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You are here: Home / 2010 / Archives for July 2010

Archives for July 2010

19712 Big Sage, Cottonwood, CA


Quiet setting, end of road privacy. Stunning kitchen, granite counters & custom cabinetry. Large Family Rm. w/ vaulted ceiling opens to attached patio overlooking back yard. Luxurious master suite has attached bath, jetted tub & separate shower. Amenities available including a boat launch to the Sacramento River, private lake, air strip, tennis, equestrian facilities, swimming and boating.

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Lake California Home for sale on Big Sage Dr
Lake California Home for sale on Big Sage Dr
Lake California Home for sale on Big Sage Dr
Lake California Home for sale on Big Sage Dr
Lake California Home for sale on Big Sage Dr
Lake California Home for sale on Big Sage Dr
Lake California Home for sale on Big Sage Dr
Lake California Home for sale on Big Sage Dr
Lake California Home for sale on Big Sage Dr
Lake California Home for sale on Big Sage Dr
Lake California Home for sale on Big Sage Dr
Lake California Home for sale on Big Sage Dr
Lake California Home for sale on Big Sage Dr

Driving Directions

Lake California Dr to left on Chimney Rock, right in Sweet Brier, left on Big Sage Dr house is on the right.

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23662 Millville Way, Millville CA

Millville Real Estate For Saleon Millville Way

Great house located on 3 acres ready for you animals. Open floor plan with great room and seperate family room or office. Kitchen is spacious with lots of cabinets and breakfast bar. Property is fencd and cross fenced with a large pasture area as wells as two seperate decks and a paved patio area.

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City:
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Bedrooms:
Bathrooms:
Basement:

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Millville Real Estate For Saleon Millville Way
Millville Real Estate For Saleon Millville Way
Millville Real Estate For Saleon Millville Way
Millville Real Estate For Saleon Millville Way
Millville Real Estate For Saleon Millville Way
Millville Real Estate For Saleon Millville Way
Millville Real Estate For Saleon Millville Way
Millville Real Estate For Saleon Millville Way
Millville Real Estate For Saleon Millville Way
Millville Real Estate For Saleon Millville Way

Driving Directions

Hwy 44 to east of Palo Cedro, left on Old 44, left on Millville Way, house is on the right look for sign.

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Home Sales Slip 5% in June But Still Higher Than This Time Last Year

Sold HomesSales of existing homes fell further in June but still remained notably higher than year-ago levels, the National Association of Realtors (NAR) reported Thursday.  According to NAR’s report, existing-home sales came in at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.37 million units in June, down 5.1 percent from 5.66 million units in May. However, sales were still 9.8 percent higher than the 4.89 million-unit pace of one year ago.

On a regional basis, existing-home sales tumbled 9 percent in the West, dropped 7.5 percent in the Midwest, and fell 6.5 percent in the South from May to June. However, sales in the Northeast soared 7.9 percent from one month to the next.

The overall decline in existing-home sales in June marked the second consecutive month-to-month drop and left sales 7.3 percent below April’s peak, a separate report by Capital Economics noted. The macroeconomic research consultancy said June’s fall was smaller than the consensus forecast of a decline to 5.1 million units and the drop to about 4.2 million units implied by the pending home sales index.

Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said the market showed uncharacteristic yet understandable swings as buyers responded to the homebuyer tax credit. He said June home sales still reflected a tax credit impact, as some sales had still not closed due to delays. Due to the extension of the closing deadline for this government incentive, Yun said these closings will show up in the next two months.

“Broadly speaking, sales closed after the home buyer tax credit will be significantly lower compared to the credit-induced spring surge,” Yun said. “Only when jobs are created at a sufficient pace will home sales return to sustainable healthy levels.”

As sales fell, total housing inventory increased. According to NAR, inventory jumped 2.5 percent to 3.99 million existing homes available for sale. At the current sales pace, this represents an 8.9-month supply, up from an 8.3-month supply in May. However, raw unsold inventory remained 12.7 percent below the record of 4.58 million units in July 2008.

“The supply of homes on the market is higher than we’d like to see,” Yun said. “But home prices are still holding their ground because prices had already overcorrected in many local markets.”

According to NAR, the national median existing-home price for all housing types was $183,700 in June, coming in 1 percent higher than a year ago. Distressed homes were 32 percent of sales last month, compared with 31 percent in May and 31 percent in June 2009.

Regionally, existing-home prices fell 1.2 percent in the Northeast and inched down 0.1 percent in the Midwest from June 2009 to June 2010. During this same period, the median price in the South held steady, and prices in the West edged up 1.5 percent.

Read the full article at DSNews.com

Bill would shield homeowners’ credit ratings

(Sfgate.com) Struggling homeowners who get loan modifications to stave off foreclosure often discover that their credit score takes a big hit.

A bill introduced on Thursday by U.S. Rep. Jackie Speier, D-Hillsborough, would shield homeowner credit ratings after a loan modification.

“To play by the rules, modify your loan and then have it as a blemish on your credit report is just flabbergasting; it adds insult to injury,” said Speier. “The credit system should not punish responsible homeowners who modify their mortgage payments to keep their homes.”

She said she first learned of the issue through articles in The Chronicle that detailed how some homeowners who made on-time modified payments approved by their servicers were being reported to credit bureaus as making partial payments, taking as much as 100 points off their credit score.

HR5743, the Protecting Homeowners’ Credit History Act, would bar banks and servicers from reporting on-time modified loan payments as delinquent and would prevent credit reporting bureaus from including this information in credit reports.

A spokesman for FICO, whose algorithm underlies credit scores, declined to comment on the bill. The Consumer Data Industry Association, which represents credit bureaus, did not return calls for comment.

In general, financial companies say they report modified payments as incomplete because they show a pattern of not fully meeting debt obligations.

Kevin Stein, associate director of the California Reinvestment Coalition, which promotes access to credit, said he thinks the legislation sounds beneficial because it would protect “people who want to meet their obligations, who are not walking away, who are trying to negotiate with their servicer as everyone is advising them to do.”

Noting the federal government’s emphasis on its Home Affordable Modification Plan, Stein said: “As a society we’re promoting these workouts; then to ding people who have gone through that process – which is no easy process – is very unfortunate.”

Although a special code for HAMP modifications introduced late last year is not supposed to blemish credit scores, many homeowners receive modifications outside of HAMP. Banks can use the special code in addition to reporting the payments as partial. Many homeowners say they were verbally encouraged by their lenders to miss payments in order to qualify for a loan modification – thus hurting their credit score even in advance of getting a modification.

Speier said the bill could be expanded to cover areas of “unintended consequence,” such as servicers encouraging homeowners to skip payments.

House Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank, D-Mass., is co-sponsor of the bill.

Read more: https://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/07/15/BUT61EF049.DTL#ixzz0uMkaDHBC

More Homebuyers Could Be Entering The Market Soon

Home sales may have been trending down the last couple of months, but there is some good news out there.  A survey by Relocation.com says more Americans are expecting to purchase a home in the near future.

The Home Buyerssurvey found that some families are temporarily renting while they do their research and look for the best possible deal.  The survey was not able to determine when the sidelined homebuyers will enter the market, but the results of the survey are encouraging.

Of the 60 percent of individuals moving into rentals, 24 percent were previous homeowners renting temporarily while they look for a new home to purchase. Underscoring this finding is that for many of these families, foreclosure was not the reason for moving. In fact, the number of consumers who moved due to foreclosure dropped by 70 percent compared to Relocation.com’s February 2010 survey.

“While the housing market continues to flux from month to month, we’re seeing strong, continued interest as consumers looking to move start their research with us,” said Sharon Ashser, chairman and founder of New York-based Relocation.com. “These findings suggest that more Americans may be poised to re-enter the housing market this year.”

While it seems that financial and economic issues still continue to exert an effect on U.S. moving behaviors, the survey found signs that the worst of the recession crisis may be over. In the February 2010 survey, 18 percent of respondents indicated that they moved to a new location with a lower cost of living and/or cheaper rent, but this percentage dropped to 7 percent in June. Furthermore, only 4 percent of the consumers in June moved due to a job loss, a drastic drop from the 13 percent who moved for that reason in February.

When it comes to homeownership, the survey found that 18 percent of movers tracked in the June survey were homeowners who moved and purchased a new home, up from 12 percent in February. And an additional 12 percent were former renters who moved to purchase a home. The June survey also found that 4 percent of movers were able to purchase a home for the first time due to the decline in home prices, and another 10 percent moved to a bigger, better home or a better neighborhood.

Shasta County Homes Sales For June 2010

Redding Real Estate Stats June 2010

Shasta County home sales were relatively flat when compared to June last year.   June 2010 had 194 home sales reported in the Shasta County MLS compared to 2009’s 193 homes.

Redding accounted for 114 of the 194 homes sold.

The median sales price for Redding homes was $222,523, down from last year’s price of $240,239.

Price per square foot for Redding homes also dropped  from last year’s $134.42 to this year’s $126.49.

The average median sales price for all of Shasta County was $211,55.

Redding Real Estate Stats June 2010

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530-222-1818
1171 Hilltop Dr
Redding CA 96003

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