Archive for December, 2007



Associated Press – Fed cuts key interest rate for third time in 3 months

The Associated Press
Dec. 11, 2007 08:08 AM

 

WASHINGTON (AP) – The Federal Reserve cut a key interest rate by one-quarter of a percentage point Tuesday, trying to keep the country out of recession.

The reduction in the federal funds rate to 4.25 percent marked the third rate cut in the past three months. Fed officials signaled that further cuts were possible if a severe downturn in housing and a crisis in mortgage lending get worse.

Commercial banks were expected to quickly match the latest reduction by trimming their prime lending rate, which would reduce this benchmark rate for millions of consumer and business loans to 7.25 percent.

The Associated Press – Subprime deal reached

The Associated Press
Dec. 6, 2007 12:00 AM
 WASHINGTON (AP) — The Bush administration has developed a plan to freeze interest rates for five years for thousands of strapped homeowners whose mortgages were scheduled to rise in the coming months.

The proposal was developed in negotiations led by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson with the mortgage industry. It would freeze introductory “teaser” rates on subprime mortgages, preventing them from resetting to higher rates for five years.

White House deputy press secretary Tony Fratto said it would help “potentially a little more than a million” people who can afford payments with their introductory rates, but not if they jump to higher rates.  Fratto said it was voluntary, and did not represent federal intrusion into the private market. Those comments were aimed at countering criticism from conservatives that the administration was violating its free-market principles by pursuing a government solution to the mortgage crisis.

President Bush, who was to announce the agreement after a meeting with industry leaders at the White House on Thursday, has stressed that the deal is not a bailout because no government money is involved.

Release of the plan was coming after news earlier Thursday that home foreclosures surged to an all-time high in the July-September period. The Mortgage Bankers Association reported that the percentage of all mortgages that started the foreclosure process in the third quarter jumped to a record 0.78 percent, surpassing the previous record of 0.65 percent of all mortgages in the second quarter.

The administration’s effort is aimed at stemming a further tidal wave of foreclosures in coming years as 2 million subprime mortgages — loans provided to borrowers with spotty credit histories — reset from their introductory rates of around 7 percent to 8 percent to levels as high as 11 percent, adding hundreds of dollars to the typical monthly payment.

The mortgage companies will offer to freeze the loans at the lower introductory rates as long as the borrowers did not miss any payments at the lower rate.

The program is the biggest effort yet to deal with the surge in mortgage defaults, which have piled up billions of dollars in losses for big banks, hedge funds and other investors while roiling financial markets worldwide. The defaults are the latest economic blow from the worst housing slump in more than two decades. Some economists think the housing bust may become severe enough to push the country into recession.

Two Democratic presidential contenders, Hillary Rodham Clinton and John Edwards, complained Wednesday that, given the risks to the economy, Bush’s proposal did not go far enough. They proposed their own plans that would not only freeze mortgage payment rates but also declare moratoriums on further foreclosures to pressure lenders to reach at-risk homeowners.

The financial services industry applauded the administration for negotiating a plan that will allow free-market forces to operate. The hope is that the five-year freeze will buy time for the housing industry to work down record levels of unsold homes and for sales and prices to start rising again.

A housing rebound would enable homeowners to refinance their current adjustable rate mortgages into fixed-rate loans with more affordable monthly payments.

The big sticking point in the lengthy negotiations was getting investors who have purchased the mortgages after they were bundled into mortgage-backed securities to agree to accept lower interest payments. Critics have said even with a deal, there are likely to be lawsuits.

“The $64,000 question remains: Will investors who might balk at going along with this be able to maintain legal roadblocks and prevent the plan from going into effect?’.” asked Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.

But officials representing major players in the mortgage industry said they believed the plan would withstand any legal challenges and would help at-risk homeowners avoid defaulting on their mortgages.

Steve Bartlett, president of the Financial Services Round-table, a trade group representing the country’s largest financial service firms, said the deal would benefit banks, investors and homeowners since there is a significant cost when a mortgage is foreclosed.

Under the administration plan, the rate freeze will apply to loans made at the start of 2005 through July 30 of this year and will cover loans that had been scheduled to rise to higher rates between Jan. 1, 2008, and July 31, 2010.

The plan represents an about-face for Paulson, who until recently had insisted the mortgage crisis could be handled on a case-by-case basis. However, he and other administration officials became convinced the tide of foreclosures threatened by the mortgage resets represented such a severe threat that a more sweeping approach was needed.

AZ Republic – Development could bring 3,700 housing units

Michael Clancy
The Arizona Republic
Nov. 29, 2007 05:47 PM 
 

The intersection of Tatum Boulevard and Deer Valley Drive is about to get a lot busier. The Falls at Desert Ridge, which gets its first hearing before a city committee next week, is situated just west of Tatum, and the 270-acre development is expected to end up with something like 3,700 units of housing.

That’s 7,500 people – at least.
By comparison, a similar-sized parcel next door, home to Fireside at Desert Ridge, is set up for fewer than 1,000 units.
The newer development will have roads that could relieve the pressure on Deer Valley, its northern boundary. Rose Garden Lane will continue from its current dead end at the Ryan Cos. buildings at Tatum and Loop 101, carrying traffic through to 40th Street. In addition, an extension of Mayo Boulevard will cut through the development’s southwest corner. Mayo eventually will cross Loop 101 and drop south to its current alignment.

The property owner is Rightpath Limited Development, which paid $149.45 million for the land in April. Rightpath is best known for its developments on the west side in conjunction with the new Dodgers-White Sox spring training parks and the development where Cabela’s is located.

Jacob Zonn, planner for the Desert View area, said the developer is eager to start building. He said Rightpath plans to sell pieces of its property to other developers for actual design and construction.

The land has three washes bisecting it, which will be kept natural. A city park, purchased separately, is on the northeast corner, between two of the washes.

A small commercial component also is being planned.

Zonn said some changes were made to a site plan presented to neighboring residents at a meeting at the beginning of December.

But they did not include shifting apartment buildings from along 40th Street to elsewhere in the project, he said.

Required setbacks of as much as 150 feet from neighboring roads should protect people living west of the proposed buildings, he said. But he did not know if the developers would seek permission to build closer to 40th.

The development is planned for close to 1,000 single-family homes and 2,700 apartment, condo or townhome units.

The hearing will take place at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Paradise Valley Community Center. The village planning committee’s recommendation will go to the Planning Commission and ultimately, the city council for final approval.


If you are looking for a home in Desert Ridge area give The Holm Group a call at 480-767-2738.

AZ Republic – Fireside’s community center comes with many perks

Michael Clancy
The Arizona Republic
Nov. 30, 2007 11:44 AM 
 

The new community center at the Fireside at Desert Ridge development in northeast Phoenix is enough to make you want to move there – it’s the only way you’ll get to use it, unless you have a friend who lives there. Of course, the homes are pricey, running from $360,000 to almost $800,000.

Open only to residents, the center provides a strong focal point in the Fireside development, south of Deer Valley Drive and west of 40th Street.
Among its features:
• A gourmet kitchen and catering kitchen.

• Lounging areas with large, flat-panel TV sets and a two-way fireplace.

• A play pool and a lap pool.

• Basketball and tennis courts, playgrounds and climbing walls.

• Picnic areas.

• A spa with saunas in the locker rooms.

• A large workout room, along with two smaller rooms for fitness classes and individual sessions.

• A yoga lawn.

• A coffee bar.

• Modern design and lighting.

Like its award-winning counterpart at Fireside at Norterra, near Interstate 17 and Happy Valley Road, the exterior design is striking with a variety of materials and colors.

Douglas Fredrickson Architects was the architect.

A soft opening already has taken place. A full-scale grand opening will take place in February.   

If you are looking for a home in Fireside or the Desert Ridge are give The Holm Group a call at 480-767-2738.

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