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Will a Sluggish Recovery Cripple Economic Growth?

Though the Great Recession officially ended three years ago, weakened aggregate income is keeping Americans from climbing out of the income slump that resulted. So said Fannie Mae's Economic & Strategic Research group in its latest edition of Housing Insights. In the report, the research group turned its eye to average and aggregate earnings in the last five business cycles to examine the impact of weakened income growth in the current economic recovery.

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Treasury to Receive Billions in Return from AIG Stock

After bailing out American International Group, Inc. at a price tag of $182.3 billion, Treasury and the Federal Reserve are expecting to see their full investment back, plus a return. On Monday, Treasury estimated a return of $12.4 billion after selling about $18 billion in shares. On Tuesday, Treasury then announced it expects to see an additional $2.7 billion after underwriters exercised their over-allotment option to purchase more shares. Treasury's proceeds from the public offering are expected to reach $20.7 billion.

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New Rep, Warranty Guidelines Bring Certainty, Transparency

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac released new representations and warranty guidelines for lenders Tuesday to clarify lenders├â┬ó├óÔÇÜ┬¼├óÔÇ×┬ó risk regarding repurchase claims and define steps lenders can take to challenge repurchase claims they feel are without grounds. Under the new guidelines, if a loan is current for 36 consecutive months, lenders ├â┬ó├óÔÇÜ┬¼├àÔÇ£will be relieved of certain repurchase obligations,├â┬ó├óÔÇÜ┬¼├é┬Ø according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency, regulator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

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Fixed-Rate Mortgages Climb Higher This Week: Zillow

Interest rates for home loans climbed higher this week, just as the European Central Bank intervened to shore up the struggling economy overseas with more euro bonds and a weak jobs report quieted investors abroad. Real estate website Zillow reported that the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage ticked up to 3.38 percent, up two basis points from 3.36 last week. The benchmark home loan had fallen and hovered somewhere between 3.36 percent and 3.41 percent over the weekend. Interest rates for the 15-year fixed-rate mortgage went up to 2.75 percent.

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Credit Union Regulator Eyes UBS for Faulty RMBS

The National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) is suing the global investment firm UBS Securities for allegedly falsely representing the level of risk associated with mortgage-backed securities the firm sold to two federal credit unions. According to NCUA officials, the defaults and losses that resulted directly contributed to the collapse of both credit unions. The suit, filed in a federal district court in Kansas, alleges 10 counts of securities laws violations by UBS at both the federal and state level.

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FBR: Some 6M Borrowers May Qualify for HARP

While FHFA reported a month-to-month drop in HARP refinances, volume under the program remains high, with numbers in the first half of the year (more than 519,000 as of the end of July) already outshining all of 2011's HARP volume. Given the government's estimate that up to 4 million loans could be eligible under the program and FBR's expectation that approximately 6 million borrowers may qualify, the firm expects that originators will continue to see strong volume in the near future.

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Lawmakers Introduce Bill to Expand Refi Opportunities

Lawmakers introduced a new bill on Monday with plans to once more revamp the Home Affordable Refinance Program for current borrowers with eligible loans with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Sens. Barbara Boxer and Robert Menendez, among others, drafted the Responsible Homeowner Refinancing Act to increase lender competition, open up refinance opportunities to all current borrowers with government-backed mortgages, and strike through appraisal costs and upfront fees on home loans. If the bill passes the House, lenders will begin to compete more often with other lenders.

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Minnesota Bank 41st to Shutter Doors in 2012

The FDIC announced Friday the closure of First Commercial Bank in Bloomington, Minnesota. The bank was closed by the Minnesota Department of Commerce, which appointed the FDIC as receiver. The FDIC announced that it entered into a purchase and assumption agreement with Republic Bank & Trust Company in Louisville, Kentucky, to assume all of the deposits of First Commercial Bank. The sole branch of First Commercial Bank reopened Monday as a branch of Republic Bank & Trust Company. Republic Bank agreed to assume of all of the bank's deposits and assets.

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Lexington Realty Trust Announces $480M Acquisition

Lexington Realty Trust, a national realty investment trust that owns, manages, and invests in single-tenant office, industrial, and retail properties, announced a multi-million-dollar acquisition Thursday with a transaction value of about $480 million. Lexington is acquiring Inland American Sub├â┬ó├óÔÇÜ┬¼├óÔÇ×┬ós portion of Net Lease Strategic Assets Fund L.P., which was a joint venture between Inland and Lexington. Lexington has owned and managed these properties for the past several years, since prior to 2007 when it entered the venture with Inland to create Net Strategic Assets Fund.

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