From feedburner.com
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2007 USA Realty Meltdown
Following the effects of the 2007 USA Realty Meltdown as homes go begging for sale.
From left: 107-22 113th Street and 107-28 113th Street (Source: PropertyShark)Between Nov. 30, 2006 and Jan. 19, 2007, Lloyd Varma took out 20 mortgages worth a combined $6.4 million to purchase 10 homes in southern Queens with no money down, though he had no considerable wealth. Varna has since defaulted on those loans. Eight of his properties, predominantly in minority and low-income areas in Queens, were in foreclosure by the end of 2007...
- Comment on Colorado foreclosure filings hit record high in 3Q (denverpost.com)
Remember the mortgage losers -- all those irresponsible Americans who took out loans they could not afford at the height of the housing boom, but then got caught with their pants down by the bust? They're an ever-popular scapegoat for those whose preference is to blame the financial crisis on the moral failings of individual American homeowners, rather than on the lenders and financial institutions who created the incentives for so much bad...
From salon.com
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- Subprime loans plague local Latinos (the-signal.com)
- Study: Subprime Loans Went to Minority-Heavy Neighborhoods (observer.com)
- Banks Take Losses on Short Sales as Foreclosures Soar (news.google.com)
Our economy is about to relapse into the disease that sent us into the Great Depression: Part Deux. Subprime loans caused the initial illness. Option-ARMs will cause the relapse. In the first half of the past decade, subprime loans were king. They were cheap and easy to get approved. Along with the subprime boom came subprime adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs), which were equally easy to afford
for a while. Of course, the A and the R in ARM...
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From freerepublic.com
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Most everyone would agree that the nation's recession was fueled largely by the collapse of the subprime mortgage industry. Many of the people who took out no-documentation, subprime loans could ill afford them. And scores of others who could eventually fell delinquent when their loans reset at a higher interest rate.
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From pasadenastarnews.com
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New York Gov. David Paterson signed new foreclosure legislation protecting homeowners, tenants and neighborhoods. The new law expands on the governor’s subprime lending reform law enacted last year in an attempt to assist homeowners on the verge of foreclosure and minimize the impacts foreclosures have on communities.
The law expands the 90-day foreclosure notice currently sent [...]
From housingwire.com
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- Nationally, delinquencies, foreclosures set record (news.google.com)
- Foreclosures Can Offer Deals, but Buyer Beware (news.google.com)
- Spike in foreclosures blamed on middle-class unemployment (news.google.com)
The Furman Center at New York University found that the probability that individual borrowers receive risky, high-cost subprime loans increases depending on the racial composition of the neighborhood or metropolitan area where they live.
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From cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com
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Real estate news and views from around the globe that make you go, “Really?”
A collection of reports on today’s SEC suit accusing New Century execs of covering up mounting financial woes.
LATEST SUSPECTS: The New Century executives charged in the civil-fraud case are among several targeted by federal authorities looking into alleged wrongdoing tied to subprime [...]
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From lansner.freedomblogging.com
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