Monday, November 24, 2008

Street Smarts
The Gift that Keeps on Taking


Gift cards have become extremely popular. In fact, the variety of cards offered and the sheer convenience of these little plastic gems have created a new global culture of gift–giving that few could ever have anticipated. The National Retailers Federation estimates that a total of $97 billion in gift cards – $26.3 billion during the holidays alone – were purchased in the US last year. This year, however, experts say that this hassle–free holiday gift may have met its match: a tough economy.
Earlier this year, when Sharper Image declared bankruptcy, nearly $20 million in gift cards were instantly voided, forcing shoppers to suddenly reconsider the merits of the gift card. Remember, unlike banks accounts, gift cards are not protected by the FDIC or anyone, and there is no guarantee that you can redeem the value of the card if a company goes under. And with other major retailers filing for bankruptcy protection recently (Circuit City, Mervyns, and Linens–N–Things, to name a few) giving gift cards this year could be as risky as playing the stock market.

The good news is, with US retail sales expected to shrink this holiday season, retailers will be working hard to get their share of your holiday budget, no matter how large or small. This means major sales and deals that could make going to the mall this year a much better option than simply handing out gift cards anyway. Because of these deals, what a $50 gift card would have purchased last year could turn into a much more valuable and memorable gift for everyone on your list.

Either way, if you receive any gift cards this year, or you still have a few you haven't used yet, be sure to redeem them right away.

by
Lisa Warren
Southlake Branch Manager
Silver Oak Mortgage
Phone: (817) 410-2518
Fax: (817) 410-2519
lwarren@somlp.com
href="http://www.silveroakmortgagelp.com/">www.silveroakmortgagelp.com

Saturday, November 22, 2008

DATES TO REMEMBER


Holiday Happenings in the area.....


Nov. 14 - Jan. 3 - ICE! and Lone Star Christmas (Grapevine)

Nov. 22 - Jan. 4 - The Trains at North Park (Dallas)

Nov. 28 - Jan. 4 - Holiday in the Park (Six Flags in Arlington)

Saturday, Nov. 22 - 3:00 to 9:00 pm

Home For the Holidays (Southlake Town Square)

Tree lighting at 6:30 pm

Saturday, Nov. 22 - 24 - www.SouthlakeFestivalofTrees.com

Friday, Nov. 28 - FW Sundance Square

2:00 to 5:30 pm - Holiday Fun Zone

6:00 to 8:00 pm - Parade of Lights and Tree Lighting

Nov. 29 - Dec. 21 - Snowflakes, Sugarplums, and SANTA! (Fort Worth)

Saturday, Nov. 29 - 6:00 to 8:00 pm

Hurst Annual Tree Lighting Spectacular

Monday, Dec. 1 - 7:00 pm

Historic downtown Grapevine Carol of Lights

Thursday, Dec. 4 - 7:00 pm

Historic downtown Grapevine Parade of Lights

Friday, Dec. 5 - 6:00 to 9:30 pm

Holly Days at Keller Town Center

Saturday, Dec. 6 - 10:00 am

Neiman Marcus Adolphus Children’s Parade Dallas

Saturday, Dec. 6 - 4:00 to 8:00 pm

NRH Night of Holiday Magic at NRH20 Family Waterpark

Saturday, Dec. 6 - dusk

Twinkle Light Parade on Grapevine Lake

Happy Holidays!!!

Friday, November 14, 2008

Foreclosure Prevention
The two secondary-mortgage-market companies are well aware of the market pain and are taking a number of steps to provide relief, particularly to prevent foreclosures.

Among other things, Freddie Mac is allowing lenders to modify their at-risk loans into 40-year, lower interest-rate mortgages and to reduce borrowers' burdens by permitting them to roll up to six months of missed payments into what amounts to an unsecured second loan. The two companies are also ramping up their staff and adjusting compensation so their internal structure better matches the size and complexity of the processing demand they face.

What’s more, to help facilitate short sales, Lockhart’s agency will be releasing a large-scale, streamlined, standardized process for expediting short sales, which he said will give lenders flexibility and tools like principal forbearance that they can’t easily use right now.

But Lockhart made it clear that the bulk of the problem isn’t with Fannie and Freddie loans, but debt in what the financial services industry calls private-label securities, the Wall Street loans, many of them subprime, that are held by investors all over the world.

The streamlined short sale process his agency will be announcing soon—he didn’t give a time line—could go a long way to focusing the minds of lenders on the problem. But ultimately the problem won’t go way until interest rates come down, buyers start streaming back into the market again, and prices firm up, he suggested.

—Robert Freedman
Realtor Magazine