By Bob Ivry and Sharon L. Lynch Tucson, Arizona | Published: 07.27.2008 Fannie Mae, the largest U.S. mortgage finance company, couldn't find a buyer who would pay $6,900 for the three-bedroom house at 1916 Prospect St. in Flint, Mich. So broker Raymond Megie, who is handling the foreclosure sale, advised cutting the price to $5,000, and he still couldn't sell the house, which sold in 2005 for $110,000. "There's oversupply," Megie said. As home prices decline, unsold properties are a problem for creditors like Fannie Mae because taxes, insurance and repairs drain their cash. Fannie Mae acquired twice as many homes through foreclosure as it sold in the first quarter, regulatory filings show, and late payments on its home loans — a harbinger of foreclosures — almost doubled in the past year. "Progress on this is probably one of,...
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