Great story on a Gilbert Short Sale
I have a very interesting story to tell about a short sale in Gilbert. We were able to get the short sale approved without the owner ever missing a payment. This was a property that the homeowner had moved to a different state but didn’t want to miss a payment. Normally this can cause problems when doing a short sale but it is possible to do a short sale without ever missing a payment. Here is the trick to a short sale without missing a payment. You will need to have a different hardship tied to the short sale. In this case the owner had moved away. A few other examples are a death in the family or a divorce situation. There are more available but the bank will look at the hardship and see why you are wanting to do a short sale.
Make sure that when you are doing a short sale without missing a payment that you get an agent who knows what they are doing or it is never going to get done. It is really difficult to do a short sale when the owner hasn’t missed a payment.
Good luck and god bless with your real estate goals
Don’t foreclose! Do a short sale
Short sales are the hottest thing going in the distressed-property market, and the trend is expected to get even hotter in coming weeks, when the government starts handing out cash to encourage lenders to close these deals.
“Banks have ramped up short sale approvals,” said Duane Legate of House Buyer Network, which connects short sellers with buyers. “They’re hiring a lot of the people who once worked in the mortgage-lending industry and moved them over to short sales.”
These transactions, where lenders allow homeowners to sell their houses for less than they owe, accounted for 17% of all residential real estate sales in February, up from nearly 13% in November, according to a monthly real estate market survey by Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance.
And Bank of America (BAC, Fortune 500), the country’s largest mortgage servicer, has more than doubled the number of short sales it processed in recent months.
Elizabeth Weintraub, a Sacramento, Calif.-area real estate agent who handles many short sales, was amazed at how quickly a recent deal went through. “Bank of America approved it in 24 days,” she said. “That flipped me out.”
This is a huge change from even just six months ago when the short-sale market was stalled and most people would describe the process has real estate hell. Because lenders stand to lose so much on these transactions, they have been reluctant to make short sales happen, often waiting months before getting back to potential buyers.
Beware: You lost your house but still have to pay
“In the past, many short sales would never come to fruition and the ones that did averaged over half a year to complete,” said Chris Saitta, CEO of Equator, which produces short sale software.
“Things would just fall into a black hole and not come out again,” added Weintraub.
And even when banks did agree to the sale, the process could be further complicated if the original owner had a second mortgage.
In most cases, the first lender is repaid in full before any money flows to a second-lein holder. And because most distressed borrowers are severely underwater, there’s usually nothing left to send on. As a result, second-lein holders are left holding the bag and have been killing many deals.
But that has been changing. For one thing, banks realize that they make out far better financially with a short sale than a foreclosure. “The lenders lose 50% on a foreclosure and only 30% on a short sale,” said Glenn Kelman, founder of the real estate Web site Redfin. “And short sales offer a way to get distressed properties off their books quickly.”
And on April 5, lenders and mortgage investors will have even more incentives to offer troubled borrowers short sales instead of foreclosing.
Under the new Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives program, borrowers will earn a $3,000 “relocation incentive” and servicers will get $1,500 for handling a short sale.
The investors who actually own the mortgage notes will get $2,000 in exchange for sharing proceeds of the short sales with any second-lien holders. And, finally, those second lien holders will receive up to $6,000 for releasing their claims.
Lenders participating in the program must also determine the market values of properties early on and inform the owners of just what price they’re willing to accept. Then, if owners come back to the lenders with bonafide offers, they have to be accepted within 10 days.
Equator’s Saiita anticipates a short sale explosion in response to the new program. “The challenge will be handling all the volume,” he said.
The company has already tweaked its software, which 58 servicers use, to handle the new HAFA rules. And that should help reduce the time it takes to execute a sale, which currently averages 88 days.
The boom in short sales may accelerate the end to the foreclosure crisis by cleaning out the overhang of borrowers in distress and replacing them with more stable homeowners.
Plus, these sales are better for distressed borrowers because their credit scores suffer less. Going through a foreclosure can knock 200 points off a FICO score, twice as much as the penalty for a short sale.
—(CNNMoney.com)
Phoenix aiming to ease foreclosure-home blight
A new program to lessen the blight from too many vacant and neglected foreclosure homes is being tested in west Phoenix.
A few weeks ago, Phoenix’s Neighborhood Services Department began closely monitoring foreclosure homes in the area between 75th and 91st avenues and Thomas and Camelback roads. A city inspector checks houses about to be foreclosed on or already in foreclosure for common signs of neglect: tall weeds and grass, dead plants, abandoned vehicles, junk and litter, open windows or doors, broken fences and graffiti.
Phoenix Councilman Claude Mattox said the pilot program will work with homeowners in foreclosure and lenders with homes taken back through foreclosure. Both groups will be notified about violations on their properties, and a system to track their responses and actions has been set up.
The program will last six months. If it cuts down on the area’s crime and blight due to foreclosures, Mattox said it could be expanded in other parts of Phoenix.
• New housing laws: Here’s a recap from the Arizona Association of Realtors of six new state laws that could have the biggest impact on the real-estate industry. HB 2345: Homeowners associations are prohibited from banning the display of temporary open-house signs, except in common areas. HOAs are also prohibited from regulating a seller’s “for sale” sign if it meets industry standards.
HB 2371: Swimming pools and spas are now part of home inspections.
HB 2450: Municipalities can’t refuse service or require payment for unpaid water and wastewater services from anyone except the person contracted for them.
HB 2766: Landlords facing foreclosure must provide residents with written notice about a trustee sale of the home they are renting. If a landlord fails to do so, a tenant can recover damages.
HB 2768: This prohibits home sellers from paying private transfer fees to developers or third-party firms.
SB 1219: The law sets a two-year period for real-estate licenses and allows real-estate agents to cancel their licenses.
Courtesy AZ Central
FHA Financing is Changing
FHA (Federal Housing Administration) will again be revising its way of collecting
revenue to sustain its ability to provide American with affordable housing and
financing. The Senate has approved important changes affecting FHA financing. The
changes will increase the monthly cost of FHA mortgage insurance premium, while
reducing the upfront costs.
According to the release from HUD, the upfront MIP, which is currently 2.25% of the
loan amount, will decrease to 1.0%, while the monthly premiums will increase from
.55% to .85% for financed amounts of 95% or less of purchase price and .90% of
financed amounts more than 95% of purchase price.
Typically, I see homebuyers in Arizona who finance with an FHA loan put 3.5% down.
In this scenario the MIP would increase to .90% monthly. On a home costing
$150,000, with 3.5% down and financing your upfront MIP, you would have a loan
amount of $146,197 making your monthly MIP $109.64; about $42.00 more per month
than the current monthly premium, which is .55%.
The good news is the upfront PMI would decrease from 2.25% of the loan amount to
1.0% of the loan amount. Using the same $150,000 purchase price, you would be
financing $1810.00 less into the amount of the loan. The break even point would be
about 43 months. After that point, the additional monthly MIP becomes a real cost.
An adverse effect of the increase in monthly insurance premium is the amount
homebuyers qualify for will be reduced by the amount of the difference in monthly
payment. In real dollars, assuming taxes and insurance to be equal, you would qualify
for about $7000.00 less house for the same monthly payment.
The new changes are scheduled to go into effect September 7th, 2010.
Housing index stays positive
A key indicator of the Phoenix-area housing market’s overall health showed mild improvement in June, although prices in some segments of the market continued to decline, according to a new report from Arizona State University’s W. P. Carey School of Business.
The ASU Repeat Sales Index clocked in at about 2 in June, according to preliminary data, which means the average price of resale homes was slightly better than it had been a year earlier. A negative index indicates year-over-year decline, while a positive index denotes improvement.
June was the third consecutive month with a positive index number, according to ASU professor of real estate Karl Guntermann, a significant recovery from its all-time depth of -35 points in April 2009.
The index was at 3 in May and 1 in April, according to the ASU report.
Still, that improvement was not apparent to all Phoenix-area residents trying to sell their homes.
Owners of Valley condominiums fared the worst, Guntermann said.
The estimated median condo price in June was $73,000, down nearly 20 percent from a year earlier.
High-end homes also continued along a persistent, but much more gradual, downward trend, according to the report, co-written by ASU research associate Adam Nowak.
The overall median home price in June was $133,000, the report said, up from $122,000 in June 2009.
The index rises and falls based on a number of factors, including changes in the market value of homes that have sold multiple times in recent years. It has been tracking the market since 1990.
Guntermann said there is a good chance the index will remain in positive territory in the near future, but he added that it probably won’t increase by much.
“Unless economic and housing-market conditions change dramatically, prices are likely to be relatively stable,” he said.
Courtesy azcentral.com


