Realtytrac
  • Check out our NEW Features!
  • |
  • Login
  • |
  • Why Join?
  • |
  • Feedback
  • |
  • Help
  • Home
  • Join
  • Search
  • Agents
  • Loans
  • Home Value
  • Learn
  • Free E-mail Alerts
  • Testimonials
  • FREE Trial
Top Keywords   [?]
Top Keywords are determined based on what terms are used in the content represented by this source, keywords, dates as compared to other sources.
  • Real Estate (7)
  • California (7)
  • Course (7)
Major Topics
  • Bank Owned (2)
  • Foreclosures (7)
  • Foreclose (1)
Types
  • Land (2)
  • Sales (5)
  • Homes (7)
  • Properties (5)
  • Houses (4)
  • Auctions (2)
  • MORE
Places
  • Long Beach (2)
  • Charlotte (1)
  • San Diego (2)
  • DC (2)
  • Florida (3)
  • San Francisco (1)
  • US (5)
  • Phoenix (1)
  • Washington (2)
  • Dallas (1)
  • MORE
Concepts
  • Prediction (4)
  • Second Mortgage (1)
  • First Mortgage (1)
  • Beach (3)
  • Realtor (3)
  • Training (2)
  • Negative (3)
  • Home Prices (5)
  • Collections (2)
  • Free (4)
  • MORE
Content Type
  • Research (5)
  • Blog (3)
  • Journal (2)
  • Presentation (2)
  • Help (4)
  • MORE
Banks
  • Harris (1)
  • Bank of America (1)
  • Associated (2)
  • Citi (1)
Months
  • October (2)
  • May (5)
  • September (2)
  • March (1)
  • June (1)
  • MORE
Year
  • 2006 (5)
  • 2010 (1)
  • 2007 (6)
  • 2005 (3)
  • 2008 (7)
  • MORE

7 Articles match "California","Course","Real Estate"

The Latest from RealtyTrac MORE
As Home Prices Plummet, When Will You Buy?
Does this make it a good time to buy real estate? have access to credit have fat cash reserves aren't already over-exposed in real estate have a secure job or income stream expect to hold the property for at least two years" But be forewarned, prices are expected to fall further, and will take awhile to rebound, according to many economists. "I Now, in 2009, or will you wait until 2020 when everyone has forgotten about this housing slump and is raving about skyrocketing home prices? Home prices in 20 of the nation's major metro areas in July were collectively down 16.3
www.foreclosurepulse.com - Tuesday, December 16, 2008
READ MORE
Realtors '07 Forecast Looks Promising for Future Foreclosure Activity
If California’s economic indicators stay at their present course, 2007 should be a very good year for investing and purchasing foreclosure properties at bargain prices. At Wednesday’s Opening Session of California Realtor EXPO 2006, Leslie Appleton-Young, Chief Economist for the California Association of Realtors, presented her housing forecast for next year , calling for the state’s median home price to drop for the first time in 10 years and the pace of home sales to continue to decrease. LONG BEACH, Calif. — The CAR forecast also calls for a 2 percent drop in
www.foreclosurepulse.com - Tuesday, December 16, 2008
READ MORE
Foreclosures Won't Break the Market Next Year
The ups and downs of every economic cycle have always been directly impacted by the health of the real estate sector. The severity of that impact, however, is open to discussion — depending, of course, on how you choose to massage the data to prove your point. Delivering the results of his research as part of an economists’ panel on the last day of California Realtor Expo 2006 in Long Beach last week, Christopher Cagan, Ph.D., Director of Research and Analytics for First American Real Estate Solutions, said that even with $1 trillion of adjustable-rate mortgages ready to reset to higher interest rates in both 2007 and 2008, he believes the number of defaults and foreclosures resulting from the increased mortgage payments will be “painful but won’t break the economy or the market.” Basing his comments on data collected on first mortgages — with an emphasis on those originated between 2004 and 2005 — Cagan said, “We have to figure out who has equity and who doesn’t.
www.foreclosurepulse.com - Tuesday, December 16, 2008
READ MORE
  • The Best from RealtyTrac MORE
  • Foreclosures: the Coming California Crash?
    California foreclosure investors now have an opportunity to tap the knowledge of a 25-year real estate investing veteran who correctly predicted the last two major swings in the California real estate market and is on the verge of correctly predicting another. “Bruce Bruce Norris was dead right” about home prices in California doubling in the early 2000s after hitting bottom in 1997, said Michael Carney, Director of the Real Estate Research Council of Southern California. Carney went on to say that he thinks Norris’ latest prediction, made in early 2006, that foreclosures will soar and home prices will plummet in the next few years is also likely to be correct.
    www.foreclosurepulse.com - Tuesday, December 16, 2008
    READ MORE
  • Foreclosures: Chicken or Egg?
    One Southern California economist believes they’re clearly a symptom. “I Michael Carney, Professor of Finance and Real Estate at Cal Poly University in Pomona, Calif., and Director of the Real Estate Research Council of Southern California . Carney pinpointed the root cause of Southern It’s a classic chicken-and-egg question: are foreclosures a cause or a symptom of the slumping housing market? I think there were troubles to start with; that’s what caused the defaults and foreclosures,” said Dr.
    www.foreclosurepulse.com - Tuesday, December 16, 2008
    READ MORE
  • Realtors '07 Forecast Looks Promising for Future Foreclosure Activity
    If California’s economic indicators stay at their present course, 2007 should be a very good year for investing and purchasing foreclosure properties at bargain prices. At Wednesday’s Opening Session of California Realtor EXPO 2006, Leslie Appleton-Young, Chief Economist for the California Association of Realtors, presented her housing forecast for next year , calling for the state’s median home price to drop for the first time in 10 years and the pace of home sales to continue to decrease. LONG BEACH, Calif. — The CAR forecast also calls for a 2 percent drop in
    www.foreclosurepulse.com - Tuesday, December 16, 2008
    READ MORE
  • Credit Card and Mortgage Debt Fuels Foreclosure
    Add mounting mortgage payments to the credit card debt and a gloomier picture emerges for overextended borrowers — in part because so many homeowners are now trapped by payments that are about to soar, even as the real estate market slumps. Among the hardest-hit states were California, Florida, Texas, Michigan, Illinois and Ohio. Debt! No word better describes why millions of Americans are now facing foreclosure.
    www.foreclosurepulse.com - Tuesday, December 16, 2008
    READ MORE
  • Foreclosures Won't Break the Market Next Year
    The ups and downs of every economic cycle have always been directly impacted by the health of the real estate sector. The severity of that impact, however, is open to discussion — depending, of course, on how you choose to massage the data to prove your point. Delivering the results of his research as part of an economists’ panel on the last day of California Realtor Expo 2006 in Long Beach last week, Christopher Cagan, Ph.D., Director of Research and Analytics for First American Real Estate Solutions, said that even with $1 trillion of adjustable-rate mortgages ready to reset to higher interest rates in both 2007 and 2008, he believes the number of defaults and foreclosures resulting from the increased mortgage payments will be “painful but won’t break the economy or the market.” Basing his comments on data collected on first mortgages — with an emphasis on those originated between 2004 and 2005 — Cagan said, “We have to figure out who has equity and who doesn’t.
    www.foreclosurepulse.com - Tuesday, December 16, 2008
    READ MORE
  • Foreclosure "Megatrends"
    questioned Jack McCabe, a real estate consultant in Deerfield Beach, Fla. Searching for Stimulus II? The solution lies in the hands of real estate investors and homebuyers. Lawyers in California — for a fee, of course — will show you how to damage your credit history for a decade or more and “walk away” from your debt. Foreclosures are rising. Home prices are falling.
    www.foreclosurepulse.com - Tuesday, December 16, 2008
    READ MORE
  • As Home Prices Plummet, When Will You Buy?
    Does this make it a good time to buy real estate? have access to credit have fat cash reserves aren't already over-exposed in real estate have a secure job or income stream expect to hold the property for at least two years" But be forewarned, prices are expected to fall further, and will take awhile to rebound, according to many economists. "I Now, in 2009, or will you wait until 2020 when everyone has forgotten about this housing slump and is raving about skyrocketing home prices? Home prices in 20 of the nation's major metro areas in July were collectively down 16.3
    www.foreclosurepulse.com - Tuesday, December 16, 2008
    READ MORE
Subscribe to Feed
Recent Posts
  • Some rental investments d...
  • US Q3 foreclosures, delin...
  • Foreclosure Spat Brews in...
  • More foreclosures and sho...
  • Buying a Home in Time to ...
  • More Foreclosures to Come
  • 3rd Drop in Foreclosures ...
  • Foreclosure Tide Turning?
Free Foreclosure Alerts Search Free
HOME | SUBSCRIBE | AGENT NETWORK | CONTACT | PRESS RELEASES | RSS FEEDS | AFFILIATES | PARTNERS
PRIVACY POLICY | TERMS OF USE | CAREERS | FORECLOSURES SITEMAP | ADVERTISE WITH US | FEEDBACK
 
© 1996 - 2008 RealtyTrac Inc. All Rights reserved.