Investment Property Mortgages Reach
Freddie Mac: Investment Property Mortgages Search In order to browse this site effectively, please enable Javascript in your browser. Investment Property Mortgages Reach Your Investment-Oriented Borrowers and Reap the Rewards of Cross-Selling Additional Services Want to expand your investment property mortgage business? As part of our Single-Family Seller/Servicer Guide (Guide), you can extend more options to your investment-oriented borrowers by originating 1- to 4-unit investment property mortgages and selling them to Freddie Mac. Originating mortgages for investment borrowers allows you to tap an abundant market and boost your business with cross-sell opportunities for your other financial products. Freddie Mac offers loan options for investment property mortgage originations. You can originate these mortgages as fixed-rate mortgages, Treasury-indexed ARMs, and others. Our flexible execution options include Cash and Guarantor. Use Loan Prospector ® to quickly and easily approve your investment property borrowers. Freddie Mac will purchase investment property mortgages for borrowers who own up to 10 financed properties, however, those who own more than one financed property will need to meet additional requirements. Executions Gold Cash® Guarantor MultiLender Swap Key Advantages 1- to 4-unit investment properties LTV/TLTV/HTLTV ratios per Guide Section 23.4 Purchase, no cash-out and cash-out refinances Additional eligibility requirements apply for borrowers who own more than one investment property Eligible for Cash and Guarantor executions Eligible Mortgages If the subject property is the borrower's only financed investment property: 15-, 20- and 30-year fixed-rate mortgages 5- and 7-year balloon/reset mortgages All ARMs A-minus mortgages If the borrower owns more than one financed investment property: 15-, 20- and 30-year fixed-rate mortgages 7/1 or 10/1 Treasury-indexed Hybrid ARM only The following mortgages are not eligible for delivery as investment property mortgages Mortgages with temporary subsidy buydowns Streamlined Purchase for Homeowners mortgages Alt 97® mortgages Freddie Mac 100 mortgages Affordable Merit Rate® mortgages Streamlined Refinance mortgages Affordable Gold® mortgages Seller-Owned Modified Mortgages A-minus mortgages, when the borrower owns more than one financed investment property Eligibility Requirements LTV/TLTV/HTLTV ratios per Guide Section 23.4. If the LTV ratio is greater than 75 percent, the mortgage must be an Accept or A-minus mortgage or, if manually underwritten, must have a minimum Indicator Score of 720. For More Information Contact your Freddie Mac Account Manager Call (800) FREDDIE Refer to Section 22.22.1 of your Single-Family Seller/Servicer Guide For further details about this product, print out an Investment Property Mortgages fact sheet [ PDF 191K ] © 2005 Freddie Mac Doing Business With Freddie Mac Single-Family Multifamily Debt Securities Mortgage Securities Vendors and Suppliers About Freddie Mac About Us Public Policy News and Information Investor Relations Careers Buying and Owning a Home Preparing for Homeownership All About Mortgages Purchasing a Home Owning and Keeping a Home Calculators and Tools Properties for Sale
Florida Real Estate Listings
Google Directory - Regional > North America > United States > Florida > Business and Economy > Real Estate Directory Help Search only in Real Estate Search the Web Real Estate Regional > North America > United States > Florida > Business and Economy > Real Estate Go to Directory Home Categories Appraisers (6) Architects (4) By County (67) By Locality (368) Commercial (6) Florida Keys (13) For Sale By Owner (2) Fort Myers-Naples (31) Gainesville Metro (8) Horse Farms (1) Jacksonville Metro (26) Miami-Fort Lauderdale (41) Mortgages (2) Orlando Metro (69) Panama City Metro (20) Pensacola Metro (20) Rentals (5) Residential (7) Tampa Bay Area (103) West Palm Beach-Fort Pierce (33) Related Categories: Regional > North America > United States > Business and Economy > Real Estate (413) Regional > North America > United States > Regions > South and Southeast > Business and Economy > Real Estate (44) Web Pages Viewing in Google PageRank order View in alphabetical order The New York Times: Florida Real Estate Listings - http://www.nytimes.com/top/classifieds/realestate/locations/florida/index.html Listings for vacation rentals, home rentals, condos and homes for sale in South Florida, Orlando, Tampa, the Keys, and throughout the state. May require free registration. Maronda Homes - http://www.maronda.com/ Developer of new home communities in areas including Orlando, Melbourne, Jacksonville and Tampa as well as in Ohio and Pennsylvania. Map of projects with links to site plans and floorplans. Employment. Florida Housing Data Clearing House - http://www.flhousingdata.shimberg.ufl.edu Provides a number of sources of housing data in formats that may be used as a basis for local planning, state-level policy-making, and increased public understanding of housing supply and demand. Reports and data. Florida Living Network - http://fl.living.net/ Search by full or partial name, city or town, and specialty. Search returns names, addresses and phone numbers of all agents and brokers licensed by the state of Florida. Link to clickable national map and comparable sites in other states. Casto Southeast - http://www.castosoutheast.com/ Developer of retail and mixed-use projects in Sarasota and statewide. News, history, map of projects. All Florida Realty Services, Inc. - http://www.allfloridarealty.com/ Provides real estate services with offices through much of the state. Information on property listings and purchase process. ELSA Home Inspections, Inc. - http://www.elsahomeinspections.com Provides residential inspections. Includes company overview, services, rates, FAQs. Serves several metro areas across the state. Prudential Florida WCI Realty, Inc. - http://www.prudentialfloridawcirealty.com/ Residential and commercial real estate, with more than twenty offices in the southern half of Florida. Investments Real Estate & Management - http://www.irm-orlando.com/ Information for buyers and sellers, along with related service. Includes list of agents and online chat. Offices in Orlando and Aventura. Real Connection - http://realestatece.com/ Details on continuing education and licensing courses through distance learning. United Country Investment Realty - http://www.unitedcountryinvestment.com Offers residential and commercial services. Search MLS, view company profile. Offices in Odessa, Melborne Beach and Wauchula. The Meek Companies - http://www.meekcompanies.com/ Developer of medical office buildings, diagnostic centers, healthcare parks and dental offices. Florida Luxury Real Estate - http://www.floridaluxuryrealestate.us/ Guides to homes priced at more than a million dollars organized by city and area. Photos, prices, capsule descriptions, links to brokers. Paid submissions. Compass Realty Advisors - http://www.compassadvisors.com Full service commercial brokerage with offices in West Palm Beach and Naples. Specializing in office lease negotiations, marketing, and site selection. Location details. Buyer's Broker of Southwest Florida - http://buyersbrokerswflorida.com Representing buyers of new homes with offices in Naples, Boca Grande, and Sarasota. Atkinson Realty and Auction, Inc. - http://www.atkinsonrealtyandauction.com/ Certified appraiser and auctioneer with locations in Sun City, Leesburg and Bradenton. Eve Realty - http://www.everealty.com Family owned and operated agency with offices in Lighthouse Point and Okeechobee. Includes featured listings, agent roster, company profile. Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web. Submit a Site - Open Directory Project - Become an Editor Modified by Google - ©2004 Google Advertise with Us - Jobs, Press, Cool Stuff...
buy Home [Magazine Subscription]
Amazon.com: Real Simple [MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTION]: Magazine Subscriptions Your Store Magazine Subscriptions See All 32 Product Categories   Your Account | Cart | Wish List | Help | Advanced Search | browse subjects | top sellers | today's deals | gift ideas | newspapers | professional & trade Search Amazon.com Magazines Newspapers Newsletters Web Search This item is not eligible for Amazon Prime, but over a million other items are. Join Amazon Prime today. Already a member? Sign in . MAGAZINE INFO Explore this magazine buying info editorial reviews customer reviews See more images Customers also bought these magazines these other items Share your thoughts write a review write a So You'd Like to... guide tell a friend about this item RATE THIS MAGAZINE I dislike it I love it! 1 2 3 4 5 Edit your ratings Visit the Books Store Real Simple: The Organized Home by Editors of Real Simple Magazine Spec tacular Readers Never misplace your reading glasses again with the hip andstylish magnetic readers from CliC . Sign in to turn on 1-Click ordering. A9.com users save 1.57% on Amazon. Learn how . Real Simple [MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTION] Cover Price: $54.00 Price: $28.68 ($2.39/issue) You Save: $25.32 (47%) Issues: 12 issues/12 months See more images Print a Magazine Gift Card Ordering it as a gift? Give your recipient a personalized Real Simple gift card! ( Flash Player required.) See more magazine gift options . Magazine subscriptions always ship free, and they help you qualify for FREE Super Saver Shipping on the rest of your order! See details . $10 Holiday Bonus Offer: For a limited time, order two or more subscriptions to RealSimple at Amazon.com and get a promotional certificate for $10off a future order. See details . Ready to Renew? Learnhow . Availability: The first issue should arrive in 6-10 weeks. Here's why See more product details Better Together Buy this magazine with In Style [Magazine Subscription] today! Total List Price : $101.88 Buy Together Today: $52.56 Product Details Format: Magazine Shipping: Currently, item can be shipped only within the U.S. Publisher: The Time Inc. Magazine Company ASIN: B00023J4H0 Average Customer Review: Based on 147 reviews. Write a review . Amazon.com Sales Rank: Today: #11 in Magazine Subscriptions Yesterday: #6 in Magazine Subscriptions For magazine orders, your name and mailing address will be shared with the appropriate publisher. This magazine subscription is provided by Synapse Services, Inc. Customers who bought this magazine also bought: O, The Oprah Magazine [Magazine Subscription] Martha Stewart Living [Magazine Subscription] Cooking Light [Magazine Subscription] Lucky [Magazine Subscription] Explore Similar Items : 19 in Magazine Subscriptions , 20 in Books , and 18 in DVD What similar items do customers ultimately buy after viewing this item? 15% buy this item(Real Simple [Magazine Subscription] 13% buy Domino [Magazine Subscription] 7% buy Metropolitan Home [Magazine Subscription] 7% buy House Beautiful [Magazine Subscription] 2% buy Home [Magazine Subscription] Explore Similar Items : 9 in Magazine Subscriptions , 9 in Books , and 5 in Tools & Hardware Editorial Reviews From the Publisher Real Simple is the new magazine for the way you want to live today. You'll find actionable solutions to streamline the ways you manage your life. Systems for reducing clutter, saving time, and reducing stress. Inspiring ideas about home, food, money, clothes, health, work, family, and holidays. Spotlight Reviews (What's this?) Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers. 148 of 189 people found the following review helpful: You've got to be kidding. , February 6, 2003 Reviewer: Auliya "An Avid Reader" (Austin, TX USA)- See all my reviews Beautiful photography, but empty articles, and advertising, advertising, advertising. Every item, on every page, is an advertisement. Everything. Every sentence in every article, every caption, every line in the index. There are numerous special sections devoted to product endorsements, although they're phrased as "tips." They should give this magazine away for free, considering the money they must make off the advertising. Sure, while it's somewhat "handy" to know what's depicted and discussed (usually the URL and price are provided) it makes me a little uneasy. I feel suckered. I feel uncomfortable. Euugh. --This text refers to the edition Was this review helpful to you? ( Report this ) 159 of 186 people found the following review helpful: Real Simple is simply about buying stuff , June 23, 2003 Reviewer: A magazine reader (Austin, Texas) I subscribed to this magazine for a year and enjoyed my first few issues, but I soon noticed that all of the ideas for "leading a simpler life" involved purchasing expensive products. You might as well just flip through a Pottery Barn catalog. They both offer the same fantasy -- "What a stress-free, genteel life I could lead if only I had closet organizers and all-white furniture!" Eventually I simplified my life by letting my subscription run out. --This text refers to the edition Was this review helpful to you? ( Report this ) All Customer Reviews Average Customer Review: Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers. 3 of 4 people found the following review helpful: My favorite magazine! , December 20, 2005 Reviewer: Starr Calooy "The Wordsmith" (San Antonio, Texas)- See all my reviews I have read the reviews and find several to be inaccurate and incomplete so I want to set the record straight! This magazine does have advertisements but they all compliment the subject matter of the copy. I am a business owner/mother/caregiver/author so I truly appreciate and use all of the great organizing articles. I also don't have time to track down where to buy the products they suggest so I find the information provided extremely helpful. This is the first magazine I have ever taken the time to read or even ordered! All the others are so similiar and boring, but Real Simple shows me step-by-step how to accomplish what I need to do for my home, what materials to buy(come on! -a coffee can to store Christmas light strings are not expensive!)and where to get them! I look so forward each month to my new issue. I am buying a subscription for my best friend this Christmas. I also planned my entire Christmas dinner party two nights ago by their suggestions and it was a huge hit. The ads really are a plus- not a negative element! Congratulations on such a big success Real Simple! Was this review helpful to you? ( Report this ) 0 of 1 people found the following review helpful: i'm totally hooked.. , December 19, 2005 Reviewer: K. Santos (New York, NY)- See all my reviews i can't say that i read it every month, but when i do i devour it. i LOVE the ideas and the new product lines. the mag is so attuned to what i crave to see and buy and know. i feel like i've learned a lot from the mag and now i have a 3 yr subscription. i'm totally hooked on this mag. Was this review helpful to you? ( Report this ) 1 of 2 people found the following review helpful: good, mindless reading , December 17, 2005 Reviewer: Dee Dee (San Antonio)- See all my reviews This is a good magazine if you're looking for short, simple articles. The tips are useful, but try to focus on one or two per issue or else you'll be taking on too much. The product recommendations are right on. I have not bought anything recommended in this magazine that was not excellent. My only complaint is that there are, of course, too many ads. Was this review helpful to you? ( Report this ) 3 of 4 people found the following review helpful: Useful , December 15, 2005 Reviewer: Michael J Edelman (Huntington Woods, MI USA)- See all my reviews This is the sort of magazine I think I would have appreciated more back in my student apartment-living, bead-curtain, cinderblock-bookcase, cable-spool-as-table days. That's the design ethic portrayed. Some of the articles are rather clever, and the projects- making a switchplate from a beercan, or building a stylish garden building for $1500- are often novel and useful. They're not all winnners, of course; some project ideas are pretty awful. And as others have noted, much of the content is devoted to mindless fashion slavery and buying. But for the urban single or young couple looking for some cheap design ideas, it's pretty useful. Was this review helpful to you? ( Report this ) See all 147 customer reviews... So You'd Like To... Protecting Your Spines Natural Curves., :by Dr Adam Weiss , Doctor and Author Depression is common for those with chronic back pain... :by Dr Adam Weiss , Doctor and Author The BackSmart Pilates Method ! :by Dr Adam Weiss , Doctor,Author, and Pilates Instructor Listmania! My 8 Favorite Magazines :A list by Anne , health-obsessed runner Magazines for your at home Chef :A list by Psboston7 , 16 Various Magazine Subscriber Recommended Fashion Magazines :A list by designerlooks4less , www.designerlooks4less.com Look for similar magazines by subject: Browse for magazine subscriptions in: Subjects > Home & Garden > Design & Decoration I have read this magazine, and I want to review it. Is there a specific product you'd like us to sell? Tell us about it. Suggestion Box Your comments can help make our site better for everyone. If you've found something incorrect, broken, or frustrating on this page, let us know so that we can improve it. 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Real Estate Prices
Real estate horror stories - Dec. 2, 2002 Enter Ticker Symbol Search CNN/Money Autos Real Estate Money's Best Home Markets & Stocks News Jobs & Economy World Biz Technology Commentary Personal Finance College Credit and Debt Insurance Interest Rates Retirement Tax Center Ask the Expert Five Tips The Good Life Millionaire in the Making Money 101 Moneyville Retirement Planner Savings Calculator Asset Allocator Mutual Funds Money Magazine Video CNN TV Fortune 500 Best Employers Money 101 Portfolio Calculators Real-time Quotes Last 5 Quotes SPONSORED BY include virtual="/fn_adspaces/markets-stocks/last_five_quotes/sponsor.88x31.ad" -- CNN/Money Email newsletters RSS Mobile news Money archives Buy story reprints Find a Mortgage SPECIAL OFFER Personal Finance Your Home Real estate horror stories There's never been a national bust but keep an eye on your backyard. December 2, 2002: 11:57 AM EST By Leslie Haggin Geary, CNN/Money Staff Writer New York (CNN/Money) - During the past three years, real estate has been a shelter in the storm. Since 2001, home prices have gained about 6.3 percent annually, according to the National Association of Realtors . And in dozens of hot markets , from San Francisco to Providence, RI to Topeka, KS, homeowners have seen double-digit price increases over the past year. Next to the seeming flimsiness of stocks, real estate looks rock solid. For the past 40 years, home sales prices have outpaced inflation by one or two percentage points per year, and there has never been a national decline in real estate values. But that's just part of the picture. When you drill down to local markets, instead of steady rises, you may find vertiginous spikes followed by stomach-churching drops. What's more, when busts hit, it can take years -- maybe even a decade -- for individuals who bought at the top of the market to recoup their investment. To see how grim it can get, we looked at annual sales figures for 138 metro areas across the country during the past three decades to spot where local bubbles burst, what drove prices into the cellar and how long it took for property owners to recoup their money. Here are some of the factors that can kill a real estate boom. Population shifts It's obvious. Jobs equal workers. Without work, residents leave, and home sales dry up. Consider the case of southern California. Once home to a thriving defense industry, military cutbacks hit the region especially hard in the early 1990s. Some 1 million individuals left the area, according to Ingo Winzer, president of The Local Market Monitor , a real estate consulting firm that tracks housing prices nationwide. In Los Angeles, home prices shed 21 percent of their value between 1989 and 1996, with the typical house selling for $172,900. (The peak was $214,800 in 1989 following a five year, 77-percent jump.) An exodus can hit smaller communities, too. Syracuse, NY once boasted 250,000 residents back in the 1950s, when it was a thriving industrial city. No longer. Many of those jobs are gone and Syracuse lost a full 10 percent of those inhabitants from 1990 to 2000, when its population dropped to 147,000 residents. Home prices, not surprisingly, fell too. Half of all property owners in the county who sold homes in 1997, for example, sold at a loss. Vacant buildings were not uncommon. (At one point, there were more than 1,000 empty dwellings.) Local recessions Ask housing experts about local busts and one of the first places they'll mention is Houston, TX. When the oil market was kicked in the teeth back in the mid-1980s, home prices in this city tumbled fast. In just three years, from 1985 to 1988, the typical home price dropped by 21 percent -- or from $78,600 to $61,800. Related Stories Did you pay too much for your house? Real estate or stocks? Milking the bubble Rev up your resale value "Prices fell so much that people owed more on than their mortgages than their homes were worth," said David Weil, an economics professor at Brown University. " They'd drive to the bank and drop off their keys to their homes and just leave." Houston isn't the only city where home prices have fallen when the local economy languishes badly. Take the stock market crash of 1987, which hit New York City's financial industry hard. Prices peaked at $183,000 in 1988, and anyone who bought then had to wait until after 1997 to get to even money. Another victim? Hartford, CT. From 1984 to 1988, the typical home price soared 92 percent to $167,600 from $87,400. Then the insurance industry started laying off or moving out. Hartford's population growth slowed to zero. And home prices starting falling. In fact it wasn't until last year that someone who bought at the 1988 price would have made their money back. Fast run-ups in housing values Are markets that have soared quickly especially prone to a bust? That's a question no doubt troubling many homeowners. But the answer isn't simple. Certainly, there have been plenty of hot markets that suddenly turned sour. Consider Honolulu, Hawaii, for example. Back in 1995, the average tab for a house in this community hit a record $360,000 -- a whopping 122 percent increase from the decade before. Then suddenly, prices began to drop. By 1999, a $360,000 island retreat was being unloaded for $290,000, a 19 percent discount, according to NAR. Prices started to finally rise in 2000, but anyone who bought at the island's real estate peak didn't recoup their money until this year. Hawaii's housing woes were tipped off by several factors, not the least of which was the decline in the Japanese economy, which squelched real-estate investment in Hawaii. Honolulu was also in trouble in part because few fundamentals, other than investment dollars -- were pushing the market. In fact, during the boom years, the island's population was climbing at a 1 percent rate, too low to justify the massive run-up in housing values. Bottom line: it's important to look at what drives housing spikes before you assume there will be a catastrophe, said Winzer. Rising interest rates "People tell you that housing never goes down, but that's just not true -- you try to sell a house when interest rates have gone up," said Stephen Cauley, associate director of the Ziman Center for Real Estate, Anderson School at UCLA . To illustrate his point, Cauley points to the early 1980's, when double-digit interest rates were being used to fight inflation. That made the cost of borrowing money for a home almost prohibitively expensive. "It was horrendous for the housing market," said Cauley. "There were no transactions." By 1982, the number of existing home sales had slid to 1.92 million, the lowest number on record, according to NAR. Many markets -- notably Detroit, Providence, Chicago and Philadelphia -- saw home prices stay flat or fall between 1979 and 1982. These days, of course, high interest rates seem a distant threat, though they are beginning to creep up. Current mortgage rates are hovering just above 6 percent for a fixed, 30-year loan. But even if rates go up a full percentage point, rates are still low, said Cauley. How will all this play out? If history is any guide, there won't be one big pop, the kind that usually come with stock-market crashes. But that doesn't make it any less painful. --* Disclaimer Selling? Buying? Click to compare top local real estate agents More on YOUR HOME Your Home: Bracing for higher rates Refinancing demand lags again A rose is (not) a rose TODAY'S TOP STORIES Most overvalued housing markets Risks to the economy in 2006 Which was the worst ad of all in 2005? CNN Money contact us | subscribe to Money magazine advertising -- | site map | glossary | RSS | press room OTHER NEWS: CNN | SI | Fortune | Business 2.0 | Time © 2005 Cable News Network LP, LLLP. A Time Warner Company ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms under which this service is provided to you. privacy policy Reprints of site stories are available.
Las Vegas real estate
Las Vegas Real Estate - Find Realtors and Las Vegas Homes using Realtor.com LAS VEGAS REAL ESTATE Are you looking for real estate in Las Vegas or the surrounding area? Realtor.com has great information about Las Vegas real estate , Las Vegas neighborhoods and suburbs, new and existing Las Vegas homes, and Las Vegas-area Realtors. When it comes to real estate, Las Vegas is a competitive market. Realtor.com stays on top of it for you, offering you the most comprehensive and current directory of Las Vegas real estate listings you'll find anywhere. Take a look at the Las Vegas real estate information you'll find at Realtor.com: Las Vegas Homes: Realtor.com has over two million active home listings nationwide. If a Realtor is listing real estate in Las Vegas or the surrounding area, you'll find it at Realtor.com, along with relevant details like description, property photos, maps, and neighborhood information. Realtor.com's listing of Las Vegas real estate includes both existing Las Vegas homes and new construction, so no matter what your taste or budget, you'll find plenty of home options. Las Vegas Realtors: Almost anyone can sell you real estate, but only Realtors are backed by the National Association of Realtors and are bound by its strict Code of Ethics. Realtor.com is the headquarters for Las Vegas Association of Realtors and is eager to help find a Realtor near you. Home Buying Help: Realtor.com has the information you need for buying real estate in Las Vegas. For all sorts of real estate information -- ranging from how to sell your present home to real estate tax information to finding a competitive local mortgage lender or contractor -- Realtor.com helps you from start to finish.