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May Home Sales Keep Up Pace in Southeast

According to a survey conducted by the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, a huge majority of brokers in the region observed an increase in sales in May, with 40 percent saying numbers were up "slightly" over last year and another 44 percent saying sales were up "significantly." Builders also indicated sales were stronger than last year, with 38 percent reporting slight increases and 33 reporting significant improvements. However, builders noted that sales growth had slowed from April.

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Agents Predict Price Gains to Mellow

In concurrence with many industry analysts, real estate agents expect price gains to mellow in the near future, according to survey results released by Redfin. Eighty-six percent of agents believe prices will rise over the next few months. However, while a majority of agents expect price gains, a minority expect prices to "rise a lot." The percent of agents who anticipate prices rising "a lot" in coming months fell from 44 percent in the first quarter to just 16 percent in the second quarter, according to Redfin's survey.

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LenderLive to Provide Subservicing for Pingora

LenderLive Network, an end-to-end mortgage services provider headquartered in Colorado, announced a partnership to provide subservicing for Pingora, a specialized asset manager focused on investing in and managing the servicing of newly produced mortgage servicing rights (MSR) portfolios.

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Mortgage Rates Explode as Fed Hints of Taper

Mortgage rates shot up in the last week following remarks from the Federal Reserve that it may be tapering its bond purchases later this year. According to Freddie Mac's Primary Mortgage Market Survey, the average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) rose to 4.46 percent (0.8 point) for the week ending June 27, an increase from only 3.93 percent last week and the highest figure since the week of July 28. The weekly increase is the largest since April 1987.

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Personal Income, Spending Rise in May

With a boost from the calendar, personal income rose 0.5 percent in May--faster than economists had forecast--while personal consumption went up an unsurprising 0.3 percent the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) reported Thursday.

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