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Housing Bubble Bursting?

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http://www.columbusdispatch.com/liv...TATE.ART_ART_01-18-08_B1_PB93EN2.html?sid=101
Inflated mortgages
Investor property problem deepens

Friday, January 18, 2008 3:15 AM
By Mark Ferenchik

THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
More out-of-towners have reported being stuck with inflated mortgages on houses in low-income Columbus neighborhoods, where they were directed by real-estate investment classes.
IMO, a HUGE amount of mortgage fraud would be caught ahead of time if law enforcement would just infiltrate these investor clubs.
Other defendants in the Brookses' suit are former Mid-State employee Karin Caruso, the Appraisal Group of Columbus and local appraisers Mary Jo Mowery, Leo Rowe Jr. and Joseph R. Colgrove.
 
http://www.realtor.org/RMODaily.nsf/pages/News2008011502?OpenDocument

Foreclosures Push Down Rents
Due to home owners trying to rent homes they can’t sell, rentals are abundant and prices are at bargain levels in areas hit hard by foreclosures.

Some home owners forced out by foreclosure are finding rental deals that are at "discounts of 50 percent to 70 percent off what they were paying on their mortgages," says Brenda F. Gerdes, who owns Management Specialists Inc. in Port St. Lucie, Fla.
 
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/W/WORLD_MARKETS?SITE=VADAR&SECTION=BUSINESS

US Recession Fears Sink Global Markets
By CARL FREIRE
Associated Press Writer

TOKYO (AP) -- Asian and European stock markets plunged Monday following declines on Wall Street last week amid investor pessimism over the U.S. government's stimulus plan to prevent a recession.

The avalanche is picking up momentum. I can see it every day-the pace is increasing. Every place we get a reading of the market as of that moment she is sliding down hill.
A better way to view it is as if it were an impending earth quake. The pressure and stresses are building and sooner or later she is going to blow.

This is a market correction resulting from bad economic policy and you can't stimulate the economy out of a correction. You can just slow it down and prolong it. m2:
 
All the Pollyanna's will be buying stocks tomorrow , see you at the bottom..
US Recession Fears Sink Global Markets
Monday January 21, 7:26 am ET
By Carl Freire, Associated Press Writer
Asian, European Markets Plunge on Pessimism Over US Stimulus Plan; Nikkei Sheds 3.9 Percent


TOKYO (AP) -- Asian and European stock markets plunged Monday following declines on Wall Street last week amid investor pessimism over the U.S. government's stimulus plan to prevent a recession.
India's benchmark stock index tumbled 7.4 percent, while Hong Kong's blue-chip Hang Seng index plummeted 5.5 percent to 23,818.86, its biggest percentage drop since the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks.

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Investors dumped shares because they were skeptical that an economic stimulus plan President Bush announced Friday would shore up the economy, which has been battered by housing and credit problems. The plan, which requires approval by Congress, calls for about $145 billion worth of tax relief to encourage consumer spending.

Concerns about the outlook for the U.S. economy, a major export market for Asian companies, has sent the region's markets sliding in 2008. Just last Wednesday, the Hang Seng index sank 5.4 percent.

"It's another horrible day," said Francis Lun, a general manager at Fulbright Securities in Hong Kong. "Today it's because of disappointment that the U.S. stimulus (package) is too little, too late and investors feel it won't help the economy recover."

Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 index slid 3.9 percent to 13,325.94 points, its lowest close in more than 2 years. China's Shanghai Composite index plunged 5.1 percent.

The sell-off continued in Europe. Germany's DAX was down 4.2 percent in morning trading, France's CAC 40 slid 4.7 percent, while Britain's FTSE 100 dropped 3.6 percent.

"People are certainly nervous about a potential recession in the U.S. spilling over to the rest of the world," said David Cohen, Director of Asian Economic Forecasting at Action Economics in Singapore.

"Maybe there's still some wariness about politicians are able to come up with a compromise and act sufficiently quickly" on a stimulus package, Cohen said. "I think the impact would be marginal anyway."

Investors took cues from the negative reaction to the president's plan on Wall Street on Friday, when the Dow Jones industrial average slid 0.5 percent to 12,099.30, bringing its loss for the year so far to nearly 9 percent.

Traders also have shrugged assurances from Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke that the U.S. central bank is ready to act aggressively -- which means a likely big interest rate cut later this month -- to help the sagging economy.

Some analysts predict that Asia won't suffer dramatically from a possible U.S. recession because increased trade and investment within Asia has made the region less reliant on the United States than in the past. Excluding Japan, 43 percent of Asia's exports go to other nations in the region, Lehman Brothers calculates, up from 37 percent in 1995.

But on Monday, uncertainty and pessimism reigned.

In Tokyo trading, exporters got hit hard, partly because of the yen's recent strength against the dollar. Toyota Motor Corp. lost 3.3 percent and Honda Motor Co. sank 3.4 percent.

In Hong Kong, Bank of China dropped 6.39 percent and China Construction Bank slid 7.83 percent.

In Mumbai, India, the benchmark Sensex index fell 1,353 points, or 7.4 percent -- its second-biggest percentage drop ever -- to 17,605.35. At one point, it was down nearly 11 percent.

The decline hit companies across the board, with power utility Reliance Energy Ltd. falling 16.4 percent. Major software company Tata Consultancy Services Ltd. slid 7.6 percent

"A gloomy U.S. climate has affected the global markets. Even if those markets recover, it will take sometime for the recovery to reach India because today's fall has been so drastic," said Jayant Pai, of the Mumbai investment company IL&FS Ltd.

Still, Pai and others suggested that the declines could lead to a buying opportunity.

"The sell-off today takes us close to the bottom," she said.

Since the start of the year, Japan's Nikkei index has declined 13 percent, while Hong Kong's blue-chip index is down more than 14 percent. Even China's Shanghai index -- which nearly doubled last year -- has fallen 6.6 percent since the beginning of the year and nearly 20 percent from its all-time closing high on Oct. 16.
 
This is a market correction resulting from bad economic policy and you can't stimulate the economy out of a correction. You can just slow it down and prolong it. m2:
"Tell it to the Marines" -- or the :new_snipersmilie: Gubermint
It's a Feel Good, and/or "Well I tried" move.
Someone suggested - The classic move here is to take the $1,000 or so they'll be sending you - and buy some gold stocks with it.
 
US Futures off over 450 points, or 4% at this point. Bully pulpit can't stop reality. In a related note, a real estate company owner from Orlando had the guts to say the market was real bad. She had a buyer, but the lender wanted a 750 credit score, 10% down, and 6 months of payments in the bank. WOW! Looks like FHA's gonna be the only game in town.
 
One of the guys who was on Apprentice came into Bella Vista Village and bought up a slew of lots, mostly for taxes or "membership lots", $1000 lots to get access to the golf courses.

He sells them to his investors whom he pitches in big spectaculars and tells them how to flip them for a profit....nice racket.
 
Realtors being sued for over valuation by buyers

Feeling Misled on Home Price, Buyers Are Suing Their Agent

“Brokers aren’t appraisers,” said Mr. Horner, one of the writers of a guide to suing brokers. “They have no obligation to opine about value. But once they do, it becomes a gray area whether it’s puffery or a misstatement of a known fact.”
Here comes the legal liability of a professional; you should have known the value was over market.
 
California Defaults Hit 15-Year High in 4Q

http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/080122/california_homes_defaults.html?.v=1
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- The number of California homeowners who fell behind on their mortgage payments surged in the fourth quarter of 2007 to a 15-year high, heightening the possibility of a jump in foreclosures, a real estate research firm said Tuesday.

A total of 81,550 default notices were sent to homeowners statewide between October and December, up 12.4 percent from the previous quarter and an increase of more than 114 percent versus the same quarter in 2006, according to DataQuick Information Systems.
 
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