Homeowners
in sentence
151 examples of Homeowners in a sentence
Sure enough, we all buy into that ... (Laughter) And with gated communities, we have a formalized expectation, with a
homeowners'
association.
So I think it's actually very empowering for
homeowners
and businesses.
Ordinary
homeowners
and renters have saved more than 250 million dollars on their energy bills, and we're just getting started.
Or the anonymous company, which bought up Americans' tax debts, piled on the legal fees and then gave
homeowners
a choice: Pay up or lose your home.
And we moved into it and we became
homeowners
in Mountain Home, Idaho.
And all of a sudden, one of the news commentators got on the air and she said, "In the last three months, eight unarmed African-American males have been killed by police, white homeowners, or white citizens."
Too bad all hurricanes aren't like this one, it would surely help our
homeowners
insurance rates here in the Sunshine State.
That legacy may be all the more painful when we consider that many
homeowners
suffered unnecessarily devastating losses because of their lack of insurance or their underinsurance, often owing to the belief that they could not afford the right coverage.
According to a report from the Insurance Information Institute, nearly 70% of homeowners’ claims in Louisiana were settled by the end of January, for a total of $7.5 billion dollars.
Indeed, a large share of New Orleans
homeowners
– 60% in Orleans Parish – were completely uninsured against floods.
Not unreasonably, President George W. Bush wants government grants to bail out only the approximately 20,000
homeowners
who can’t be faulted for failing to buy flood insurance, because they lived outside the designated flood plains.
According to estimates by Robert Klein of Georgia State University, homeowners’ insurance premiums in Louisiana had already gone up by 70% between 1997 and 2005.
If the insurance companies can get a good enough price for such bonds, they can eliminate their exposure to the risk of a major disaster, thereby allowing them to issue policies to
homeowners
at a lower cost.
Millennium Development MilesPARIS – The global economic crisis has claimed many victims – unemployed workers, underwater homeowners, and bankrupt pensioners – but nowhere have the repercussions been as devastating as in the developing world.
Without inflows of Chinese capital, the US Treasury would face higher interest rates, raising the cost of financing government debt and the cost of homeowners’ mortgages.
Monetary policy would have been more effective in the US had more attention been devoted to credit blockages – for example, many homeowners’ refinancing problems, even at lower interest rates, or small and medium-size enterprises’ lack of access to financing.
Many of the calls to resist further construction, residents must understand, are being made by special interests; indeed, they amount to a kind of rent seeking by
homeowners
seeking to boost their own homes’ resale value.
Rising house prices also allowed
homeowners
to refinance their mortgages, obtaining additional cash to spend on other things.
Home prices fell 40%, completely wiping out the equity of one-third of all
homeowners
with mortgages.
The new property rights law undoubtedly offers stronger protection to Chinese citizens, in particular homeowners, by equalizing the legal status of private and state property.
But higher interest rates could leave
homeowners
and shareholders vulnerable to losses.
Collateralized debt obligations (CDOs, mainly tied to mortgages) made a new population of aspiring
homeowners
supposedly creditworthy by enabling the originating banks to sell “sub-prime” debt to other investors.
As a result, one-third of all American
homeowners
with mortgages are already “underwater” – their mortgage debt exceeds the value of the house.
When
homeowners
default, banks lose money, and uncertainty about the extent of future defaults undermines confidence in banks’ capital, making it more difficult for them to raise funds and causing them to reduce their lending in order to conserve existing resources.
Given the large number of negative-equity homeowners, there is a risk that defaults and foreclosures will continue.
In addition to this increase in the real cost of debt service, deflation would mean higher loan-to-value ratios for homeowners, leading to increased mortgage defaults, especially in the US.
Throwing money at banks hasn’t helped homeowners: foreclosures continue to increase.
Theoretically,
homeowners
can use these new instruments to protect themselves against their home losing value.
But these instruments are rather sophisticated--too sophisticated, in fact, for most
homeowners
to embrace.
But, from an economic point of view, the share of
homeowners
versus tenants is not very important.
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