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- July 13, 2010: The Role of Appraisal Inflation in Loan Securitization
- May 25, 2010: 10 red flags that signal your home's weakest links.
- May 5, 2010: Boulder is a top place to live for 2010
- May 3, 2010: 8 things you must include in a financial plan.
- April 9, 2010: Colorado and New Mexico Top Places To Retire List
- April 7, 2010: Credit Issues Slowing Recovery
- March 26, 2010: Existing Home Sales, Prices Decline
- March 4, 2010: Metro Denver Economic Indicators
- March 3, 2010: Beware of this bill going through Congress. It will eliminate our choices and favor the big banks too big to fail!
- February 26, 2010: New appraisal law creating havoc with our market.
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High Home values mean high consumer debt.
High Home Values Mean High Consumer Debt
Owners of rapidly appreciating homes feel wealthier and therefore are more likely to take on debt, according to research to be released today by the Federal Reserve.
The research paper by Donald L. Kohn, the second-highest ranking Fed official after Ben Bernanke, with assistance by Fed economist Karen E. Kynan, blames the rapid rise in housing prices for soaring consumer debt.
But the authors predict that the increase in debt isn’t likely to be repeated, unless home prices rise as rapidly as they have in the recent past and mortgages continue to be easy to get.
The authors note that the average household owes more money than it makes in annual income. In the early 1980s, the debt-to-income ratio was below 60 percent.
Source: The Wall Street Journal, David Leonhardt (08/20/2007)
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