Monday, July 30, 2007

 

Jazzlines Pandora Radio Station



Listen To This!


















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Standards Stricter for Borrowers

Subprime problems mean 100% financing harder to get, by Eve Mitchell, Median Staff.

Thinking about refinancing a mortgage or getting a no-money-down loan to buy a home? Something that was relatively easy to do several months ago may be a lot harder in today's stricter lending environment.

In recent months, many lenders have tightened underwriting standards for no-money-down loans, also known as 100 percent financing, in response to the subprime mortgage mess that has seen foreclosure activity soar this year.

The upshot is that today many borrowers are finding it harder to get a loan than a few months ago even though interest rates are at the same level as last year. To qualify, borrowers may find that they will need to document their income, bolster their savings or find a co-signer.

Those who are getting hit hardest by the tightening loan standards are those with low credit scores, subprime borrowers and people who are unable or unwilling to document their income, mortgage experts say.

So what do people need to get a loan if they are having a hard time in today's lending environment? The Full Story and Tips can be viewed HERE.

A related story from U S News; "Lenders Crack Down After Subprime Collapse."

And from BusineeWeek; "The Subprime Mess, Let the Blame Begin."

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Tuesday, July 10, 2007

 

Glen's Market Data - Months Supply

This is a revision from the May Post as an update for what the months supply is doing on a city by city basis for Contra Costa & Alameda Counties.

What is months supply? Basically, months supply is the ratio of inventory to sales. And what it tells us is how many months the stock of homes for sale would last, if sales continued at their current rate.

See how your City's doing.



We currently have a 7.5 month supply of homes in the entire SF Bay Area. How does this compare historically? "A state of equilibrium" is considered 6 months, a point at which you would have an equal number of sellers and buyers. Considerably less, would be considered a "seller's" market, while anything more than that number would be considered a "buyer's" market. Since 1988, our low in California has been 1.3 months in April of 2004. It was even less than that in the San Francisco Bay Area. Our high was in February of 1991 at 18.8 months. The long run average has been 6.9 months. (Statistics are from C.A.R.)

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Thursday, July 05, 2007

 

Happy July 4th

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Monday, July 02, 2007

 

KCSM



Welcome to the Jazz 91 online community. KSCM FM has been broadcasting mainstream jazz to the Bay Area for over twenty-five years.

KCSM has been a favorite of San Francisco Jazz fans and considered by many, including myself, as "THE" Jazz station in the area. You can listen anytime Live by installing their program and "button" onto your PC or MAC. Simply follow their online instructions, HERE. Then, if you ever do hear something "special" while playing KCSM live, you can go to their site to an updated playlist and read what's been playing.

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C.A.R. Reports Sales Down, Median Price Up

C.A.R. Chief Economist Leslie Appleton-Young on KNX 1070 AM, June 25, 2007.

C.A.R. Chief Economist Leslie Appleton-Young discusses the housing numbers for May 2007 and what they mean for the California real estate market. You can listen to the audio interview Here.

And here's the report that she's referring to released from C.A.R. on June 25th;

C.A.R. reports sales decrease 25 percent in May, median price of a home in California at $591,180, up 4.8 percent from year ago.

Here's a look at May's numbers for Contra Costa County;




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