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Thursday, June 04, 2009
The weekly national 30-year average rates up 0.38 percentage points this week.
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Friday, May 29, 2009
Housing Secretary Shaun Donovan will announce details Friday on the Obama Administration's new plan to allow some first-time homebuyers to get upfront cash for a down payment on a house through the government’s new $8,000 tax credit for new homebuyers.
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Thursday, May 21, 2009
Find out if you qualify for the federal government's new program to reduce mortgage payments.
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Friday, April 17, 2009
Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), a prominent Congressional advocate of mortgage cramdown authority, is considering whether to accept a compromise version of the legislation early next week that would still face stiff opposition from financial institutions and Senate Republicans.
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Friday, April 10, 2009
Attempts to get lenders to modify loans for troubled homeowners have so far not done much to revive the housing market. Now, the Obama Administration’s effort is “absolutely under way,” according to a Treasury official.
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Blog List
FEATURES / RECOMMENDED READING
- Freddie Mac: Mortgage Rates Hit Year-to-Date High
- Tax Credit to Come Upfront for Some First-Time Home Buyers
- Mortgage Cramdown Compromise Could Be Near
- Mortgage-Modification Efforts Are Being Stepped Up
- Low Interest Rates Give Annaly a Leg Up
- Mortgage Rates Fall to Another Record Low
- For Sale: AIG Headquarters
- Average 30-Year Mortgage Rate Falls to 5.03%
- Defining the Word ‘Home’
- FOXBusiness.com's Week in Review: Feb. 16-20, 2009
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Helping Veterans Land Jobs
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Jul 2, 2009
Baird on Helping Soldiers
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President's Plans Working
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Jul 2, 2009
Goodstein on Stimulus Success
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Jackson Lives On
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Jul 2, 2009
Beck on Future of Jackson
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$20 Dollars a Gallon
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Jul 2, 2009
Paying More to Save Economy
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Looking for the Road to Recovery
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Jul 2, 2009
Morris on Unemployment
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FOX Translator
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Think telemarketer. Except, it's much worse because you can't avoid this call. Instead, when you get one, it's time to pay up, because the bet you placed with borrowed money is eating itself.
Buying stocks on margin is risky because you're essentially "playing" with someone else's money. If the shares you purchased tank, your losses will likely be more than if you had bought the shares with your own cash. This is why the New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq impose certain restrictions on the practice.
Initially, you¿re only allowed to borrow half of the money from your broker when buying on margin. You set up a margin account and from then on must keep a maintenance balance of at least 25% of the market value of your stocks.
If the market value of your investment falls below this minimum, you're required to make up the difference by either depositing money into your account or selling some of the stock. If your broker notifies you that you've dipped below this minimum, it's called a margin call.
If you fail to adjust your account accordingly, the broker is authorized to sell shares in your account to make up the difference. The broker can even sell other stock in your margin account to make up for the loss that selling the shares didn't cover.
As an example, say you buy $8,000 in stocks of any given company. You borrow the maximum $4,000 from your broker and pay the rest yourself. Now, if and when the total value of these shares changes, you must make sure you maintain at least $2,000 (25%) in equity. In other words, if the total value were to drop below $6,000, you¿d be in trouble since you only put in $4,000 of your own money to begin with.







