Agency Helps Consumers Resolve Credit Report Complaints

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau announced that it is now accepting consumer complaints about credit reporting and will work to help resolve individual credit reporting issues.
“Credit reporting touches the financial lives of nearly each and every American,” writes Scott Pluta, CFPB’s assistant director for the Office of Consumer Response. “Credit reports affect whether or not you are able to get a credit card, a home loan, an auto loan, or a student loan, the ability to rent an apartment or get hired, and even tasks as simple as getting a cell phone or electricity for your home. It also can affect how affordable or expensive those things are for you.”
As such, CFPB says it will now help consumers with individual complaint assistance on issues with their credit report. Issues may include incorrect information on a credit report; improper use of a credit report; being unable to get a copy of a credit score or file; or problems with credit monitoring or identify protection services.
For consumers who think there is an error on their credit report, CFPB first recommends they go through the credit bureau’s process for trying to fix any problems. But for those who aren’t satisfied with the end result, the CFPB encourages consumers to contact the agency for assistance in resolving the issue.
CFPB says that it is using the submitted complaints as a way to better understand the challenges consumers face with credit reporting agencies.
Consumers can submit a complaint at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's Web site, www.consumerfinance.gov/Complaint.
Source: “Now Accepting Credit Reporting Complaints,” Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (Oct. 22, 2012)

Falling Foreclosures Pushing Up Home Prices

As foreclosure backlogs have decreased, so have many of the big discounts on home prices. The slowdown in foreclosures is partially behind the recent rise in home prices, some economists say.
“Deeply discounted existing homes have been subject to strong demand from cash buyers and investors looking to lock into housing’s attractive income returns,” says Paul Diggle, a housing economist at Capital Economics. “The supply of such homes, meanwhile, has been dwindling. That has bid up existing house prices, particularly at the lower end of the price spectrum."
The median price of existing homes nationwide was 9.5 higher in August compared to a year ago, and new home prices were up 17 percent in that same time period.
Distressed properties typically sell for big discounts. For example, in 2007 during a nationwide foreclosure surge, foreclosures tended to sell for about a third of the median price of the home. The housing markets with some of the largest price falls tended to have the highest number of distressed home sales.
Lately, foreclosures have been posting big drops. Last month, new foreclosure filings reached a five-year low, according to RealtyTrac, a real estate research firm that tracks foreclosure housing data.
“There is a shortage of inventory — as crazy as it sounds to say that,” says Daren Blomquist, a RealtyTrac spokesman. “In a lot of market there's less inventory of foreclosed properties than there is demand. You’re hearing about multiple bids for these properties.”
Source: “Foreclosure Slowdown Pushing Home Prices Higher,” NBC News (Oct. 11, 2012)

Foreclosures Drop to 5-Year Lows

Foreclosures continue to do the opposite of what most analysts had predicted: They keep falling rather than rising.
Foreclosure filings in September fell 7 percent from August and are down 16 percent from last September, RealtyTrac reported Thursday. Foreclosure filings include default notices, scheduled auctions, and bank repossessions.
The number of foreclosure filings in September reached their lowest level since July 2007. What’s more, foreclosure filings have decreased 13 percent in the third quarter compared to the third quarter of 2011, marking the ninth consecutive quarter with an annual decrease in foreclosure activity, RealtyTrac reports.
“We’ve been waiting for the other foreclosure shoe to drop since late 2010, when questionable foreclosure practices slowed activity to a crawl in many areas, but that other shoe is instead being carefully lowered to the floor and therefore making little noise in the housing market — at least at a national level,” says Daren Blomquist, vice president at RealtyTrac. “Make no mistake, however, the other shoe is dropping quite loudly in certain states, primarily those where foreclosure activity was held back the most last year.”
A backlog of delayed foreclosures in certain states may be problematic in some areas soon, Blomquist says, particularly in judicial states, where foreclosures must be approved by a court. Florida, Illinois, Ohio, New Jersey, and New York have posted the largest year-over-year increases in foreclosure activity.
Meanwhile, other states are seeing large drops in foreclosure activity, mostly centered in “non-judicial” states, where foreclosures do not have to be court-approved. For example, states like California, Georgia, Texas, Arizona, and Michigan have posted large drops in foreclosure activity.
Source: RealtyTrac

Shadow Inventory Drops 10% From Last Year

Predictions that the nation’s shadow inventory would rapidly rise have yet to materialize, as the shadow inventory continues to show signs of dropping, according to the latest report reflecting July data from CoreLogic. The nation’s shadow inventory has fallen 10.2 percent in July compared to a year ago.

As of July, 2.3 million properties were considered in residential shadow inventory, which represents a six-month supply. Of those properties, 1 million are from seriously delinquent loans; 900,000 are in some stage of foreclosure; and 345,000 are REOs, according to CoreLogic’s report.

Shadow inventory reflects the number of distressed homes that have not yet been listed on the multiple listing service but will likely reach the market soon.

“Broadly speaking, the shadow inventory continued to shrink in July,” says Anand Nallathambi, president and CEO of CoreLogic. “The reduction is being driven by a variety of resolution approaches. This is yet another hopeful sign that the housing market is slowly healing.”

Serious delinquencies, a main driver of shadow inventory, fell the most from April to July in Arizona (3.2%), Pennsylvania (2.8%), New Jersey (2.3%), Delaware (2.2%), and Maine (2.2%), according to CoreLogic.

CoreLogic calculates the shadow inventory by figuring the number of properties that are seriously delinquent, in foreclosure, and held as an REO by banks but not yet listed on the MLS.
Source: CoreLogic

Falling Foreclosures Mark Big Step in Recovery

Foreclosures continue to show signs of dropping across the country. In August, there were 57,000 foreclosures completed nationwide, down from 75,000 one year ago, according to CoreLogic's National Foreclosure Report for that month .
As of August, about 1.3 million homes — or 3.2 percent of all homes with a mortgage — were in the national foreclosure inventory or in some stage of foreclosure. In August 2011, that number stood at 1.4 million.
“The continuing downward trend in foreclosures and a gradual clearing of the shadow inventory are important signals that the recovery in housing is gaining traction,” says Anand Nallathambi, CEO of CoreLogic. “The reduction in foreclosure volumes is to some degree being facilitated by the rising popularity of alternative resolution methods, such as short sales and loan modifications.”
August marked the fourth consecutive month of fewer foreclosures nationwide. Still, some housing markets are facing higher concentrations of foreclosures than others.
In particular, five states — California, Florida, Michigan, Texas, and Georgia — account for nearly half of all completed foreclosures nationwide in the past year, says Mark Fleming, CoreLogic’s chief economist.
The states with the highest percentages of foreclosure inventories are Florida (11 percent), New Jersey (6.5 percent), New York (5.2 percent), Illinois (4.8 percent), and Nevada (4.6 percent).
Meanwhile, the states boasting the lowest number of completed foreclosures in the last year are: South Dakota, District of Columbia, Hawaii, North Dakota, and Maine.
Source: CoreLogic

Obama, Romney Spar on Mortgage Rules

Daily Real Estate News | Thursday, October 04, 2012
Mortgage rules being drafted by federal banking regulators came under the spotlight last night in the first election debate between President Barack Obama and his Republican challenger, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.
The President defended provisions in the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, enacted in 2010, as necessary to prevent a repeat of the loose lending practices that resulted in the country’s financial crisis in 2007. “Does anybody out there think that the big problem we had is that there was too much oversight and regulation of Wall Street?” Obama said midway through the 90-minute debate.
Gov. Romney cited the qualified mortgage (QM) rule as a key example of the problems Dodd-Frank has created in the mortgage market, because the law left it unclear what a qualified mortgage looks like. That has created confusion among lenders, hurting mortgage availability to consumers.
“Dodd-Frank correctly says we need to have qualified mortgages,” Romney said, “and if you give a mortgage that’s not qualified, there are big penalties, except they [lawmakers] didn’t ever go on and define what a qualified mortgage was. It’s been two years. We don’t know what a qualified mortgage is yet. So banks are reluctant to make loans, mortgages. Try and get a mortgage these days. It’s hurt the housing market because Dodd-Frank didn’t anticipate putting in place the kinds of regulations you have to have. It’s not that Dodd-Frank always was wrong with too much regulation. Sometimes they didn’t come out with a clear regulation.”
The qualified mortgage rule is intended to ensure lenders make loans only to borrowers who can demonstrate a reasonable ability to repay them. NAR’s position is that the definition should be broad, rather than prescriptive, so lenders can make safe, affordable mortgages to all creditworthy borrowers, not just those with the strongest credit profiles.
The candidates’ discussion of the QM rule was the only time housing came up in the debate. They also sparred over a broad range of domestic issues, including the economy, taxation, the federal deficit, health care, energy, and education.
On taxation, Gov. Romney said he wants to reduce rates across the board, including bringing the top corporate rate down to 25 percent from 35 percent, and decrease deductions and credits.
“I want to bring down the tax burden on middle-income families,” he said. “And I’m going to work together with Congress to say, OK, what — what are the various ways we could bring down deductions, for instance? One way, for instance, would be to have a single number. Make up a number, $25,000, $50,000. Anybody can have deductions up to that amount. And then that number disappears for high-income people. That’s one way one could do it.”
President Obama said he wants to continue existing tax rates, although for households with incomes of more than $250,000 a year, rates should return to what they were in the 1990s. He also said he would seek to bring down the top tax rate for small businesses.
On health care, Obama defended the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, enacted in 2010, saying premium increases last year rose “slower than any time in the last 50 years. So we’re already beginning to see progress.”
Romney said he would seek to replace the law, although he supports the law’s protection for people with preexisting conditions and the provision enabling adult children to stay on parents’ coverage.
— Robert Freedman, REALTOR® Magazine