|
 |
|

Yahoo! News Search Results for Home Equity Loan Rate
Yahoo! News Search Results for Home Equity Loan Rate
SLM Sells Debt at Higher Rate Than Students Pay: Credit Markets (Bloomberg)
March 18 (Bloomberg) -- SLM Corp. , the biggest U.S. student-loan company, tapped the bond market for the first time in almost two years, paying more than it charges some borrowers as $11 billion of b...
SLM Sells Debt at Higher Rate Than Students Pay: Credit Markets (BusinessWeek)
SLM Corp., the biggest U.S. student-loan company, tapped the bond market for the first time in almost two years, paying more than it charges some borrowers as $11 billion of bonds mature through 2011.
Homeowners tap their home equity (Worcester Telegram & Gazette)
John Hale's four-bedroom house near Seattle is worth about $2 million and is 90 percent paid for. It still took him nine months to find a bank that would give him a $250,000 home equity line of credit...
Refinance likely, thanks to equity cushion (Bankrate.com via Yahoo! Finance)
Owning a first home free and clear should boost the odds of getting a refinance on a second home.
Southern California home prices rise 10% in February (Los Angeles Times)
Led by double-digit jumps in coastal areas, the median sales price for the region reaches $275,000. The number of homes sold was nearly flat, up only 0.8%. Southland home prices jumped 10% in February...
Consumer loan rates (The Springfield News-Leader)
Springfield financial institutions quoted the following rates Friday for home equity, auto and boat loans. The home equity rate is based on a $10,000 loan or line of credit with applicable points incl...
Wall Street stocks rise as US Fed holds rate at near zero (New Zealand's Nati...
The US Federal Reserve held its key target interest rate at near zero and reiterated its commitment to keeping money cheap "for an extended period." The decision, while expected, immediately boosted t...
Home Short Sellers May Face Big Tax Bills (CBS 2 Los Angeles)
What should have been a legislative afterthought is threatening to become a financial purgatory for thousands of California taxpayers hit by the housing crisis.
|