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Author Archives: Ryan Schuette

Ryan Schuette is a journalist, cartoonist, and social entrepreneur with several years of experience in real-estate news, international reporting, and business management. He currently lives in the Washington, D.C., area, where he freelances for DS News and MReport.

Mortgage Applications Fall 2.5% as Refinances Steady: MBA

Mortgage applications fell 2.5 percent last week, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. The trade group found application volume declining by 3 percent on a seasonally unadjusted basis. Purchases fell 0.8 percent from the week before and 3 percent on a seasonally unadjusted basis. The refinance share of mortgage activity stayed the same from last week, hovering at 79 percent, with the adjustable-rate mortgage share of activity ticking up to 5 percent of total volume. Interest rates for fixed-rate mortgages by and large fell with volume.

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Construction Spending Falls in July, Shy of Estimates

Private and public construction spending fell off in July, shy of initial estimates, with private nonresidential spending worse for the wear if trends persist, analysts say. Analysts with IHS Insight shared their concerns on Tuesday with commentary detailing the latest spending numbers from the Census Bureau. According to the report, construction spending declined by 0.9 percent in July, while spending went up 9.3 percent year-over-year. Public construction declined by 0.4 percent.

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Mortgage Rates Hold Steady Near Record Lows

Mortgage rates held steady above record lows this week, as the debt crisis in Europe threatened to upend an increasingly more favorable economic climate. Zillow reported that the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage hovered old lows at 3.36 percent, only after dipping from 3.39 percent last week. Interest rates for 15-year home loans currently average 2.73 percent, while those for 5-year and 1-year adjustable-rate mortgages stay near 2.35 percent. The debt crisis in Europe continues to feed uncertainty for investors interested in stability.

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CFPB Unveils Change of Guard With New Senior Personnel

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau recently unveiled several recent changes of guard for senior personnel. The bureau said in a release on Tuesday that Kelly Thompson Cochran, Chris Lipsett, Stephen van Meter, and Delicia Reynold Hand would move into senior roles. Cochran will transition from her role as deputy assistant director into a new office as acting assistant director for regulations. Van Meter will take up a new position as deputy general counsel, a change from his past role as assistant general counsel for policy with the CFPB.

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Q2 Profits Rise for Independent Mortgage Bankers, Originators

Independent mortgage bankers and originators saw their profits rise over the second quarter, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. The trade group released a statement on Thursday that found independent mortgage banks and subsidiaries clinching $2,152 on average for every loan from the second quarter. That's an increase from $1,654 per loan from the quarter before. Net production income shot up by 107 basis points, a leap from 82 basis points from the first quarter.

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Mortgage Rates Plummet Back to Historic Lows

Just when you thought they were on a rebound, mortgage rates once again fell precipitously this week, with the 30-year fixed-rate home loan slamming into 3.39 percent. Zillow reported the latest numbers on Tuesday. The real estate website found the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage slipping from 3.5 percent to 3.4 percent earlier this week. Interest rates for the 15-year home loan averaged 2.76 percent, while those for 5-year and 1-year adjustable-rate mortgages hovered at 2.38 percent.

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FDIC-Backed Banks Rebound Over Second Quarter

As bank failures dwindle, FDIC-backed institutions continue to see their own coffers swell, with an agency report finding that banks with government guarantees earned $34.5 billion over the second quarter. And banks seemed to sweat a little less over the last quarter. The FDIC reported that banks with its seal of approval saw their year-over-year increases for the 12th straight quarter. Loan balances meanwhile ticked up by $102 billion, increasing for the fourth time in the last five quarters.

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Fed Moves to Delay Stress-Test Rules for Banks

Fed

The Federal Reserve said Monday that it may delay rules under Dodd-Frank related to stress tests for big banks until next year. According to a release, the change would hold off on implementation until September 2013, giving some elbow room to banks, state member banks, and savings and loans institutions with anywhere between $10 billion and $50 billion in total assets. The move follows a December 2011 rulemaking proposal to green-light rules and procedures for stress tests under Dodd-Frank.

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Former Governor Among Five New Board Members for OMSO

Five new faces joined the board of directors at the Office of Mortgage Settlement Oversight on Monday. The five include former banking commissioners, politicians, attorneys, and academics, with Mississippi banking commissioner John Allison and former North Carolina Gov. James Holshouser notably joining the board. Although board members, the five will serve only in functional roles for the mortgage settlement office. None will bring any decision-making power to bear on the national settlement.

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Wells Fargo to Donate $500K in Homes to Vets, Families

Wells Fargo announced recently that it will donate up to $500,000 in bank-owned homes to qualifying veterans and their families. The lender will hand over these properties to veterans and military families through the "Homes on the Homefront" program with Operation Homefront, a nonprofit organization dedicated to supplying onetime warriors with housing opportunities. Some of those qualifications require that recipients serve on active duty.

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