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Top Keywords are determined based on what terms are used in the content represented by this source, keywords, dates as compared to other sources.
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9 Articles match "Funds","New York","Real Estate"

The Latest from RealtyTrac MORE
New York Versus Freddie Mac: Round One
New York Versus Freddie Mac: Round One By Peter G. Miller     It’s fight time in New York. On one side is newly-passed state legislation which sets tough standards for subprime and “high cost” loans and on the other is Freddie Mac, which says it won’t buy such loans in the state after September 1st, the day the new law goes into effect. This is a big deal because if New York lenders can’t sell mortgages to buyers such as Freddie Mac, they simply won’t make such loans. You can guess what happens next:
www.realtytrac.com - Tuesday, February 3, 2009
READ MORE
Fed, World's Banks Pull Off Global Rate Reduction
Ben Bernanke and his team at the Federal Open Market Committee took the federal funds rate down another 50 basis points (one-half a percent) to 1.5 rdquo; The New York Times reported Wednesday that in a speech delivered the day before to members of the National Association for Business Economics, Bernanke said the economic turmoil has caused the Fed to downgrade its “already-gloomy economic outlook.” As In an unprecedented move aimed at quelling the mounting tidal wave of unrest affecting the world’s economies and investors, the Federal Reserve, in partnership with other central banks around the world, pulled off a coordinated reduction of short-term interest rates Wednesday.
www.foreclosurepulse.com - Thursday, December 18, 2008
READ MORE
Fed's Latest Moves No Real Surprise
Following what is now a familiar and conservative wait-and-see strategy towards the nation’s economy, and reactionary as usual, Bernanke and the Federal Open Market Committee left their short-term federal funds rate at 2 percent. rdquo; The New York Times commented today that the decision to keep the key rate where it is clearly demonstrates the Fed’s limited ability to solve a problem involving the nation’s housing and mortgage markets. Financial analysts who were hoping for some downward movement on interest rates yesterday by the Federal Reserve were disappointed as Ben Bernanke and his merry band unanimously voted to do nothing.
www.foreclosurepulse.com - Tuesday, December 16, 2008
READ MORE
  • The Best from RealtyTrac MORE
  • New York Versus Freddie Mac: Round One
    New York Versus Freddie Mac: Round One By Peter G. Miller     It’s fight time in New York. On one side is newly-passed state legislation which sets tough standards for subprime and “high cost” loans and on the other is Freddie Mac, which says it won’t buy such loans in the state after September 1st, the day the new law goes into effect. This is a big deal because if New York lenders can’t sell mortgages to buyers such as Freddie Mac, they simply won’t make such loans. You can guess what happens next:
    www.realtytrac.com - Tuesday, February 3, 2009
    READ MORE
  • The $3 Billion Foreclosure Payday
    That puts the Wall Street hedge-fund manager among the top 150 richest Americans. During the last housing slump, Paulson was a foreclosure investor, buying two distressed properties; a New York apartment and a large home in the Hampton on Long Island. By 1994, he started his own hedge fund with $2 million and built it into a $500 million nest egg by 2002. You may not know who John Paulson is, but you soon will. Last year, Paulson made $3 billion betting on foreclosures .
    www.foreclosurepulse.com - Tuesday, December 16, 2008
    READ MORE
  • Fed's Latest Moves No Real Surprise
    Following what is now a familiar and conservative wait-and-see strategy towards the nation’s economy, and reactionary as usual, Bernanke and the Federal Open Market Committee left their short-term federal funds rate at 2 percent. rdquo; The New York Times commented today that the decision to keep the key rate where it is clearly demonstrates the Fed’s limited ability to solve a problem involving the nation’s housing and mortgage markets. Financial analysts who were hoping for some downward movement on interest rates yesterday by the Federal Reserve were disappointed as Ben Bernanke and his merry band unanimously voted to do nothing.
    www.foreclosurepulse.com - Tuesday, December 16, 2008
    READ MORE
  • Celebrity Foreclosures
    Rich people, it turns out, are just as vulnerable as poor folks to foreclosure. New York Post celebrity real estate columnist Braden Keil today reported that Veronica Hearst, the widow and third wife of Randolph “Randy” A. acre oceanfront estate in Manalapan, just south of Palm Beach, Fla. million for Hearst, is fighting foreclosure proceedings on her 5.1 The couple paid for $29.9
    www.foreclosurepulse.com - Tuesday, December 16, 2008
    READ MORE
  • Back to Wait and See for the Fed
    The Federal Open Market Committee took the advice Wednesday of all the financial analysts and market watchers and did absolutely nothing with the short term Federal Funds Rate (FFR). After whittling away at the rate over time from a high of 5.25 This move by the Fed is recognition of the fact that further increases in oil prices threaten the economy by pushing up prices in goods and services, according to the New York Times . percent back in August 2007 down to 2 percent last month, the Fed has decided to go back to the wait-and-see stance Chairman Ben Bernanke established when he first took over the reins of the agency back in August 2006.
    www.foreclosurepulse.com - Tuesday, December 16, 2008
    READ MORE
  • Foreclosure "Megatrends"
    Perez, chairman and CEO of the Related Group , the nation’s leading high-rise luxury condo developer, becomes the biggest ‘vulture’ fund buyer in the downturn, what does that tell you?” questioned Jack McCabe, a real estate consultant in Deerfield Beach, Fla. Searching for Stimulus II? In a presidential year, Uncle Sam and politicians nationwide are rushing to unveil new and Foreclosures are rising. Home prices are falling.
    www.foreclosurepulse.com - Tuesday, December 16, 2008
    READ MORE
  • Rate Cut, Real GDP Are Some Positive News
    In the first, and the more closely watched of the two, the Federal Reserve took a much anticipated move to lessen the pressure on the nation’s economy by lowering the federal funds rate another 25 basis points to 2 percent (that’s a long way down from the 5.25 The vote was 10-2 in favor of the cut in the federal funds rate. One day after President Bush pointed the finger at Congress and told the American public to blame lawmakers for all of their recent financial woes, an inkling of actual positive news came out of Washington Wednesday with two announcements from government agencies.
    www.foreclosurepulse.com - Tuesday, December 16, 2008
    READ MORE
  • Fed, World's Banks Pull Off Global Rate Reduction
    Ben Bernanke and his team at the Federal Open Market Committee took the federal funds rate down another 50 basis points (one-half a percent) to 1.5 rdquo; The New York Times reported Wednesday that in a speech delivered the day before to members of the National Association for Business Economics, Bernanke said the economic turmoil has caused the Fed to downgrade its “already-gloomy economic outlook.” As In an unprecedented move aimed at quelling the mounting tidal wave of unrest affecting the world’s economies and investors, the Federal Reserve, in partnership with other central banks around the world, pulled off a coordinated reduction of short-term interest rates Wednesday.
    www.foreclosurepulse.com - Thursday, December 18, 2008
    READ MORE
  • As Foreclosures Mount, Candidates React to the Credit Crisis
    Here’s what the major presidential candidates have to say about the growing foreclosure epidemic: Democrats The three main Democratic presidential candidates — Clinton, Obama and Edwards —have made various proposals for modest reform, including setting up a federal fund to help homeowners fend off foreclosure and providing borrowers with counseling, along with laws to ban predatory lending policies. Hillary Rodham Clinton wants to put an end to prepayment penalties for home mortgages and to set up a $2 billion federal fund to help homeowners avoid foreclosure. With mortgage foreclosures at historic highs, Democrats and Republicans are fighting over a political issue that could have major implications in the 2008 presidential campaign.
    www.foreclosurepulse.com - Tuesday, December 16, 2008
    READ MORE
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