2 Navy SEALs investigated in Green Beret’s death: reports

Two members of the U.S. Navy’s elite SEAL Team 6 are being investigated in the strangulation death of an Army Green Beret in Mali, according to reports Sunday. The New York Times first reported the probe into the death of a staff sergeant found dead in U.S. embassy housing in the Malian capital of Bamako on June 4. U.S. officials later confirmed the investigation with ABC News. While the Naval Criminal Investigative Service has not charged anyone yet, the two SEAL members are considered “persons of interest” in the homicide, the Times reported. The two have since been placed in administrative leave. No motive for the alleged crime has been established. The West African country of Mali borders Niger, where four U.S. soldiers were killed during an ambush earlier this month. Hundreds of U.S. special operations troops are stationed across West Africa, largely to train local troops in anti-terrorism operations.

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From:: Stock Market News

A Cooldown in Housing? Not This Season

By Susanne Dwyer

Autumn began in September, but activity in the housing market remained at summer-like levels through October, according to realtor.com®’s latest data preview. Prices in October were 10 percent higher than those one year ago, with the national median at $275,000 and the national median age of inventory at 73 days.

“This month we aren’t just experiencing still-summery weather—we’re also seeing a sizzlingly competitive housing market at a time when things are usually cooling off for the fall,” says Danielle Hale, chief economist at realtor.com. “With not enough homes on the market to meet the high demand, homes are selling 8 percent more quickly than a year ago even though prices are as high as they’ve ever been.

“For potential buyers who waited until fall hoping to score a bargain, the pickings are disappointingly slim,” Hale says, “but one potential bright spot for market-fatigued buyers is that new listings are up slightly from one year ago. While new listings declined in the first four months of the year, they have increased on a year-over-year basis in five of the last six months.”

The housing markets ranking in realtor.com’s Hotness Index for October:

  1. San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, Calif.
    Median Age of Inventory: 30 days
  1. Vallejo-Fairfield, Calif.
    Median Age of Inventory: 38 days
  1. San Francisco-Oakland-Hayward, Calif.
    Median Age of Inventory: 30 days
  1. San Diego-Carlsbad, Calif.
    Median Age of Inventory: 40 days
  1. Boston-Cambridge-Newton, Mass.-N.H.
    Median Age of Inventory: 46 days
  1. Stockton-Lodi, Calif.
    Median Age of Inventory: 41 days
  1. Sacramento-Roseville-Arden-Arcade, Calif.
    Median Age of Inventory: 44 days
  1. Detroit-Warren-Dearborn, Mich.
    Median Age of Inventory: 47 days
  1. Denver-Aurora-Lakewood, Colo.
    Median Age of Inventory: 41 days
  1. Modesto, Calif.
    Median Age of Inventory: 43 days

For more information, please visit www.realtor.com.

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From:: Real Estate News

A Cooldown in Housing? Not This Season

By Susanne Dwyer

Autumn began in September, but activity in the housing market remained at summer-like levels through October, according to realtor.com®’s latest data preview. Prices in October were 10 percent higher than those one year ago, with the national median at $275,000 and the national median age of inventory at 73 days.

“This month we aren’t just experiencing still-summery weather—we’re also seeing a sizzlingly competitive housing market at a time when things are usually cooling off for the fall,” says Danielle Hale, chief economist at realtor.com. “With not enough homes on the market to meet the high demand, homes are selling 8 percent more quickly than a year ago even though prices are as high as they’ve ever been.

“For potential buyers who waited until fall hoping to score a bargain, the pickings are disappointingly slim,” Hale says, “but one potential bright spot for market-fatigued buyers is that new listings are up slightly from one year ago. While new listings declined in the first four months of the year, they have increased on a year-over-year basis in five of the last six months.”

The housing markets ranking in realtor.com’s Hotness Index for October:

  1. San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, Calif.
    Median Age of Inventory: 30 days
  1. Vallejo-Fairfield, Calif.
    Median Age of Inventory: 38 days
  1. San Francisco-Oakland-Hayward, Calif.
    Median Age of Inventory: 30 days
  1. San Diego-Carlsbad, Calif.
    Median Age of Inventory: 40 days
  1. Boston-Cambridge-Newton, Mass.-N.H.
    Median Age of Inventory: 46 days
  1. Stockton-Lodi, Calif.
    Median Age of Inventory: 41 days
  1. Sacramento-Roseville-Arden-Arcade, Calif.
    Median Age of Inventory: 44 days
  1. Detroit-Warren-Dearborn, Mich.
    Median Age of Inventory: 47 days
  1. Denver-Aurora-Lakewood, Colo.
    Median Age of Inventory: 41 days
  1. Modesto, Calif.
    Median Age of Inventory: 43 days

For more information, please visit www.realtor.com.

For the latest real estate news and trends, bookmark RISMedia.com.

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From:: Finance and Economy

Treasury’s Mnuchin dispels rumors of Turkish bank sanctions over Iran

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said Saturday he did not threaten to sanction Turkish banks in a recent conversation with a senior government official, quieting rumors that had jarred that country’s markets earlier this week. “Turkey is not the focus right now, for the moment,” Mnuchin told the Wall Street Journal and other reporters traveling with him on a trip through the Middle East. Amid an escalation of U.S. sanctions against Iran for its ballistic missile program, Turkish media reported that the U.S. would sanction six Turkish banks that maintained business relations with Iran’s sanctioned military unit. “There is no truth to those rumors,” Mnuchin said. “I did have discussions with them [on the sidelines of a global finance ministers’ meeting in Washington earlier this month] but I did not have specific conversations on sanctions.”

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From:: Stock Market News

Report: Mortgage Interest Deduction Promotes Inequality

By Susanne Dwyer

Among the repercussions the tax overhaul proposal can have on the mortgage interest deduction, the National Low Income Housing Coalition (NLIHC) and the Institute on Assets and Social Policy (IASP) at Brandeis University’s Heller School recently released a report, “Misdirected Investments: How the Mortgage Interest Deduction Drives Inequality and the Racial Wealth Gap.” The report states that the mortgage interest deduction exacerbates racial inequality and widens the racial wealth gap by distributing the annual $71 billion federal disbursement to primarily white, high-income homeowners.

According to the report, 84 percent of the deduction benefits go to households with more than $100,000 in income (about $55 billion annually), and 64 percent go to those with over $200,000. The report shows this also plays a role in the racial wealth gap, as most households (67 percent) are white and are more likely to be in a high-income bracket compared to black and Latino households.

Here’s a breakdown of the benefits by race:

  • Latino: 7 percent
  • Black: 6 percent
  • White: 78 percent

The NLIHC and the IASP blame a faulty policy structure for the disparity in deduction distributions. Since the break primarily helps homeowners that itemize their deductions—even though 70 percent of Americans take the standard deduction—low- and moderate-income households, or homes with lower tax rates, stand to receive much less than high-income households or homes with higher tax rates.

These institutions are calling for reform of the mortgage interest deduction in a way that redirects the U.S. housing budget towards renter benefits and better housing security.

The NLIHC and the IASP propose:

  • Turn the deduction into a tax credit so the value of the deduction is worth the same for all households and to benefit those that do not itemize deductions.
  • Remove second home eligibility for the mortgage tax break to improve housing security for all.
  • Reduce the mortgage interest eligibility cap from $1 million to $500,000 so federal dollars are subsidizing lower-income homes.
  • Create a tax credit for renters to reduce the disparity in possible tax benefits between renters’ and homeowners’ housing costs.
  • Increase investment in rental vouchers using tax reform savings to help low-income renters better afford housing in the private market.

View the entire NLIHC report.

Source: National Low Income Housing Coalition (NLIHC)

Liz Dominguez is RISMedia’s associate content editor. Email her your real estate news ideas at ldominguez@rismedia.com.

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From:: Real Estate News

FHFA: Home Prices Rose in August

By Susanne Dwyer

Home prices rose 0.7 percent month-over-month in August 2017, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s (FHFA) recently released House Price Index (HPI). The HPI year-over-year—based on prices for homes with Fannie Mae- or Freddie Mac-backed mortgages—was up 6.6 percent.

Per the Index, month-over-month home price changes range from -0.1 percent in the New England Census division to +1.4 percent in the Pacific division. Home price changes year-over-year ranged from +5.0 percent in the Middle Atlantic Census division to +9.3 percent in the Pacific division.

Source: Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA)

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From:: Real Estate News

FHFA: Home Prices Rose in August

By Susanne Dwyer

Home prices rose 0.7 percent month-over-month in August 2017, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s (FHFA) recently released House Price Index (HPI). The HPI year-over-year—based on prices for homes with Fannie Mae- or Freddie Mac-backed mortgages—was up 6.6 percent.

Per the Index, month-over-month home price changes range from -0.1 percent in the New England Census division to +1.4 percent in the Pacific division. Home price changes year-over-year ranged from +5.0 percent in the Middle Atlantic Census division to +9.3 percent in the Pacific division.

Source: Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA)

For the latest real estate news and trends, bookmark RISMedia.com.

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From:: Finance and Economy

John Murray: Working Smarter With Analytics

By Susanne Dwyer

John_Murray

John Murray has spent 14 years in real estate, and in that time, he has individually listed and sold approximately 15,000 homes. He is licensed in Illinois, Florida, Maryland, Virginia and Wisconsin.

“My real estate company is unique in that we hand out our leads, tools and systems for free, so our agents are able to succeed, and all of our efforts are focused on their success,” says Murray. “I see a lot of models where the focus is on the brokerage, and we’re the opposite of that. It’s important to run our brokerage like a big team.”

Murray conducts most of his business in Rockford, Ill., and tends to focus on a specialty niche. Like many in the industry, he’s seeing a supply problem, with much more demand.

“It’s certainly a seller’s market,” he says. “We focus a lot on data and predictive analytics and working smarter to target sellers and buyers, focusing our dollars and efforts on those individuals who have a higher propensity to buy or sell.”

Using analytics in this way is something Murray has been doing for more than a decade—before it became a trendy thing to do.

“Our access to this data has changed as the availability of data has changed,” says Murray. “It’s become broader and wider, but at its root core, it’s still about utilizing data to better understand the market and specifically target those who are more likely to transact,” he adds. “We’ve been very early adopters of technology. I started with a relational database the day I started in real estate.”

Before beginning his real estate career, Murray worked as a CTO for a Fortune 500 company’s wireless subsidiary and served as IT program manager for numerous Fortune 100 companies, including IBM Global Services, so he understands the importance of doing so.

“If you rewind to 2003, real estate wasn’t systematized, but I did that from day one,” says Murray. “Today, the landscape has changed. The availability out of the box is there. Systems are extremely important today.”

Murray goes so far as to say that analytics is the future of real estate. “If you go to any market, and you can pinpoint your customers and identify them to any degree of certainty, that’s where the market is,” he says. “It’s mission-critical. The brokers that don’t adopt big data are going to lose, because at the end of the day, the consumers will be targeted by those who do understand.”

Today, Murray has a brokerage in multiple states, interfaces with multiple private equity funds and still finds the time to buy, sell and trade real property.

“The real estate firm is expanding, and at some point, it will be a national company,” says Murray. “We’re going to tie into a much larger picture with leads and referrals and a lot of these analytics. A side project we’re working on involves building the next generation customer acquisition component.”

In addition to his prowess in the real estate game, Murray is also a tech guru, serving as co-owner of Realty Pilot, a virtual, …read more

From:: Real Estate News

Merck shares fall deeper into red as European lung-cancer marketing application pulled

Merck & Co. shares fell in the extended session Friday after the drug maker said it was no longer pursuing market approval for a lung cancer drug in Europe. Merck shares declined 2.3% to $56.91 after hours, adding to a 6.1% drop during Friday’s regular session after the company reported a cyberattack in June hurt sales by at least $135 million in the third quarter. Not only did that wipe out earlier gains following an earnings beat, but put Merck shares at a 1.1% loss for the year. Late Friday, Merck said that it had withdrawn its European application for Keytruda to treat metastatic nonsquamous non-small cell lung cancer, but did not list a specific reason for the withdrawal. Earlier in the year, Merck shares slipped 1.7% on July 6 after the company said it was halting three U.S. clinical studies for Keytruda in the treatment of certain blood cancers.

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From:: Stock Market News

S&P raises Italy rating one notch to BBB, citing economic recovery

S&P Global Ratings upgraded Friday the credit rating of Italy’s sovereign debt one notch to BBB from BBB-. They cited the improvement in growth prospects, rising business investment and diminished risks in the banking sector. The ratings firms’ analysts said they had confidence the government could cut its “very high” debt levels. Italy’s debt to GDP ratio stood at 132.6% in 2016, compared with 99.8% in 2007.

Market Pulse Stories are Rapid-fire, short news bursts on stocks and markets as they move. Visit MarketWatch.com for more information on this news.

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From:: Stock Market News