Tuesday, September 27, 2011


Group Breaks Down U.S. Debt Into Family Budget
Sep 27, 2011 5:39 PM EDT

America's ever-growing debt crisis is in the trillions -- more than $14 trillion, give or take a few billion.
That's a lot of zeros, numbers so large they're sure to make Americans numb when trying to get their arms around what it means to them.
But what would the federal debt crisis look like if you set it up as a household budget?
A heck of a lot simpler, according to new figures from one Tea Party group, which estimates the government "household" spends nearly twice as much as it takes in every year, has a credit card bill nearly seven times annual income and cuts back less than 2 percent of that spending in an effort to control the debt.
"We had discussed about how any citizen needs to understand what the proposed cuts mean," said Laurie Newsom, president of the Gainesville, Fla., Tea Party. "One of our members had figured it out and put it in terms of a household budget. If you ran a household with these numbers, you would see that it's simply not enough."
The group looked at some key figures, mainly tax revenue, the current federal budget, debt and budget cuts, and divided each figure by $100 million, in an effort to break it down into simple terms that most Americans can comprehend. The group posted its findings online and came up with a household with an average family income of $21,700. But that "family" spent nearly twice that -- $38,200 -- and has an existing credit card balance of a whopping $142,710.
"Everyone tries to keep things extremely simple for these things meant for general public consumption and of course there's a give-and-take with that," said Seth Rabinowitz, a partner with Silicon Associates, an economics-focused management consulting firm based in California. "I would make it clearer for the layman.They used the line 'Money the family spent'...but really that means, 'Money the family spent (last year and intends to spend this year again).' "
"However, when you remove those eight zeros, the $385 spending cuts obviously aren't even visible. They don't even make a dent," he said.
The bottom line, according to Newsom: "Cuts won't take care of it. You need business growth, which we wouldn't have in a regulatory environment."

Monday, September 19, 2011

Thursday, September 15, 2011

More house's in Illinois under water. But don't lose hope this is the best time to buy. Buy low and sell high. Those with jobs will make out like bandits. Those losing  their homes can always buy a home again after foreclosure in three years or two years after bankruptcy 7.

Read the full story from the Chicago Tribune.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

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Average rates vs Mortgage Applications


Today's RatesTODAYYESTERDAYCHANGE
30 Yr FRM4.13%4.07%0.06
15 Yr FRM3.32%3.31%0.01
FHA 30 Year Fixed3.82%3.78%0.04
Jumbo 30 Year Fixed4.38%4.39%-0.01
5/1 Yr ARM3.13%3.10%0.03
Updated: 9/13/11 4:36 PM
Rates updated daily.
FHFARATEPOINTSCHANGE
15 Yr. Fixed4.39%1.150.09
30 Yr. Fixed4.69%0.88-0.10
MBA
30 Yr. Fixed4.17%0.97-0.06
15 Yr. Fixed3.40%1.17-0.01
Freddie Mac
30 Yr. Fixed4.12%0.70-0.10
15 Yr. Fixed3.33%0.60-0.11
1 Yr. ARM2.84%0.60-0.09
5/1 Yr. ARM2.96%0.60-0.11
Source: FHFA, MBA, Freddie Mac
IllinoisTODAYYESTERDAYCHANGE 
30 Yr FRM4.21%4.26%-0.06%» more info
15 Yr FRM3.47%3.53%-0.06%» more info
5/1 Yr ARM2.77%2.95%-0.18%» more info
Updated: 9/14/11 8:48 AM

Follow Mortgage Rates with our Free Daily Rate Update
Average Rates vs. Mortgage Applications200820105001,0001,5002,0002,5003.004.005.006.007.00

Mortgage Rates: Same Rates, Slightly Higher Borrowing Costs

Here is something interesting cost are going higher but rates remain the same. When shopping for a mortgage loan keep this in mind.


Mortgage Daily News:
Today's post might as well be yesterday's.  Precious few differences exist between today and yesterday in the world of Mortgage Rates.  Whereas things slightly improved yesterday, they were slightly weaker today.