NEW YORK, Aug 17 (Reuters) - Amstar Financial Holdings Inc. (AFLH.PK: Quote, Profile, Research) said on Friday that its Amstar Mortgage Corp. unit was laying off most of the office staff at its corporate headquarters in Houston.
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KANSAS CITY, Mo., Aug. 17 - As we disclosed previously, the tighter guidelines and adjusted pricing we have adopted will reduce loan originations until the secondary market shows signs of normalizing. This reduction in force includes stepping back temporarily from pursuing new loans in the wholesale market, a decision we are also seeing among some of our peer companies. For now, we believe this is the right thing to do economically. Our retail channel will be the dominant source of new loans in the coming months. We will follow through on the funding of loans already approved through the wholesale channel."
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Filed under News, Mortgage Brokers, Mortgage News, Secondary Mortgage Market, Mortgage Products, Wholesale Lenders, Mortgage Blog, Housing Crash, Subprime lenders, subprime meltdown, credit crunch, Liquidity Crisis by Godfather
It’s time for an update on the real estate bubble, which I have been watching since 2003. About a year ago, I laid out a timeline for the real estate boom. Knowing real estate happens in 16-year cycles, I juxtaposed the last boom/bust cycle in the early 90’s onto this cycle. Here’s what I came up with:
1990 (2007): Prices take a serious plunge. One article claims that housing booms are a bad thing and we should hope prices stay low. Increasing mortgage rates are blamed for the bust. The word “recession” is mentioned. Gloom and doom.
That’s next year. How many times do you think you will hear the words “looming recession” next year? More than you want to, that’s for sure…
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Filed under Housing Market, Mortgage News, Economy, Real Estate, Secondary Mortgage Market, Fannie Mae, Market Forecast, Mortgage Blog, Housing Crash, subprime meltdown, Lending guidelines by Godfather
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Reserve, declaring that increased economic uncertainty poses risks for U.S. business growth, announced Friday that it has approved a half-percentage point cut in its discount rate on loans to banks.
The action was the most dramatic effort yet by the central bank to restore calm to global financial markets which have been roiled in the past week by a widening credit crisis.The decision means that the discount rate, the interest rate that the Fed charges to make direct loans to banks will be lowered to 5.75 percent, down from 6.25 percent.
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