Housing market improving, but foreclosures still rampant
Ten years after the housing market collapse Eastern North Carolina seems to be healing, but it appears the military hasn't fully recovered.
Ten years after the housing market collapse Eastern North Carolina seems to be healing, but it appears the military hasn't fully recovered.
Kings County Supreme Court is about to quietly dismiss thousands of foreclosure cases on Tuesday – in what lawyers say will deal a severe blow to homeowners with pending cases. The court said it planned to dismiss all cases filed before Jan. 1, 2016 that have seen no court activity after Sept. Foreclosure News
Naz Dupre carries tubing to be cut on top of a house under construction in Promontory Point Friday, May 23, 2014. In many neighborhoods on the northeast side of Colorado Springs, families are moving into homes while construction is still going on nearby. Foreclosure News
There have been three recessions since the 1990s, including the Great Recession, which took place from 2007 and 2009 and lasted about a year and a half. Earlier, a recession took place in 1990 thanks to growing inflation and debt, followed by the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, which exacerbated oil prices. Foreclosure News
Several U.S. Senators have introduced legislation for a Military Consumer Enforcement Act that would seek to empower the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to oversee and enforce compliance with the Servicemember Civil Relief Act . If passed and signed into law, the new act would amend the Consumer Financial Protection Act of 2010. Foreclosure News
What would you do with a massive concrete house in which most of the plumbing fixtures and cabinets have been removed? Built 15 years ago as a modernistic showcase for more than $ 3 million, the 21,000-square-foot house sits vacant next to an old cemetery in the middle of an 18-acre field. Auto dealer Dan…
A three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit recently affirmed a district court's summary judgment finding that a national consumer reporting agency did not violate the Fair Credit Reporting Act . The court explained that the CRA could not be held responsible for the adverse consequences that consumers may face when a subscriber interprets consumer reports…