Daily Archives: March 12, 2013

Real Housewife of Miami faces foreclosure | Pound Ridge Real Estate

We keep saying it, and it’s true: Foreclosure is not just for the middle-class or the average, working citizens who fall on hard times.

Many borrowers who are somewhat cash-liquid also end up facing foreclosure.

Karent Sierra, 38, appeared to the public on The Real Housewives of Miami to play the independent businesswoman who doesn’t need a husband to support her two mortgages, which carry a total balance of $870,000. Or maybe she does?

A gossip rag out of Miami claims the reality TV star is at risk of losing two Miami homes.

She is apparently worth $5 million, according to published reports.

No word on whether this is a strategic default …

Forget housing and jobs … energy is the quiet killer | Bedford Corners Real Estate

Flashback to 2008 and you may recall the hot summer with skyrocketing gas prices that passed right before the financial markets collapsed.

What has been lost in all the financial news as of late is just how high energy prices soared in 2008, placing extreme pressures on consumers  before the meltdown.

Perhaps, high gas prices were not the cause of the crisis, but they certainly put a squeeze on spending, adding to the pain.

It’s easy to forget the precious role energy plays in personal budgets, but Deutsche Bank analysts are now warning us not to.

After all, with higher social security payroll taxes now in effect and unemployment above 7%, higher gas prices are the last thing consumers and economists want.

Here it is from the horse’s mouth. Deutsche Bank analysts explain their energy fears this way:

“We are keeping a watchful eye on energy prices, because gasoline prices have increased nearly 50 cents over the past three months, and this is occurring at the same time that households are adjusting to a 2% increase in the payroll (social security) tax. Our overall economic growth outlook for 2013 is largely dependent upon domestic economic drivers, so we are cognizant of the potential for rising gas prices to tax consumption by sapping households’ (and businesses’) wherewithal to spend.”

In other words, an energy hike could spook consumers, which in turn has the potential to derail confidence created by rising home prices and sales.