I read an article the other day that shook my core. Mortgage brokers are sure getting an bad rap in the media today and I don't think anyone can better summerize my feelings about the situation. This is just one little snip-it:
"The last time I checked, mortgage brokers didn’t do the underwriting of all these fraudulent and unsupportable loans... it was unvarnished underwriting negligence and pure consumer greed and fraud that drove the market to the edge, and beyond..."
For full article, click here.
Granted, there have been some real losers in the Real Estate field - lenders, mortgage brokers, real estate agents, insurance agents, builders - all alike. But, the state of our current market has shook things up and the cream has risen to the top.
I tend to believe that any con artist who was tripping over themselves to put customers in fraudulent loans for homes they couldn't afford, has now gone onto to an easier gig. Anyone still in business today, I feel, is the real thing. In it for the long haul. Having a vision beyond just how to make a quick buck. Because, trust me, it ain't quick any more.
Inflation Fears Persist
In both the US and in Europe, central bank officials have focused recently on the threat of higher inflation. Monday, the Fed's Fisher pointed to increased global demand as a major source of inflationary pressures. Later in the week, the Fed's Plosser described inflation as a very serious problem for the economy. Fed Chief Bernanke warned that the Fed will "strongly resist" a rise in long-term inflation. He also remarked that the surprising jump in the Unemployment Rate from 5.0% to 5.5% didn't have much impact on the Fed's outlook for economic growth and inflation.
With so much talk about the threat of higher inflation, many mortgage investors positioned their portfolios very conservatively ahead of Friday's big Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation report. The report, however, revealed no startling surge in inflation. May CPI came in slightly higher than expected, while May Core CPI, which excludes the food and energy components, matched the consensus forecast. Mortgage investors were pleased that the news wasn't worse, and mortgage rates declined after the report was released, although they remained higher than the prior week.
In the housing sector, in April pending home sales jumped 6% from March, far exceeding the consensus forecast for a small decline. Pending home sales are a leading indicator of future housing market activity. The National Association of Realtors (NAR) latest forecast predicted that conditions will remain soft in the short term, but that activity will pick up during the second half of the year.
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