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PA Mortgages & Pennsylvania Refinance at Today's Lowest Mortgage Rates
If you're searching for a mortgage in Pennsylvania, PA Mortgage Now wants to help you find a PA mortgage broker that works for you. A PA mortgage broker that will provide you with a loan based on the lowest PA mortgage interest rates currently available today.
We work hard to provide our website visitors with the best PA mortgage and refinance information, we strive to find the lowest PA mortgage interest rates available and the lowest total cost mortgages for both new home PA mortgages and PA refinances.
The PA Mortgage Now staff continuously searches out the latest loan trends to offer you information about today's best PA mortgages and PA refinance loan programs. Every day we strive to define the best current programs and the lowest PA mortgage interest rates available.
This website is a service for PA mortgage borrowers! PA Banks normally can only offer borrowers their own private loan programs. They try to fit you into their loan program - instead of searching the entire mortgage market for the program that best fits your current PA mortgage needs. Fill out this short no obligation form and you'll receive up to 4 loan offers within hours then just choose the one that best meets your needs.
Weekly mortgage applications rise for first time in three weeks (at MarketWatch)
Weekly mortgage applications rise for the first time in three weeks, the Mortgage Bankers Association says Wednesday.
Five things to consider before buying a pad for your college kid (MarketWatch)
Rising college costs are causing some parents to consider an alternate housing plan for their students: Theyâre bypassing the dorm and off-campus apartments in favor of purchasing a condominium or single-family home.
Even the best borrowers will feel the brunt of the credit crisis (at MarketWatch)
The credit crunch is the one area that many consumers think they can sidestep if their financial situation is not perilous. After all, the term âcredit crunchâ was just put into the Concise Oxford English Dictionary, defined as âa severe shortage of money or credit,â so anyone with decent credit or stable cash flow is likely to believe that credit headlines represent someone elseâs problems.
Where real-estate market may be headed, and how to plan for it (MarketWatch)
Like everyone else, I can only guess the near-term path of the real-estate market. With that disclaimer on the books, hereâs my guess.
Mortgage applications off 1.5% on week-to-week basis: MBA (at MarketWatch)
Fewer applicants seek mortgages, with the volume of applications filed last week down a seasonally adjusted 1.5% compared with the last week of July, the Mortgage Bankers Association says.
CORRECT: Pending home sales index rises 5.3% in June: NAR (at MarketWatch)
In a sign that the U.S. housing market may strengthen in coming months, an index of sales contracts on previously owned U.S. homes rises 5.3% in June from the prior month, the National Association of Realtors reports.
New fees by Fannie Mae may drive mortgage rates higher (MarketWatch)
The average rate on the 30-year fixed mortgage remained flat this week, and other mortgage rates moved little, according to Freddie Macâs weekly survey released on Thursday. But a new fee structure announced by Fannie Mae may push rates higher in the weeks ahead.
Builder CEO decries elimination of seller-funded down-payment aid (at MarketWatch)
The chief executive of one of the nationâs largest home builders on Tuesday vented his frustration over new housing legislation and the elimination of some down-payment assistance for buyers, saying the move will further weaken the sagging market.
Residents stay put as housing slumps, reshaping U.S. migration (at MarketWatch)
Something happened last year in Chicago that hasnât been seen since 2001: Instead of losing residents, the Second City actually gained population.
The hidden tax traps in the housing-rescue bill (MarketWatch)
From a tax perspective, the housing bill is likely to cause more upset than calm. Here is a look at five areas where tax law was changed along with housing law, and the good news and bad news that goes along with each:
President signs far-reaching housing bill (at MarketWatch)
President Bush signs legislation that consumers, industry and lawmakers hope will shore up the housing market, provide an emergency safety net for mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and help hundreds of thousands avoid foreclosure.
The hidden tax traps in the housing-rescue bill (MarketWatch)
From a tax perspective, the housing bill is likely to cause more upset than calm. Here is a look at five areas where tax law was changed along with housing law, and the good news and bad news that goes along with each:
Fine print in housing bill mutes benefits to consumers (at MarketWatch)
One of the highlights of the housing bill waiting to be signed by President Bush is a tax credit of up to $7,500 for first-time home buyers. But read a little closer and it doesnât seem quite as appealing for buyers: that credit has to be paid back.
Massive housing-relief bill awaits president's signature (at MarketWatch)
As the economy continues to wilt under the housing marketâs strain, beleaguered homeowners, the housing industry, Congress, regulators and others are awaiting President Bushâs signature on massive legislation that promises relief.
Inflation fears send mortgage rates soaring (at MarketWatch)
Mortgage rates spike this week on inflation fears, with the benchmark 30-year, fixed-rate loan soaring more than a quarter percentage point to a national average 6.63%, its highest level in nearly a year, Freddie Mac says.
Mortgage credit to stay tight for months; what you need to know (at MarketWatch)
In todayâs mortgage market, thereâs still money out there for those with good credit scores, significant down payments and decent income streams.
After IndyMac failure, be sure your accounts are properly insured (at MarketWatch)
"You can count on us" was their slogan. Not quite. IndyMac Bancorp Inc. had $1 billion of uninsured, unsecured, and unprotected consumer deposits at stake. The 10,000 uninsured depositors will get 50 cents on the dollar now and wait for the rest.
How turmoil over Fannie, Freddie could affect morgtage market (at MarketWatch)
Get ready to see mortgage rates rise somewhat as concerns about Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae continue, those in the mortgage industry say.
Mortgage rates mixed on week, remain well below year ago (at MarketWatch)
Mortgage rates changed little this week as the housing sector received mixed economic reports, Freddie Macâs chief economist said on Thursday.
Decision-making expert is flummoxed in search for a house (at MarketWatch)
DURHAM, N.C. -- My wife Sumi and I are house hunting. That presents many problems.