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San Jose Buyers See Fastest Closing Times

New data shows San Jose, California, homebuyers enjoy the fastest closing times in the nation, with an average of just 41 days to close. Six other cities came in at 50 days or less, including Dallas, San Francisco, and Denver. These markets are seeing multiple bidders, many of whom are pre-qualified and offer large down payments, on the first day of listing.

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Millennials: Want to Buy, Forced to Rent

The rate of homeowners in the U.S. has reached a historic low. Many question if the largest living generation, millennials, will purchase homes at similar rates to previous generations. Apartment List’s annual renter survey included input from 24,000 millennials, which they analyzed to better understand millennial homeownership plans.

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FHFA Issues Request for Input Over Mortgage English Proficiency

The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) is looking to the public for input regarding Limited English Proficiency (LEP) in the mortgage lifecycle. LEF borrowers currently face challenges applying for mortgages because they risk not understanding or relying too much on a source that could mislead them. FHFA looks to better understand the experience LEP borrowers have in order to improve support from the mortgage industry.

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Tight Supply Sends Prices Up 12 Percent

New data shows that real home prices have risen almost 12 percent over the year. Though wages have risen, increasing mortgage rates and tight supply continue to hurt overall affordability. Jacksonville, Florida, came in as the least affordable metro in the nation.

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Rural, Urban or Suburban: Who Wants to Buy More?

Despite talk of the rural-urban divide, new data shows that Americans seem to share the same sentiments about homeownership regardless of their location. In a recent survey, residents in rural, suburban, and urban areas all shared largely similar thoughts on homeownership and its role in the American Dream. The only place the three groups diverged was in the intended length of stay; only 35 percent of urban buyers plan to stay seven years or more.

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Rising Demand, Shrinking Inventory Fuel Median Price Growth

There are few more concrete examples of supply-and-demand economics in action than the housing market. A new report looking at April numbers shows a spike in demand and a corresponding spike in median prices. The B-side, of course, is that while demand rises, inventory shrinks, fueling the current sellers’ market.

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Borrower FICO Scores Hit 8-year Low

According to a new report, the average FICO score of an American mortgage borrower has hit its lowest point since 2008. Currently, the average borrower has a FICO score of just 729. Broken down by lender type, borrowers of bank-originated loans have an average FICO score of 743, while borrowers of independent, non-bank loans have an average score of 719.

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Home Buyers Facing Frustrations

Existing home sales took a drop in April as prospective buyers and middle-income homeowners faced problems in the current housing market. Tightening supply continues to drive up prices. Properties, on average, stayed on the market for a month.

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Small Salary? Buy in Pittsburgh or Cleveland

New analysis shows that buyers in Pittsburgh need just $31K to purchase a median-priced home in the area. Cleveland and Cincinnati also require low salaries, while San Francisco, San Diego, and Los Angeles buyers need the highest salaries in the nation. San Fran buyers need salaries of $161K in order to buy.

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U.S. House Prices Up in Q1 and Year-Over-Year

Quarterly house prices were up for the 23rd time in a row, according to the FHFA’s Q1 House Price Index report. They were also up year-over-year for the 21st time in a row. But Q1’s rate of growth nationally was a lightweight compared to quarterly growth rates of the past few years.

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