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Thanks for visiting us at Tampa Real Estate News.  This is a blog developed by Realtors for Realtors, real estate agents and you, the general public.  We want you to feel free to express yourself here without worry for any political correctness.   We only ask that you keep it clean, truthful and within the confines of the NAR Code of Ethics (i.e., don’t badmouth other Realtors, etc.)  Hopefully we can share some insight into our local real estate, as well as our State and National Associations. Thanks for your participation.  Without you, there is nothing to say!

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Prediction: Magazine, TV ads on way out

January 15, 2012

ST. LOUIS (UPI) — Traditional advertising for products — magazine ads and 30-second television commercials — may go the way of the rotary phone, a U.S. researcher predicts.Seethu Seetharaman of Washington University in St. Louis said so-called crowdsourcing, viral Internet campaigns, product placements and guerrilla promotions will dominate the marketing and advertising landscape going forward.

“Traditional expensive advertising is no longer effective given all the clutter, as well as the emergence of technologies, like digital video recorders, that block the ads from even being viewed, much less absorbed, by consumers,” Seetharaman said in a statement.

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Medicaid opt-out possible

January 15, 2012

An issue that has received scant attention with all the uproar related to the individual mandate in the healthcare reform law is what will happen if a state decides against expanding Medicaid to comply with the law’s provisions.The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act was signed into law nearly two years ago but will not be fully implemented until 2014.The U.S. Supreme Court takes up the law in March, with the major focus on the constitutionality of requiring people to buy at least minimal healthcare coverage.But another aspect of the case is whether the federal government can force states to expand Medicaid. Refusal would end a state’s participation in the program, cutting off federal funds for healthcare coverage for the poor.

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Color of Money ~ Reality Check on Investing

Michelle Singletary

WASHINGTON — I often hear people say they can’t stomach investing anymore. And I understand.

They’re scared about losing their money. But in my experience, contributing to the poor returns some investors receive are the bad decisions they made because they panicked, because they were greedy or because they didn’t investigate their investment choice.

“I am more convinced than ever that all investment mistakes are really investor mistakes,” writes Carl Richards, a certified financial planner and founder of Prasada Capital Management, a portfolio design firm.

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The Nation’s Housing: Deductibility takes a hit …

Kenneth R. Harney

WASHINGTON — Though its demise drew little attention because of the partisan year-end brawl over the payroll tax cut extension in Congress, a key mortgage financing benefit disappeared at the end of December: The ability of large numbers of homebuyers and owners to write off the premiums they pay for mortgage insurance.

The loss of that tax deduction — plus mandatory new fees imposed by Congress on all new conventional and FHA loans — could effectively ratchet up the costs of homeownership this year.

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Tampa Bay home prices predicted to rise in 2012

January 9, 2012

Mark Puente, Times Staff Writer

Home prices in Tampa Bay are predicted to improve 7.4 percent this year, according to a California firm’s report.

This year may bring an end to the starring role Tampa Bay and Florida have played in the national housing crisis.

Home prices in four Sunshine State metro areas are predicted to improve more than most other regions in the country, according to a Clear Capital report released today.

The California-based housing valuation and analytics firm sees a 7.4 percent home price increase in Tampa Bay in 2012, which would make it sixth in the nation in terms of predicted price improvement.

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Raskin Urges Penalties on Mortgage Servicers

Published: January 7, 2012 at 4:35 PM ET
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Federal Reserve Governor Sarah Bloom Raskin on Saturday said the Fed must impose monetary penalties on banks who entered into an April agreement with regulators over how to fix problems in their mortgage servicing businesses.
“The Federal Reserve and other federal regulators must impose penalties for deficiencies that resulted in unsafe and unsound practices or violations of federal law,” Raskin said in remarks to the Association of American Law Schools. “The Federal Reserve believes monetary sanctions in these cases are appropriate and plans to announce monetary penalties.”

Fed: Mortgage servicers have ‘problems’

WASHINGTON (UPI) — Mortgage servicers are preventing the U.S. government from fixing the broken housing market and consequently the economy, a Federal Reserve official said.

Sarah Bloom Raskin, a Federal Reserve governor, called mortgage servicers’ practices “sloppy and deceptive,” The Wall Street Journal reported Sunday.

It is necessary “that the severe misconduct that has been uncovered in the mortgage servicing sector be addressed through intensified public enforcement of the law as part of the overarching effort to rebuild our damaged communities and neighborhoods,” Raskin told a conference of the Association of American Law Schools.

Servicers are responsible for collecting payments on mortgages but aren’t necessarily the ones who grant the mortgage and hold it, the newspaper said.

Raskin said federal regulators have found 14 of the largest mortgage servicers have “significant problems,” including forged promissory notes, erroneous fees and illegal foreclosure actions.

“The Federal Reserve and other federal regulators must impose penalties for deficiencies that resulted in unsafe and unsound practices,” she said.

Copyright 2012 by United Press International

Stock option loop costs taxpayers billions …

 

WASHINGTON (UPI) — Recession-era stock prices are now haunting U.S. taxpayers in the form of stock options that allow corporations significant tax deductions, records show.The loop that allows corporations to deduct billions of dollars from their tax bills is simple: When stocks are doing poorly, corporations are loath to part with large sums of cash. Continue reading →

The Sunbelt’s Comeback – Forbes

Joel Kotkin

Joel Kotkin, Contributor

I cover demographic, social and economic trends around the world.

Dec. 22 2011 — 11:49 am

Along with the oft-pronounced, desperately wished for death of the suburbs, no demographic narrative thrills the mainstream news media more than the decline of the Sun Belt, the country’s southern rim extending from the Carolinas to California. Since the housing bubble collapse in 2007, commentators have heralded “the end of the Sun Belt boom.”

Yet this assertion is largely exaggerated, particularly since the big brass buckle in the middle of the Sun Belt, Texas, has thrived throughout the recession. California, of course, has done far worse, but its slow population growth and harsh regulatory environment align it more with the Northeast than with its sunny neighbors.

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