Kingdom Business Promise!

Hello to all! I am promising to give an offering of $80/per transaction whether you are buying or selling or both to one of the following ministries as a Love Offering.

This Love Offering will be used as a seed that will give greater harvest in the future by helping to spread the Word of God through the world via either Lakewood Church, Creflo Dollar Ministries, Bill Winston Ministries, Joyce Meyers Ministries or John Hagee Ministries.


Thank you for your support,

Brian Taylor
















Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Housing and Government

Good Morning,
Here is a article found on the AP this morning. They are really trying to get the mortgage crisis turned around out there. Although we may not be experiencing what many others around the country are dealing with it does indirectly affect us. If you are a seller out there right now you have a shrinking pool of buyers in certain price ranges.

We in Heritage Park, both Friendswood and Webster live in one of the most affordable areas. And as you have seen over the past few years by visiting the site that our numbers are usually holding steady or increasing each month from years past.

WASHINGTON – The Obama administration is expected to announce Tuesday that it is expanding its plan to stem the housing crisis by offering mortgage lenders incentives to lower borrowers' bills on second mortgages.
During the housing boom, lenders readily gave out "piggyback" second loans that allowed consumers to make small down payments or avoid fees entirely. While home prices soared, such mortgages were even extended to borrowers with poor credit scores and people who didn't provide proof of their incomes.
But those loans, which are attached to about half of all troubled mortgages, have proved an obstacle to efforts to alleviate the housing crisis. That's because borrowers who are trying to get their primary mortgage modified at a lower monthly payment need the permission of the company holding the second mortgage.
The new plan aims to get rid of that roadblock, said two senior administration officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because the details were not yet public.
The administration initiative, funded out of $50 billion in financial rescue money, relies on a series of payments to mortgage companies as an incentive to modify second loans at lower interest rates. Mortgage companies would get $500 upfront for each modified loan, plus $250 a year for three years as long as the borrower doesn't default.
Similarly, borrowers would get up to $1,000 over five years applied to the principal balance of their primary mortgage, and the government would pick up part of investors' costs as well.
The administration also plans to give mortgage companies $2,500 payments to entice them to participate in the "Hope for Homeowners" program. It was launched by the government last fall but has so far fallen flat, proving unattractive to banks required to absorb large losses.
It was supposed to allow 400,000 troubled homeowners to swap risky loans for traditional 30-year fixed-rate mortgages with lower rates. Instead only a handful of borrowers have been able to qualify, and as of earlier this spring only one loan had completed the program.
Meanwhile, the faltering economy is causing the housing crisis to spread. Nationwide, nearly 804,000 homes received at least one foreclosure-related notice from January through March, up from about 650,000 in the same period a year earlier, according to RealtyTrac Inc., a foreclosure listing firm.
And another key piece of President Barack Obama's plan to keep borrowers from losing their homes is expected to be defeated this week in the Senate. Allowing people to seek mortgage relief in bankruptcy court is opposed by Republicans and enough Democrats to block the proposal. Last week, Democratic aides said the prospects of an agreement looked dim.
Many lawmakers remain worried that such legislation would unleash a torrent of loan defaults, ultimately driving up mortgage rates and introducing fresh uncertainty to an already ailing economy.
Congressional Democrats had championed the legislation, which passed the House in March. But the measure quickly stalled in the Senate amid a multimillion-dollar lobbying effort by banks and credit unions that said the forced easing, or "cram-down," of mortgage terms would impose steep and unpredictable costs.

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What are you still waiting for? Let me get your home SOLD!!!

Want to get your property listed? Give me a call, e-mail me or click on the link to the left for a free market analysis.

So before you call other Friendswood Realtors or Webster Realtors give me a call and lets talk!

I look forward to exceeding your service expectations in 2009.

Your Neighbor,
Brian Taylor

Winner of Coldwell Banker Sterling Society Award
Winner of Coldwell Banker Diamond Society Award
Ranked in Top 100 Listing Agents CB United -Texas
Multi-Million Dollar Producer

(832) 722-1756
biggbee11@yahoo.com

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