Affordable Financial Services LTD Weekly Finance Review

CNNMoney recently reported that the number of foreclosures in February fell 14%, compared to January and 27% compared to February 2010. According to RealtyTrac, that is the largest year-to-year drop the company has ever recorded. While some see this as a sign of recovery in the housing market, the company says part of the decline could be attributed to the fallout over the robo-signing scandal.

On Long Island, the number of home repossessions for February was 717. RealtyTrac data reported in Newsday showed that there were 340 new cases in Nassau County last month and 377 in Suffolk. The Newsday article also showed that, based on data from the Empire Justice Center, a nonprofit organization, Long Island had more than 26,079 homes in the foreclosure process last fall and another 20,985 loans at least 90 days past due. Since October 2010, the number of repos has declined.

Rates for 30-year mortgages have increased slightly. Freddie Mac reported this week that the average rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages was at 4.88%, up from 4.87% last week. The 5/1 ARM showed a slight increase from 3.72% last week to 3.73% this week. The 15-year rate remained unchanged at 4.15% and the one-year adjustable rate mortgage was at 3.21%, down from 3.23% the previous week.

According to Bloomberg, mortgage applications in the U.S. were up last week. Bloomberg reported that the Mortgage Bankers Association’s index of loan applications was up 16% for the week ending March 4 — the biggest gain since June 2010 — over the previous week. The MBA further noted that the purchase index rose 13% last week compared to the previous week (the most since November 2010) and the refinancing gauge jumped 17%. Economists say more people were looking to purchase or refinance their homes as unemployment eased up and more companies sought to hire more people.

An article in the San Francisco Chronicle stated that Republicans have introduced a bill to kill the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP). When HAMP was announced in February 2009, the Obama administration predicted that it would help 3-4 million homeowners avoid foreclosure under this voluntary program. As of December 31, 2010, only 522,000 homeowners participated in the program.

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