Help for Homeowners Facing Foreclosure
November 20, 2008
Everyone seems to agree that flooding the market with empty, foreclosed homes does not help neighborhoods maintain stability – either as a way of living, or regarding the value of homes. Empty homes do nothing for a neighborhood.
Recently some organizations are taking tentative steps to allow homeowners who are defaulting on their mortgage to remain in their homes –at least for the time being.
Fannie and Freddie Mac have announced that they are freezing foreclosure sales until after the new year while they review strategies and the future of their organizations.
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. and Citigroup Inc. recently announced foreclosure-prevention programs that aim to reduce interest rates, extend repayment schedules and, in the case of Citigroup, reduce loan amounts, to help borrowers keep their homes. But the programs have focused primarily on loans wholly owned by those companies because they feel they have more authority to rework those mortgages.
HSBC is also making more options available to more people. For example, it is contacting customers before their adjustable-rate loans reset to higher rates and freezing the current rate or allowing the borrower to pay a rate below what the new rate would be. The bank also is lowering fixed rates for selected borrowers. All this in an effort to stave of foreclosures.
One way of stabilizing markets where supply exceeds demand is to regulate supply. That way the people who can buy homes can buy from sellers who can’t afford to stay in their current home. But, amazingly enough, new home construction is still going on – even in saturated markets. Merrill Lynch economist David Rosenberg suggests, only half-jokingly, that the Treasury should impose a moratorium on home building. "It sounds like lunacy, but we have to destroy the housing capital stock to help put a floor under the market," he said.
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Local Information for Newburgh, IN
Latitude: 37.946579 -- Longitude: -87.403735
Other Area Cities:
Evansville
Newburgh
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John Sprinkle landed here in the spring of 1803, thirteen years before Indiana entered the Union as the 19th state. Sprinkle started the first settlement in what is now Warrick County. Originally called Sprinklesburg, later Newburgh (in 1837), the community grew to be the largest riverport between Cincinnati and New Orleans by 1850.
On July 18, 1862, Newburgh was the first town north of the Mason-Dixon line to be captured by the Confederate forces during the American Civil War. Colonel Adam R. Johnson, with a partisan band, crossed the Ohio River and confiscated supplies and ammunition without a shot being fired. The Confederates would have been unable to shell the city (as promised) had Newburgh put up a fight. The Confederates' 'cannons' were an assemblage of stove pipe, a charred log, and wagon wheels.
-- Source: Wikipedia.com
Indiana 2000 Census Population Profile Map
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Newburgh |
Indiana |
United States |
|---|
| Population |
3,088 |
6,080,485 |
281,421,906 |
|---|
| Median age |
39.1 |
35.2 |
35.3 |
|---|
| Median age for Male |
38 |
33.9 |
34 |
|---|
| Median age for Female |
40 |
36.5 |
36.5 |
|---|
| Households |
1,369 |
2,336,306 |
105,480,101 |
|---|
| Household population |
3,072 |
5,902,331 |
273,643,273 |
|---|
| Average household size |
2.24 |
2.53 |
2.59 |
|---|
| Families |
890 |
1,602,501 |
71,787,347 |
|---|
| Average family size |
2.79 |
3.05 |
3.14 |
|---|
| Housing units |
1,478 |
2,532,319 |
115,904,641 |
|---|
| Occupied units |
1,369 |
2,336,306 |
105,480,101 |
|---|
| Vacant units |
109 |
196,013 |
10,424,540 |
|---|
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Ruth Brinkley
ERA First Advantage Realty, Inc
8711 West Hwy 66
Newburgh, IN 47630
VOICE: 812-455-8216
FAX: 812-853-5276
TOLL FREE: 888-416-0164
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