Home
loan bargains are turning sour - South Florida's
housing slowdown is starting to spell trouble
for homeowners who took out exotic mortgages during
the recent boom
You've
heard the pitches for home mortgages that just
about anyone could get: 100 percent financing!
No closing costs! One percent interest! Low, looow
monthly payments!
A lot of South Floridians did indeed rush into
these unconventional mortgages in search of a
bargain. Now some are finding themselves trapped
by monthly payments that are about to soar, even
as the real estate market slumps.
The result: It's getting a lot harder for borrowers
to make their payments. Mortgage delinquencies
are already beginning to tick up, and more defaults
down the line could dump homes for sale on a market
that already has too many of them.
Cynthia Cariseo is struggling to make interest-only
payments on an option adjustable-rate mortgage
for the Dania Beach town house she bought last
year.
Housing
sales down from year ago - But mortgage rates
remain at low ebb
Third quarter housing sales were down from the
record-setting span a year ago, but Illinois Realtors
point out that the market remains strong with
mortgage interest rates remaining near 45-year
historic lows.
The recently released figures from the Illinois
Association of Realtors show total home sales
were down 14.7 percent in the third quarter. That's
46,759 homes sold compared to 54,804 homes sold
in the period July through September of 2005.
Fewer homes were sold in metro-east from July
through September than that same span a year ago.
St. Clair County sales were down by 16.5 percent,
Monroe County numbers decreased by 11.8 percent
and Madison County was off by 9.2 percent.
However, interest rates for 30-year, fixed-rate
mortgages remained low, averaging 6.6 percent,
according to the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp.
Greater Gateway Association of Realtors Executive
Director Al Suguitan, who oversees real estate
activity in Madison, Calhoun, Jersey, Fayette,
Montgomery, Greene and part of Macoupin counties,
said the decrease in sales is not very significant.
Suguitan believes the Illinois housing market
is undergoing a correction.
Homes
for sale supply rises despite low mortgage rates
With
sales still cooling, the supply of homes for sale
continues to rise in the Oklahoma City area despite
mortgage rates remaining at historic lows -- even
after inching up for months.
October ended with a 5.4-month supply of homes
on the market, up from a five-month supply in
August and a four-month supply at the start of
the year, according to The Oklahoman's analysis
of data from the Oklahoma City Metro Association
of Realtors. The supply was determined by dividing
the number of listings for sale at the end of
October by the average number of closings over
the past 12 months.
"It's been slow. This (was) probably the
slowest summer I've had since I've been back in
Oklahoma," said Linda Finch, a Realtor associated
with Paradigm Realty in Oklahoma City.
Finch said she's never had a down year in the
home-selling business. She left Oklahoma for California
and a new career in real estate in 1984 when her
oil-business job went bust with so many others.
She said she hit Contra Costa County, Calif.,
as it was recovering from a housing downtown,
then moved back to Oklahoma City in 1989, after
the worst of the oil and real estate bust here.
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