration and business processes to meet current client demands.
“I don’t think there’s a client dealing with consumers that doesn’t have a concern about cybersecurity,” Schmidt said. “What we need to do, is make sure we listen to clients and scale the services we provide to them, based on the size of their business, but it runs the full gamut of clients.”
“Moss Adams and CCG people operate similarly in terms of behavior, collaboration and service delivery,” Curtis said in a statement. “I’m looking forward to combining forces and having more resources available to meet our client needs, as well as engaging with a new set of interesting and dynamic organizations.”
source http://www.accountingtoday.com/accounting-technology/news/moss-adams-merges-in-curtis-consulting-group-75445-1.html
Tuesday, August 4, 2015
Fed: Business Credit Cheaper; Jumbo Mortgages Easier to Get
Credit standards continued to ease in most commercial and consumer loan categories, according to the Federal Reserve’s latest survey of senior loan officers released today. Banks reported significant easing of terms and costs of credit for commercial and industrial loans, as well as easing standards across a broad range of mortgage products.
A net 21.4 percent said the cost of credit for larger businesses had eased, and 18.8 percent said cost of credit had fallen for small business borrowers. Loan rate spreads for C&I loans narrowed across the board; a net 42.8 percent said spreads narrowed on loans to larger firms, while 36.2 percent said spreads narrowed on loans to smaller borrowers. Most respondents attributed the easing standards to robust competition and moderately stronger demand.
Fewer loan officers reported easing on commercial real estate loans, with around 20 percent saying demand was up in different CRE loan categories. Among consumer loans, lenders left standards little
read more: http://bankingjournal.aba.com/2015/08/fed-business-credit-cheaper-jumbo-mortgages-easier-to-get/
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