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Real Estate Weekly: Most wouldn’t walk away from mortgage: survey
May 21, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Forty-one percent of homeowners with a mortgage would consider walking away from their home if the loan were to go underwater, meaning they’d owe more than the market value of the home, according to a survey from Trulia.com and RealtyTrac.
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Real Estate Weekly: Most wouldn’t walk away from mortgage: survey
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Real Estate Weekly: Most wouldn’t walk away from mortgage: survey
May 21, 2010 by publisher · Leave a Comment
Forty-one percent of homeowners with a mortgage would consider walking away from their home if the loan were to go underwater, meaning they’d owe more than the market value of the home, according to a survey from Trulia.com and RealtyTrac.
Here is the original post:
Real Estate Weekly: Most wouldn’t walk away from mortgage: survey
the-loan
Real Estate Weekly: Most wouldn’t walk away from mortgage: survey
May 21, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Forty-one percent of homeowners with a mortgage would consider walking away from their home if the loan were to go underwater, meaning they’d owe more than the market value of the home, according to a survey from Trulia.com and RealtyTrac.
See the original post:
Real Estate Weekly: Most wouldn’t walk away from mortgage: survey
the-loan
Real Estate Weekly: Most wouldn’t walk away from mortgage: survey
May 21, 2010 by publisher · Leave a Comment
Forty-one percent of homeowners with a mortgage would consider walking away from their home if the loan were to go underwater, meaning they’d owe more than the market value of the home, according to a survey from Trulia.com and RealtyTrac.
View post:
Real Estate Weekly: Most wouldn’t walk away from mortgage: survey
the-loan
Real Estate Weekly: Most wouldn’t walk away from mortgage: survey
May 21, 2010 by publisher · Leave a Comment
Forty-one percent of homeowners with a mortgage would consider walking away from their home if the loan were to go underwater, meaning they’d owe more than the market value of the home, according to a survey from Trulia.com and RealtyTrac.
View original here:
Real Estate Weekly: Most wouldn’t walk away from mortgage: survey
the-loan
Keep the Loan Process Smooth to Finance Your Fort Lauderdale Real Estate (Turks.US)
March 5, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
When financing for a Fort Lauderdale real estate property, no buyer wants hang-ups. As much as possible, they want the loan process to run smoothly. Unfortunately, problems relating to loan application and processing are often the buyer’s fault.
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Keep the Loan Process Smooth to Finance Your Fort Lauderdale Real Estate (Turks.US)
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Factors to consider in paying down the mortgage (Washington Post)
February 26, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Q: We are still in our house almost 2 1/2 years after refinancing, and the rate on our interest-only mortgage is 6.5 percent. If I have $10,000 that I will not need in the foreseeable future, can I send that amount with our next payment to help pay down the principal on the loan? Or am I better off investing that money at current interest rates — which, of course, are much lower?
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Factors to consider in paying down the mortgage (Washington Post)
the-loan
Will mortgage reforms kill off the recovery? (Independent)
October 17, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment
During the property boom earlier this decade, the British mortgage market was infected by fraud and poor lending practices.
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Will mortgage reforms kill off the recovery? (Independent)
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Mortgage borrowers face tough new incomes rule (Independent)
October 17, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment
Borrowers will no longer be able to self-certify their incomes under a crackdown on mortgage lending to be announced by the Financial Services Authority tomorrow.
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Mortgage borrowers face tough new incomes rule (Independent)
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New head of State Bar of California assails mortgage modification scammers (Los Angeles Times)
September 13, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment
Los Angeles attorney Howard Miller lambastes lawyers who claimed to be offering help to homeowners facing foreclosure but did nothing except take their money.
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New head of State Bar of California assails mortgage modification scammers (Los Angeles Times)