Seek news on
InfoAnda
powered by
Google
Custom Search

Last text search :
2016 wso 2.5 rw-r
2017 #1 smp wso rw-r

wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php
2017 #1 smp wso rw-r
wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php
wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php
wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php


Sunday, 10 January 2010 - In Foreclosureville, USA, so much change
  • Pakistanis angry over detentions in Times Sq. case
    Monday, May 24, 2010
    ISLAMABAD – Relatives of three men detained by Pakistan for alleged links to the suspect in the attempted Times Square bombing say the men are innocent.
    They
  • Taiwan denies boycotting Australian film festival
    Thursday, August 6, 2009

    AFP - Thursday, August 6TAIPEI (AFP) - - Taiwan's Beijing-friendly government on Wednesday denied boycotting an Australian film festival amid a row over the e
  • Merkel's support dips, regional ally resigns International
    Thursday, September 3, 2009

    By Sarah Marsh and Noah Barkin

    BERLIN (Reuters) - Chancellor Angela Merkel suffered a double blow on Thursday as a senior party ally in east German
  • Minister seeks closure of anti-Berlusconi websites
    Wednesday, December 16, 2009
    ROME (AFP) - – The Italian government moved Tuesday to close down Internet sites encouraging further violence against Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who
  • Asian markets mixed after Wall Street rally
    Wednesday, March 18, 2009

    By ELAINE KURTENBACH,AP Business Writer AP - Wednesday, March 18SHANGHAI - Asia's stock market rally seemed to be running out of steam Wednesday, despite an
  • Mali names interim PM after wave of arrests | | 17 April 2012
  • Madagascar coup plot stokes pressure on Rajoelina | | 18 November 2010
  • Israel hopes for tourism, image boost from pope | 11 May 2009
  • EBay to deepen Facebook relationship | | 12 October 2011


    Forum Views () Forum Replies ()

    Read more with google mobile : In Foreclosureville, USA, so much change

    Yahoo! My Yahoo! Mail More Yahoo! Services Account Options New User? Sign Up Sign In Help Yahoo! Search web search Home Singapore Asia Pacific World Business Entertainment Sports Technology Africa Europe Latin America Middle East North America In Foreclosureville, USA, so much change By EVELYN NIEVES,Associated Press Writer - 2 hours 52 minutes ago Send IM Story Print STOCKTON, Calif. – Stockton hardly looks like the most miserable city in the country. But the statistics and stories over the last two years make a case that it is: Since the housing crisis began, this inland port city 80 miles east of San Francisco has had one of the worst foreclosure rates in the country _ for most of the time, the worst. At the height of it, about 1 in 10 houses fell to foreclosure. Houses that sold for more than $500,000 before the crash now go for $200,000. In some neighborhoods, fixer-uppers cost less than a new Honda Fit _ under $20,000. To spend time in Stockton, a plain-jane city of single-family home neighborhoods edged by freeways and lingering farms, is to begin to understand the calamitous effects of the nation's foreclosure crisis, which has devastated so many once-booming places. Stockton is the San Joaquin County seat. And according to the Associated Press Economic Stress Index, a month-by-month scoring of U.S. counties' rates of unemployment, bankruptcy and foreclosures, San Joaquin had a score of 23.55 in November, making it the fourth-most stressed of counties with a population over 25,000. Its foreclosure rate of 6 percent was exceeded only by metro Las Vegas, metro Fort Myers, Fla., metro Orlando, Merced County, Calif., and Kendall County, Ill. An outsider might not notice immediately how Stockton has suffered. It boasts a downtown mall, a mix of handsome, century-old and modern architecture, a new sports stadium, even a promenade overlooking the city's canal. But two years into the housing crisis, Stockton is a changed place. Whole neighborhoods have been decimated by the mortgage disaster. The tax base has shrunken. City services and municipal jobs have been cut. Unemployment hovers at about 16 percent. Economists predict it will take years for Stockton to recover from the housing bust. Locals say the same about the city's reputation. Since the housing meltdown began, journalists from around the world have parachuted in to see the city felled by sub-prime mortgages, which enticed new homeowners priced out of the San Francisco Bay area with low interest rates that reset to levels they could not afford. "Welcome to Foreclosureville, U.S.A." wrote the Los Angeles Times. "America's Most Miserable City," declared the London Independent. That headline was inspired by Forbes' "most miserable cities" index, which ranked Stockton No. 1. City officials say they fully expect Stockton to shake the title in 2010 (it's recently dropped to No. 4 or 5). But how far away from the top can it go? The population of 290,400 is strapped. Up to two-thirds of homeowners owe more on their properties than the houses are now worth. Housing values have dropped more than 60 percent since the height of the boom four years ago, more than any other city. Housing developments built for commuters have been hit the hardest, since they were the ones to attract newcomers fleeing the huge spike in prices closer to the Bay area. Those whose livelihoods depend on a healthy housing environment _ real estate brokers, contractors, day laborers _ are barely holding on here. Probably the happiest people are the ones scooping up foreclosures. Speculators are back, of course, but the other bargain hunters include people who only dreamed of being able to afford a house. They're now living the dream in Stockton. By the time the whole foreclosure phenomenon is done, Stockton may well look less like the bedroom community for commuters to the Bay Area that it was becoming and more like the working-class, immigrant community ringed by Central Valley farm country that it was before. For now, residents just hope the worst is over. ___ The heart of Foreclosureville, U.S.A. _ the Stockton subdivision that had more bank repossessions than any other place in the country for much of the last two years _ is starting to look like its old self again. The "For Sale" signs that overwhelmed Weston Ranch are mostly gone, and the lawns where weeds grew like corn stalks are shorn. Foreclosure businesses that sprang up, including one that spray-painted brown lawns green and another that offered a foreclosure bus tour, have folded. Every time a foreclosure hits the market, bargain hunters snap it up. But looks are deceiving. In Weston Ranch, financial devastation struck like a natural disaster and the ground has not yet settled. Speculators are buying houses to rent out. On streets where everyone knew everyone, no one knows anyone. Orlando Mixon and his family _ wife, son and daughter _ are typical Weston Ranch settlers. They moved here eight years ago from Union City, east of San Francisco, after a search for an affordable house sent them farther and farther down the freeway. In those boom times, the Mixons paid $175,000 for a new four-bedroom, three bath split-level, more than they would have paid just five days earlier. But they were excited. They didn't know Stockton, but the subdivision of 5,000 homes was like a town unto itself, built for easy access to and from a long commute. Beige and boxy, the houses made up in size what they lacked in style. Now, the Mixons are hanging on by their fingers. Their house, they think, is worth just over $200,000, though some on the next street sold recently for $150,000. Still, with two mortgages, they owe more than that (they won't say how much). Until last month, Mixon spent four months out of work, pushing the family toward financial ruin. "I try not to think about that," Mixon said. He spoke while washing his blackened work clothes in the driveway: He now works on an oil rig in Los Angeles when there is work, drives the 340 miles every other week to his job, seven days on, seven off. His wife Sharon's commute is 60 miles each way, five days a week in rush hour traffic, for her job as a manager in a hospital in Hayward. Stockton residents on average commute 46 miles each way. ___ The biggest bargain in Stockton stands on a street most people would choose to avoid. Old men drinking from bottles in brown paper bags lean against an empty brick building. Younger ones loiter on the corners, wearing puffy parkas, selling ... something. Rudy Willey, a real estate broker who knows his turf, had had no great expectations for the house. But the property was worse than he had imagined: more like a package store than a single-family home. It had no land, no porch, no stoop. Squatters had had their way with the place. Its small, low-ceilinged rooms looked lopsided. All the fixtures were gone. The bathroom, the kitchen _ the whole place _ needed a do-over. "$15,000?" Willey said, locking the front door. "I think they're asking too much." He smiled at the irony of it. Twenty-seven years of selling real estate in Stockton had not fully prepared him for what has happened to his city, his vocation and his livelihood. At 58, nearing retirement, or so he thought, Willey is working twice as hard and making half as much as he did two years ago. In two months, he has taken just two days off. Not three years ago, Willey couldn't keep up with the demand for half-million-dollar starter homes springing up within a 30-mile radius of Stockton. Commuters were buying in; locals were trading up. Having seen his share of boom and bust cycles, Willey knew the times were too good to last. A wave of selling in Elk Grove, a town half an hour away that had been the fastest growing in the country in 2007, became a sign. "When I saw the 'For Sale' signs, I thought: 'Something's happening,'" Willey said. "I thought we were due for a correction _ maybe a 15 percent drop." Now, Willey is selling houses for less than half of what they sold for then. Even so, it is harder to close a deal. A few brokers have acquired most of the foreclosure listings. Most no longer take phone calls to hear offers. Half the time, they don't return e-mails. In some cases, Willey suspects the broker simply does not want to share a commission. Time to work on a Plan B: Willey is taking a multimedia course at San Joaquin Delta College, a two-year school where he also teaches real estate classes. He hopes to start a Web site. At night, he works on a book, a guide for would-be homebuyers. And each day, he tries to look on the bright side. On an afternoon's outing to see houses below $35,000, he kept remarking on the "wonderful opportunities" working people have to own a home. "Not bad, not bad," he said, going through an $18,000 house that had decent bones. It was in a homely neighborhood of aging bungalows. But there were no drug dealers on the corners. "Redone," Willey said, "this could be a nice little home." ___ Among all the bargains in Stockton, Jason Ramey had his heart set on one. It was not on the market yet. But on its window and door was the sign of the times: an eviction notice. This was early 2009, the height of Stockton's foreclosure boom. More than 90 percent of the houses for sale in the city were foreclosures or short sales _ where the lender lets borrowers sell a property for less than they owe on it, forgiving the balance, to avoid foreclosure. Ramey, a 31-year-old insurance agent, knew what he wanted. He had been looking at real estate listings for years. But when the market was high, he could not afford to buy. Even "shacks," as he likes to say, cost $300,000 _ well above his price range. Then came the housing disaster, and opportunity. Ramey began scouting houses on the San Joaquin County foreclosure listings. As soon as he saw The One, a corner property in a coveted new development, he decided to wait for it. The house had an arched entrance that reminded Ramey of a French chalet. Neighbors showed pride of place _ planting rose gardens, flowering fruit trees, dooryard bougainvillea. It wasn't as big as other foreclosures in the mid-$200,000 range. But Ramey, a local boy, knows Stockton inside and out. This house had location, location, location, besides its four bedrooms, three baths. This was a place where he could see staking roots, growing a family. Ramey waited four months for the house to come on the market. Meanwhile, he and his girlfriend took a real estate class for first-time homebuyers. Their instructor: Rudy Willey. He taught them how to research properties, find the right mortgage, make a deal. The very morning the house showed up on the real estate listing site he'd been checking every day, Ramey called Willey. "We put an offer in that night," Ramey said, smiling widely, then adding: "Sure enough, our offer was accepted." They bought the house, which had sold for more than $500,000 three years earlier, for $233,000. "Every day, we can't wait to get home," Ramey said, while giving a tour of the house. Everything in it, stainless steel appliances, tile floors, paint, looked brand spanking new. A koi pond and above-ground pool shared space in the backyard with magnolia trees and hibiscus plants. The family that lost that house had put love and money into it. Ramey said the solar panels _ which have cut their utility bills to $30 from $250 when they were renting _ were appraised at over $100,000. "You hear all these horrible stories," Ramey said. "There are so many other aspects to this. This market, the way it is, gave us the opportunity to live the American dream." Recommend Send IM Story Print Related Articles CIA director defends agency against criticism AFP - 1 hour 19 minutes ago Salvaging corpses at a bend in the river AP - 1 hour 20 minutes ago Croats start voting for new president Reuters - 1 hour 29 minutes ago Police say Anchorage officer shot several times AP - 1 hour 36 minutes ago Cold stuns Floridians, causes deaths elsewhere AP - 1 hour 56 minutes ago News Search Top Stories Argentina appeals court ruling on Central Bank chief Oil talks fail between Russia, Belarus: news agencies Government hopes to cash in on devaluation in Venezuela Dozens join Sudan drumming protest in London Germany needs 'big spending cuts' to reduce deficit More Top Stories » ADVERTISEMENT Most Popular Most Viewed Most Recommended Britain faces toughest cuts for 20 years: Darling Hugh Grant sets marriage as New Year's resolution New for 2010: anti-wrinkle bras, protein undies Formula One boss launches Saab rescue bid: reports Weak US jobs report highlights sluggish recovery More Most Viewed » British priest defends urging people to shoplift Beat the blues by going to bed early: study Huge tomb found at Egypt's Saqqara pyramid More Most Recommended » Elsewhere on Yahoo! Financial news on Yahoo! Finance Stars and latest movies Best travel destinations More on Yahoo! News Home Singapore Asia Pacific World Business Entertainment Sports Technology Subscribe to our news feeds Top StoriesMy Yahoo!RSS » More news feeds | What are news feeds? Also on Yahoo Answers Groups Mail Messenger Mobile Travel Finance Movies Sports Games » All Yahoo! Services Site Highlights Singapore Full Coverage Most Popular Asia Entertainment Photos Copyright © 2010 Yahoo! Southeast Asia Pte. Ltd. (Co. Reg. No. 199700735D). All Rights Reserved. Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Community | Intellectual Property Rights Policy | Help

    Other News on Sunday, 10 January 2010
    GIs return to their war zone and find it peaceful
    Germany needs 'big spending cuts' to reduce deficit
    Google becoming "giant monopoly"
    NATO, Afghanistan agree Bagram prison handover
    Tablets and slates take center stage at trade show
    Iraq confiscates arms in private security crackdown
    CIA attack 'revenge' for Taliban death: video
    Muslims, Christians set homes ablaze in Egypt
    Snow, freezing weather hit Europe, disrupt travel |
    U.S. warns of attack threat to Sudan-Uganda flights |
    Iran Supreme Leader urges firm action over riots
    Blast outside Greek parliament, no one hurt |
    France urges U.N. action on Congo refugees |
    Report: 15 injured in latest Hong Kong acid attack
    Warnings about accused Del. pediatrician surface
    NYC man charged with getting al-Qaida training
    Afghans losing hope after 8 years of war
    Report: Slight cost increase in Senate health bill
    Suspected US missile strike kills 2 in Pakistan
    Police: Ex NYPD commissioner hit woman, drove off
    CIA director: suicide bomber was almost searched
    Chinese man arrested over US security scare: report
    Palestinians demand full settlement freeze
    Sri Lankan ex-rebels reunited with family members
    Biographical information on EPA's Lisa Jackson
    Google becoming giant monopoly
    British FM says aid to Afghanistan conditional
    US denies any plane entered Venezuelan airspace
    Taiwan opposition scores fresh election win
    Fourth church attacked in Malaysia as Allah row deepens
    US warns of 'potential threat' to Uganda-Sudan flights
    China port faces worst ice threat in 30 years
    Afghanistan's second list of Cabinet nominees
    Ruhr inaugurated as European Capital of Culture
    CBS says business as usual with Charlie Sheen |
    CIA director defends agency against criticism
    Italians evacuate migrants, bring in police after clashes
    Convent school, fifth church attacked in Malaysia |
    Shoot video on the ski slopes with camera goggles
    Argentina appeals court ruling on Central Bank chief
    Israel: Palestinians to blame for impasse in talks
    Oil talks fail between Russia, Belarus: news agencies
    Europeans stock up as no end to cold snap forecast
    Lego expands its universe with online game
    Government hopes to cash in on devaluation in Venezuela
    Nervous Venezuelans buy TVs after devaluation |
    Dozens join Sudan drumming protest in London
    Nicaraguan election tribunal stands for now: Ortega |
    Japan tech needs M&A but patent war more likely
    Roxxxy the sex robot makes her world debut
    Croats start voting for new president |
    Nokia urges mobile developers to focus on poor nations
    Deadly ambush weighs on top Africa soccer event |
    Nokia urges mobile developers to focus on poor nations
    Japan tech needs M&A but patent war more likely |
    LG confirms LCD TV sales target, eyes more market |
    Taiwan lawmakers blame president for poll setback
    Police say Anchorage officer shot several times
    Grenade hurled at cathedral in southern Philippines
    Cold stuns Floridians, causes deaths elsewhere
    Suspect arrested over Hong Kong acid attack: police
    In Foreclosureville, USA, so much change
    Two more Malaysian churches attacked in "Allah" row
    2 more churches attacked in Malaysia in Allah feud
    US lawmakers to tackle airport security
    Powerful quake hits off California coast: USGS
    Convent school, fifth church attacked in Malaysia
    6.5 quake shakes buildings on California coast
    Weather forecast for the Asia-Pacific region
    Family doesn't know what led to plant shooting
    China urges US to halt arms sales to Taiwan
    Schwarzenegger says health care bill a 'rip-off'
    Fifth church attacked in Malaysia in Allah feud
    Gumby animator Art Clokey dies at 88 in California
    CBS chief: Prime-time Leno great for us
    China cements export lead with December surge
    Report: JAL to decline offers from Delta, American
    Indian firms set to report rising profits
    JAL will not forge capital tie-up with US carrier: report
    Friends star Matt LeBlanc back to TV
    Nevada brothel seeking a few good men in US first
    Foreign actresses move centre-stage in Bollywood
    Winter of discontent for Berlin commuters
    "Friends" star Matt LeBlanc back to TV
    Adopted girl's fantasy life becomes series
    CBS chief: Prime-time Leno great for us
    Fashion show with Olympic themes opens in Rio
    Picasso's 'Absinthe Drinker' to stay with British foundation
    Mexico transfers inmates for reported Gibson film
    CBS says business as usual with Charlie Sheen
    Israel vows "powerful response" to Gaza attacks
    Russia kills 'militant chief' in Dagestan: reports
    Togo team to return from Africa soccer cup: captain |
    Google apologises to Chinese writers over book flap
    Laser projector, set-top box win gadget awards
    UAE ruling family member acquitted in torture trial |
    Israel vows powerful response to Gaza attacks |
    Iran MPs criticize treatment of post-vote detainees |
    Algerian security forces kill 10 militants: report |
    Israel razes Palestinian structures in West Bank |
    No secret as U.S. Marines plan for Afghan assault |
    Russia says kills two Dagestan rebel leaders |
    Iran frees Syrian journalist held during protests |
    China writers say Google ready to settle book row
    Bombing targets provincial lawmaker in NW Pakistan
    Texas teen says he didn't hire friend to kill mom
    China will likely spend full amount of stimulus
    China evacuates 5,400 after heavy snow in NW
    China overtakes Germany as biggest exporter
    S.Korean dies over 200 days after life support cut
    3 more churches attacked in Malaysia in Allah feud
    Second Thai minister quits over graft scandal
    Australian WWII wreck seen for first time in 66 years
    New Zealand house prices rise in December
    China will likely spend full amount of stimulus
    China overtakes Germany as biggest exporter
    Food prices soaring in N. Korea: group
    Greece at new risk of being pushed off euro
    Bodies of missing Tenn. mom, Jo Ann Bain, and daughter found
    Female Breasts Are Bigger Than Ever
    AMD Trinity Accelerated Processing Units Now in Volume Production
    The Avengers (2012 film), made the second biggest opening- and single-day gross of all-time
    AMD to Start Production of piledriver
    Ivy Bridge Quad-Core, Four-Thread Desktop CPUs
    Islamists Protest Lady Gaga's Concert in Indonesia
    Japan Successfully Broadcasts an 8K Signal Over the Air
    ECB boosts loans to 1 trillion Euro to stop credit crunch
    Egypt : Mohammed Morsi won with 52 percent
    What do you call 100,000 Frenchmen with their hands up
    AMD Launches AMD Embedded R-Series APU Platform
    Fed Should not Ignore Emerging Market Crisis
    Fed casts shadow over India, emerging markets
    Why are Chinese tourists so rude? A few insights

    [InfoAnda] [Home] [This News]



    USD EUR - 1 year graph

    VPN on MacOSX

    BlogMeter 1.01