Posted by caperdew on May 25, 2009
First Time Buyers
Congratulations! You are first time buyer. Welcome to your home buying guide. Here are a few things to bear in mind when considering this important step in your life:
- Deposit: The first thing to be aware of is that most lenders will look favorably on you having a cash deposit to put down on a property. This deposit can range from 5-15% of the purchase price. If you were buying a property for $300,000, an expected deposit would range from $15,000-$35,000. In certain cases, a lower or higher down payment may be necessary.
- Find a REALTOR®: Don’t buy a home without one. Besides helping you find the home of your dreams, a REALTOR® assists you with every aspect of your homebuying experience. From appraisals to inspections, contracts to disclosures, questions and concerns, our sales professional are experts in the industry and are eager to help you every step of the way.
- Credit Score: As a first time buyer, your credit score will be used to determine your loan and interest rate options. Credit scores range from 340 to 820. The higher your credit score, the better your loan and interest rate options will be. Guarantee Pacific Mortgage, our in-house lender, specializes in helping first time buyers and can provide you with financial assistance you’ll need to purchase your first home.
- Mortgage Payments: Make sure you know what your interest rate is. Many first time buyers go for a fixed rate so they know exactly how much their total mortgage each month.
- Bills: Buying and maintaining a property is not just about keeping up with the mortgage payments; it is also about paying your bills. Besides your mortgage payment, you will be responsible for gas, electric, water, and sewage bills, not to mention other household amenities (i.e. telephone, television and internet bills). Plan in advance for these costs to make sure you can afford to pay them each month.
- The Rewards: Once you have bought your first home, you can enjoy the benefits of freedom and independence. You will soon discover that it is the best thing you ever did, not just in terms of doing as you please, but also that financially you have made a start in paying back the biggest investment of your life. With property prices seen to be rising higher in the coming years make no mistake that your home will become your most valuable possession. Congratulations and enjoy your new (home!
Search for homes at www.CentralValleyHomes.com

CAROL PERDEW
Your Real Estate Professional
Prudential California Realty
(209) 239-7979
www.CentralValleyHomes.com
Posted in Central Valley Homes, Home Buying, Home Search, Homes for Sale, first time home buyer, real estate | Tagged: California Department of Real Estate, Central Bank Owned Homes, Central Valley Careers, Central Valley Foreclosure, Central Valley Homes, Central Valley Jobs, Central Valley Mortgage, Central Valley Property, first time home buyer, Home Buyer Tax Incentive, Home Search, Home Seller, Homes for Sale, Lathrop Bank Owned Homes, Loan Modification, Manteca Bank Owned Homes, Merced Bank Owned Homes, Modesto Bank Owned Homes, Mt. House Bank Owned Homes, Prudential California Realty, Real Estate License, Rentals, REO, Ripon Bank Owned Homes, San Joaquin Bank Owned Homes, Short Sale, Stanislaus Bank Owned Homes, Stockton Bank Owned Homes, Tracy Bank Owned Homes | Leave a Comment »
Posted by caperdew on February 23, 2009
Here is a greet opportunity to get loan modification counseling at the upcoming Foreclosure Seminar. There is a local meeting with Freddie Mac’s representative. Check below for more information.
Foreclosure help coming Feb. 27
Freddie Mac outreach specialist holding seminar
By Rose Albano-Risso
Manteca Bulletin City Editor
LATHROP – A representative of Freddie Mac will be at the University of Phoenix in Lathrop Friday, Feb. 27, to give financially distressed South County homeowners advice on how to avoid foreclosure.
Jacqui Cosgrove, consumer outreach specialist with Freddie Mac which is the nickname for the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, will be available to personally meet with the property owners and answer their questions from 2 to 7 p.m. that day, said Freddie Mac public relations director Patti Boerger.
“This seminar will combine hourly sessions to address the process of loss mitigation from a homeowner’s best-practices perspective. It will also give borrowers the opportunity to meet with their lenders, face to face, in order to work toward a solution to avoid foreclosure,” Cosgrove said.
There will be nonprofit counseling available as well at this event “for those who have other debts or obligations to address in order to prioritize the home,” added Cosgrove.
One advantage of this seminar over just doing research on the Internet or elsewhere is that at this event, representatives of various organizations who can help individuals with hardships will be there in person to help you, she said.
“They can help you determine your options and get the process started. In certain situations, borrowers have been able to exit an event with their workout option approved that day,” Cosgrove explained.
To get approved that same day, one will need to bring the following requirements ready for the processing: proof of financial hardships which could be loss of employment or reduction of work hours, major illness or injury, divorce or separation, and death of a spouse; and statements showing income and expenses.
Cosgrove said loan modifications and other relief options are available to those who are honest and demonstrate a hardship. She defined hardship as “an involuntary inability to make your mortgage payment.”
Not being realistic is one of the mistakes commonly made by homeowners when it comes to seeking help from their mortgage companies.
“Adjustments to the original loan terms will not be made for homeowners just because they don’t want to give up their lavish lifestyle and expensive car payment, or are renting an investment property to family members for below market rent,” Cosgrove said.
Ironically, there are always those who take advantage of a sad situation to make a buck out of unsuspecting people who are already having difficulties making ends meet. Advertisements are everywhere – on television, radio and the printed media – offering services and promising results and relief from mortgage debts to vulnerable and unsuspecting consumers but at a cost. This is a case of caveat emptor or buyer beware, Cosgrove warns consumers.
“Don’t pay organizations to help you. There are thousands of companies that are charging borrowers and telling them ‘we’ll work with your lender.’ Steer clear of anyone who charges. Instead, call one of the federally approved nonprofit counseling agencies whose services are free,” she said.
Advice for frustrated homeowners
Cosgrove’s advice to homeowners who are getting increasingly frustrated because they can’t get the attention or any answer or cooperation from their mortgage companies:
• Keep calling and make sure you’re talking to the right person.
• Demand to talk with loss mitigation area, not collections. As a consumer, you have the right to request to speak with a supervisor.
• Be sure to keep a log of each person you speak with and contact as you make an effort to work with your servicer. Oftentimes, if a borrower establishes a relationship with a HUD-certified counselor, the counselor will have access to specialized phone portals in order to help facilitate the collection of your financial data and completion of your loss mitigation request.
Added Cosgrove, “Borrowers with loans owned by Freddie Mac and others may qualify for special loan modification programs, including permanent rate reductions, mortgage term extensions or forbearance. Just remember these three rules: be prepared, be honest, and be realistic about possible outcomes.”
Freddie Mac does not have a disclosable breakout of foreclosure figures by state, said Cosgrove. However, she said that nationally, about 200,000 of Freddie Mac’s 12 million loans are either 90 days late or in some stage of foreclosure.
“We’re also approving an estimated 14,000 workouts a month through our mortgage services, which means about 3 out of 5 seriously delinquent borrowers with Freddie Mac loans avoid foreclosures. Our REO (Real Estate Owned-homes we own due to foreclosures, etc.) inventory is about 29,000 homes nationwide. In context, Freddie Mac loans account for just 7 percent of the nation’s seriously delinquent mortgages, Cosgrove said.
Five tips to make the most of your call to your mortgage servicer from Freddie Mac:
• Open your mail. Notices are sent before foreclosure proceedings begin so be sure to open your mail for loan modification offers and advice from your mortgage services. Freddie Mac advises distressed borrowers not to stand by and wait.
• Be prepared before you call. Ask to speak to someone in the loss mitigation area (not the collection area) and make sure you can quickly and concisely state your financial hardship. Workout programs are only available for borrowers with true financial hardships. Harships include: loss of employment or reduction of hours, major illness or injury, divorce or separation, and death of a spouse.
• Be able to document your income and provide details about your mortgage loan and other financial obligations so have the following documents on hand:
a. Your mortgage loan number, name of mortgage services and recent mortgage statement,
b. Your most current pay stubs,
c. Your bank statements, with account balances and account numbers, and
d. Information on other expenses and debts, such as student loans, car leases, and credit card debt.
• Be honest about your income, expenses and debt. A credit report will be pulled and income such as child support and other debts will show up.
• Be realistic. Loan modifications won’t be made for homeowners just because they don’t want to give up their lavish lifestyle and expensive car payment or are renting an investment property to family members for below market rent. If that’s the case, start reducing expenses and saving money by paring down to bare necessities.
The University of Phoenix in Lathrop is located in the Lathrop Business Park on South Harlan Road east of Interstate 5, just south of Louise Avenue.
Thanks,
CAROL PERDEW
(209) 239-7979
wwwCentralValleyHomes.com
Posted in Foreclosure Info, Foreclosure Relief, Home Loans, Loan Information, Loans Modification, Short Sale, real estate | Tagged: California Department of Real Estate, Central Valley Bank Owned Homes, Central Valley Employment, Central Valley Home Search, Central Valley Homes, Central Valley Homes Loans, Central Valley Jobs, Central Valley Real Estate, Fannie Mae, first time home buyer, Foreclosure, Lathrop Bank Owned Homes, Loan Modification, Manteca Bank Owned Homes, Merced Bank Owned Homes, Modesto Bank Owned Homes, mortgage, Prudential California Realty, Real Estate License, Rentals, REO, Ripon Bank Owned Homes, San Joaquin Bank Owned Homes, Short Sale, Short Sales, Stanislaus Bank Owned Homes, Stockton Bank Owned Homes, Tracy Bank Owned Homes | Leave a Comment »
Posted by caperdew on January 31, 2009
Sales pace of California resales rises 85%
Real estate brief
By Inman News, January 28,2009
The sales pace of single-family, detached resale homes soared 84.9 percent in December 2008 compared to the same month in 2007, with the median sales price diving 41.5 percent, the California Association of Realtors reported this week.
The seasonally adjusted annual rate of home sales in the state was 544,580 in December — this rate is a projection of a monthly sales total over a 12-month period, adjusted to account for typical seasonal fluctuations in sales activity. That compares to a pace of 294,520 sales in December 2007.
Sales for the entire year in 2008 were up an estimated 27 percent compared to the prior year, the association also reported, with the median price falling 38 percent in 2008.
The trade group’s Unsold Inventory Index for single-family, detached resale homes in December 2008 was 5.6 months, which compares to 13.4 months in December 2007. This index gauges the length of time it would take to sell off the total for-sale inventory, based on that month’s sales pace.
A separate monthly report by the Realtor group and DataQuick Information Systems, which measures prices and price changes for new and resale single-family homes and condos, found that five of 338 cities and communities tracked had year-over-year increases in median home prices.
SEARCH FOR HOMES AT Central Valley Homes.com
CAROL PERDEW
Prudential California Realty
(209) 239-7979
wwwCentralValleyHomes.com
Posted in Bank Owned Homes, Central Valley Homes, Home Buying, Home Search, Homes for Sale, REO, first time home buyer, real estate | Tagged: California Department of Real Estate, Central Valley Bank Owned Homes, Central Valley Employment, Central Valley Foreclosure, Central Valley Home Search, Central Valley Homes, Central Valley Jobs, Central Valley Mortgage, Central Valley Real Estate, first time home buyer, Foreclosure Assistance, Home buyer, Home Seller, Lathrop Bank Owned Homes, Loan Modification, Merced Bank Owned Homes, Modesto Bank Owned Homes, Mt. House Bank Owned Homes, Prudential California Realty, Rental, REO, Ripon Bank Owned Homes, San Joaquin Bank Owned Homes, Short Sales, Stanislaus Bank Owned Homes, Stockton Bank Owned Homes, Tracy Bank Owned Homes | 1 Comment »
Posted by caperdew on December 28, 2008

IRS to help homeowners refinance or sell homes
Presented by Yahoo Finance
WASHINGTON – The Internal Revenue Service said Tuesday it will try to make it easier for homeowners in financial straits to refinance or sell their homes.
The plan announced by IRS Commissioner Doug Shulman would speed up a process where financially distressed homeowners may request that a federal tax lien be made secondary to liens by the lending institution that is refinancing or restructuring a loan.
Taxpayers will also be able to ask the IRS to discharge, or remove, its claim to a property in certain circumstances where the property is being sold for less than the amount of the mortgage lien.
“We need to ensure that we balance our responsibility to enforce the law with the economic realities facing many American citizens today,” Shulman said, stressing that “we don’t want the IRS to be a barrier to people saving or selling their homes.”
He said the program will focus on those people who ordinarily pay their taxes in full but “because of these extraordinary times are getting behind in their tax payments.”
A tax lien occurs when the government makes a legal claim to property as security or payment for a tax debt. The government thus notifies other creditors that it has a claim on the property.
The IRS can rule that its lien will be secondary to another lien, such as that of a lending institution, if it determines that taking a subordinate position will ultimately help with the collection of the tax debt. Taxpayers or their representatives may apply for a “subordination” of a tax lien if they are refinancing or restructuring their mortgage.
Lending institutions generally want their lien to have priority on the home being used as collateral.
Taxpayers may also request a certificate of discharge if they are giving up ownership of the property at an amount less than the mortgage lien if the mortgage lien is senior to the tax lien. A discharge does not relieve a person of the tax that is owed, but it does remove the lien on a particular property such as a home. The IRS would still maintain its lien on other possessions of the taxpayer.
Normally it takes about 30 days to rule on a request for a discharge or subordination of a tax lien, but Shulman said the IRS will work to speed up that process so there would be no delays for people trying to obtain new mortgage loans. The IRS urged people to contact the agency’s Collection Advisory Group early in the home sale or refinancing process.
The agency said it issues more than 600,000 federal tax lien notices annually and that currently there are more than 1 million outstanding tax liens tied to both real and personal property.
FOR REAL ESTATE INFO GO TO www.CentralValleyHomes.com
CAROL PERDEW
Prudential California Realty
(209) 239-7979
wwwCentralValleyHomes.com
Posted in Central Valley Homes, Central Valley Living, Home Loans, Loan Information, Loans Modification, Selling a Home, Short Sale, real estate | Tagged: Central Valley Bank Owned Homes, Central Valley Employment, Central Valley Foreclosures, Central Valley Home Search, Central Valley Homes, Central Valley Homes Loans, Central Valley Jobs, Central Valley Property, Central Valley Real Estate, first time home buyer, Home buyer, Home Seller, Homes Sales, Lathrop Bank Owned Homes, Lathrop Real Estate, Loan Modification, Manteca Bank Owned Homes, Manteca Real Esate, Merced Bank Owned Homes, Modesto Bank Owned Homes, Modesto Real Estate, Mt House Real Estate, Mt. House Bank Owned Homes, Prudential California Realty, Relocation, Rental, REO, Ripon Bank Owned Homes, Ripon Real Estate, San Joaquin Bank Owned Homes, Short Sales, Stanislaus Bank Owned Homes, Stockton Bank Owned Homes, Stockton Real Estate, Tracy Bank Owned Homes, Tracy Real Estate | 2 Comments »
Posted by caperdew on December 7, 2008
The hardest hit real estate market is California’s Central Valley. Many homeowners owing more than their home is worth are being forced into foreclosure. The inventory of home has dropped to a low level of a 2-3 month supply of available homes. The Central Valley may have felt the worst financial crises but very well may be the first to experience signs of recovery.
Safe Havens in Real Estate
Excerpt by Louis Jones
Worst Market
12-month change in home values:
Merced: -42.3
Stockton: -40
Salinas: -38.7
Modesto: -37.9
Riverside: -36.8
Vallejo: -34.5
The market hit hardest by the housing bubble is the Central Valley in California, where aggressive development and price hiking has yielded more homes than jobs. Now many homeowners owe more than their house is worth and are being forced into default.
Still, it’s not all doom and gloom for the California housing market. The drop in home values has created an affordable market for first-time home buyers. And, on average, monthly sales have almost tripled from last year. Although the Valley has seen the worst of the crash, it may well be one of the first areas to recover.
Thanks,
CAROL PERDEW
(209) 239-7979
wwwCentralValleyHomes.com
Posted in 1, Central Valley Homes, Home Buying, Home Search, Homes for Sale, REO, first time home buyer | Tagged: California Department of Real Estate, Central Valley Bank Owned Homes, Central Valley Employment, Central Valley Home Loans, Central Valley Home Search, Central Valley Homes, Central Valley Jobs, Central Valley Real Estate, first time home buyer, Home Loan Modification, Lathrop Bank Owned Homes, Lathrop Real Estate, Manteca Bank Owned Homes, Manteca Real Estate, Merced Bank Owned Homes, Modesto Bank Owned Homes, Modesto Real Estate, Mt House Real Estate, Mt. House Bank Owned Homes, Prudential Real Estate, Real Estate License, Rentals, REO, Ripon Bank Owned Homes, Ripon Real Estate, San Joaquin Bank Owned Homes, Short Sale, Stanislaus Bank Owned Homes, Stockton Bank Owned Homes, Stockton Real Estate, Tracy Bank Owned Homes, Tracy Real Estate | Leave a Comment »
Posted by caperdew on November 22, 2008
HUD: Consumers will shop for loans
Rule changes could cut into industry profits
BY MATT CARTER, INMAN NEWS
Consumers will be less likely to accept overpriced loans, title insurance and other services — including those offered by businesses affiliated with real estate brokerages and builders — once new loan disclosure forms and settlement procedures are fully in place at the end of next year.
That’s according to a lengthy review by the Department of Housing and Urban Development of its proposed rule changes governing enforcement of the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act.
In publishing a final rule in Monday’s Federal Register, HUD detailed numerous “significant” changes to its proposed overhaul of RESPA in response to feedback from industry and consumer groups.
When they announced the new rule last week, HUD officials emphasized concessions they made to the real estate industry trade groups, who were highly critical of the rule changes as first proposed in March. Industry critics said HUD has overestimated the extent to which consumers will comparison shop, and underestimated the unintended consequences of the rule change, such as consolidation.
HUD’s response to the criticism included dropping a requirement that consumers be read a lengthy script at the closing table, and shortening the standardized good faith estimate (GFE) from four pages to three.
More crucially, perhaps, HUD toned down but did not abandon measures intended to encourage consumers to shop for the best deal and create more competition between lenders and settlement services providers. The measures still in place could have a dramatic impact on the way those products are marketed and sold to consumers.
The overall goal of the new, standardized GFE is helping consumers compare different loan packages, HUD said. The new disclosures and procedures will empower consumers to compare not only the rates and terms of different mortgage offers, but the price services required by most lenders, such as title insurance.
Slack on tolerances
HUD said one way it is helping consumers comparison shop is by imposing tolerances on how much prices and fees quoted in the GFE can change before borrowers reach the closing table. Loan origination fees can’t change at all, and fees for required services won’t be permitted to change by more than 10 percent when they are provided by a company selected by the lender.
Trade groups representing lenders and settlement service providers were generally opposed to tolerances when they were proposed by HUD in March. In order to minimize the risk of violating the tolerances, some said, big lenders would have to contract with large settlement service providers, driving small companies out of business and reducing competition.
HUD said accurate estimates are crucial to empowering consumers to shop for the best deal, protecting them from “low-ball” offers that change at the last minute. But HUD said it did not intend to punish loan originators for unforeseen changes in a borrower’s circumstances or other factors beyond their control, such as government recording charges.
HUD says the final rule provides some additional leeway for fees to change due to unforeseen circumstances. If there are changes in the tax rate or the price of the property after the good faith estimate is provided, for example, originators can provide a revised estimate.
While transfer taxes will still subject to a “zero tolerance,” HUD acknowledged that government recording charges may not be be known until closing, and will instead be categorized with other settlement services that can change by 10 percent overall.
HUD will cut lenders some additional slack by giving them up to a month after a closing to correct any failure to achieve the tolerances. The final rule would give loan originators 30 days to “cure” violations by reimbursing the borrower by the amount the tolerances were exceeded.
If that sounds like a slap on the wrist that won’t deter loan originators from engaging in bait-and-switch tactics, HUD says that until Congress grants it additional power to enforce RESPA, it can’t legally impose fines for such violations.
But lenders won’t be able to break the rules with impunity, HUD says, because federal and state banking regulators can punish the companies they license for RESPA violations. In addition, aggrieved borrowers can bring civil suits under RESPA seeking redress, and lenders who sell loans on the secondary market can also be held liable by the investors who buy them if they break rules governing mortgage originations.
In its handling of tolerances, HUD says the final RESPA rule “seeks to balance the borrower’s interest in receiving an accurate GFE early in the application process … with the lender’s interest in maintaining flexibility to address the many issues that can arise in a complex process such as loan origination.”
Presented by
CAROL PERDEW
(209) 239-7979
wwwCentralValleyHomes.com
Posted in Central Valley Homes, Home Buying, Home Loans, Home Search, Homes for Sale, Loan Information, first time home buyer | Tagged: California Department of Real Estate, Central Valley Bank Owned Homes, Central Valley Employment, Central Valley Homes, Central Valley Jobs, Central Valley Properties, Central Valley Real Estate, first time home buyer, foreclosures, Interst Rates, Lathrop Bank Owned Homes, Lathrop Real Estate, Loan Modification, Manteca Bank Owned Homes, Manteca Real Estate, Merced Bank Owned Homes, Modesto Bank Owned Homes, Modesto Real Estate, mortgage, Mt House Real Estate, Mt. House Bank Owned Homes, Pruential California Realty, Real Estate License, Rentals, REO, Ripon Bank Owned Homes, Ripon Real Estate, San Joaquin Bank Owned Homes, Short Sales, Stanislaus Bank Owned Homes, Stockton Bank Owned Homes, Stockton Real Estate, Tracy Bank Owned Homes, Tracy Real Estate | 1 Comment »
Posted by caperdew on November 17, 2008
Despite difficulties, homeowners finding relief with HOPE NOW program
By Jack Guttentag,
Inman News|
Editor’s note: A previous version of this story erroneously stated that the HOPE NOW Alliance of loan servicers charges borrowers for consultations. The consultations are free.
Q: “I have been giving my clients an article you wrote about a year ago advising borrowers having payment problems how to request a modification in their loan contract … Could you bring it up to date?”
A: A lot has happened since that article was written. Very shortly thereafter, the HOPE NOW program promoted by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson began as an effort by housing counseling agencies and mortgage servicers to modify loans on a strictly voluntary basis. Since then, the first recourse of borrowers in trouble has been to call them at 1-888-995-HOPE. I have sent many people to HOPE NOW, with mixed feedback.
House prices have declined further in the last year, turning more borrowers “upside down” where they owe more on their mortgage than their house is worth. This induces some borrowers to stop making payments, which increases foreclosures. But price declines also reduce the amounts that investors recover from sale of the house following a foreclosure, which should increase the attractiveness of loan modifications as an alternative.
In addition, a full-fledged financial crisis has erupted, forcing the Federal Reserve to act as the lender of last resort to a series of weakened financial firms unable to meet their cash needs. The coverage of deposit insurance has been broadened and money market funds are now insured. In the works, furthermore, are plans to purchase mortgage assets from investors, to make direct equity investments in banks, and even to insure payment of principal and interest on mortgages and other assets.
An excellent study by Alan M. White provides some indications of what has happened to modifications during this tumultuous period. In a sample of subprime loans he examined, the mortgage payment was reduced in only about half the modifications, and the balance was reduced in very few cases. In many cases, the modification consisted of adding the amounts past due (“arrearages”) to the balance, which raises the payment. It is no wonder that during the annual period he examined, the number of foreclosures swamped the number of modifications.
Borrowers having payment trouble have choices. The rational choices are either to seek help immediately, or to take immediate action themselves. Those who put their heads in the sand will lose their home in a foreclosure.
I suggest that those who elect to seek help go to HOPE NOW first, and if that does not work out, to try a HUD-approved counselor. Before seeing a counselor, prepare yourself by pulling together all the data that the counselor will need; the form at Genworth Financial can be used for this purpose.
Responding to a solicitation from one of the many modification consultants who have emerged over the last year is extremely risky. They charge $1,000 and up, usually payable in advance. Some may do a good job, but many are hustlers looking to garner upfront fees.
If you elect to handle the matter yourself, you must get to the servicer’s loss mitigation department, which may take some persistence. The burden of proof is on you to demonstrate and document that, for the reasons you lay out, you can no longer make the required payment. You must also demonstrate and document that you can make a smaller payment that you specify.
Under the new FHA program called H4H (“Hope for Homeowners”), FHA will refinance loans of borrowers having payment problems if the existing investor will write down the loan balance to 90 percent of current market value. HUD publishes a list of lenders participating in this program. I am not sure whether there is any benefit to a borrower contacting one of them before the firm servicing their existing loan has agreed to pay down the balance. But it can’t hurt to get that lender on your side.
Aside from the possible increased risk exposure under FHA, the federal government has not channeled any crisis money directly to borrowers. The new programs referred to earlier will direct $700 billion or more to financial institutions, but none to households. A strong case can be made that this is unbalanced.
The root cause of the crisis is the decline in home prices, which will continue so long as the foreclosure problem isn’t solved. Arguably, dealing directly with this problem is more effective than dealing with it indirectly. The Treasury recently put out a request for proposals on a mortgage payment insurance plan, which could be the perfect vehicle for providing direct assistance to borrowers. Stay tuned.
The writer is professor of finance emeritus at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. Comments and questions can be left at www.mtgprofessor.com.
Presented by
CAROL PERDEW
Prudential California Realty
(209) 239-7979
wwwCentralValleyHomes.com
Posted in Central Valley Homes, Foreclosure Info, Foreclosure Relief, Loan Information, Loans Modification, Short, Short Sale | Tagged: California Department of Real Estate, Central Valley Bank Owned Homes, Central Valley Employment, Central Valley Foreclosures, Central Valley Home Search, Central Valley Homes, Central Valley Homes Loan, Central Valley Jobs, Central Valley Properties, Central Valley Real Estate, Central Valley Realty, First Time Homes Buyer, Home Sales, Interest Rates, Lathrop Bank Owned Homes, Lathrop Real Estate, Loan Modification, Manteca Bank Owned Homes, Manteca Real Estate, Merced Bank Owned Homes, Modesto Bank Owned Homes, Modesto Real Estate, Mt House Real Estate, Mt. House Bank Owned Homes, Pruential California Realty, Real Estate License, Rental, REO, Reocation, Ripon Bank Owned Homes, Ripon Real Estate, San Joaquin Bank Owned Homes, Short Sales, Stanislaus Bank Owned Hoems, Stockton Bank Owned Homes, Stockton Real Estate, Tracy Bank Owned Homes, Tracy Real Estate | Leave a Comment »
Posted by caperdew on November 9, 2008
Mortgage Fright and Moral Quandaries
The mortgage world has suddenly become very frightening to many people who have no real reason to be frightened. Their mortgages are in good standing, they are not having any trouble meeting their payments, yet they are in distress — in large part because so many around them are in distress. Fear is contagious. The only antidote I know to fear is good information.
One important thing that people suffering from mortgage fright often forget is that a mortgage loan is a contract between two parties, and it cannot be violated by either without the permission of the other. If the loan is sold, the purchaser replaces the originating lender as the contracting party and is subject to the contract in the same way. If the servicing of the loan is sold, the servicer as the agent of the owner is required to abide by the terms of the contract, and the same holds if the loan is placed in a pool as collateral for a mortgage-backed security.
The two letters below are from borrowers who do not have a problem with their current mortgages but are distressed about what might happen in the future.
“Crazy “Can whoever owns my mortgage demand immediate repayment of the balance? I know it doesn’t make sense, but crazy things seem to be happening…”
Mortgage contracts do not give the lender the right to demand immediate repayment. Balloon loans require repayment at the end of the balloon period, but that is stated in the contract. Fortunately, there are not too many balloon loans around.
Even if lenders had the legal right to demand immediate repayment, they wouldn’t do it because it would only generate more foreclosures. For the same reason, borrowers with balloon loans in good standing who are unable to refinance anywhere else will find that their existing lender will prefer to refinance them than to foreclose.
Things Are Happening”
A Rate Is Adjustable — Not the Index
“When the rate on my ARM (adjustable-rate mortgage) adjusts next year, the new rate should be the one-year Treasury rate at the time, plus a margin of 2.5 percent. Last year, however, my lender replaced the Treasury rate on new loans with Libor. Because of the crisis, Libor is now 2.5 percent higher than Treasury. Can my lender switch my ARM to Libor when my rate is adjusted?”
No way. The rate is adjustable but not the index used to calculate it. Your ARM contract stipulates the index and its source, and the only circumstance in which a different index can be substituted is in the event the specified index is no longer available. The different Treasury indexes used by ARMs are compiled by the Federal Reserve and there is zero likelihood that they will disappear.
When a Borrower Is Upside Down
I wish I could answer the next letter with the same degree of certainty.
“We bought our house just last year with 100 percent financing; now it is worth $40,000 less than we owe. I don’t know what to do. Do we keep making mortgage payments or do we stop? A friend has advised us to lock the door and send the key to the lender, but that doesn’t sit very well with me. We’ve always met our obligations and have good credit. What do you advise?”
This letter is typical of many I have received from borrowers who are “upside down” in owing more than their houses are worth. I have a lot of trouble dealing with it because in good part it is a moral issue.
My right-handed side says that when you borrow money, you should pay it back if you can. During the many years when house prices were rising, he never once heard of a mortgage borrower offering to share the capital gain with the lender. There is no justification in forcing the lender to share the capital loss.
My left-handed side rejoins that very few of the people who are upside down today enjoyed a capital gain on previous homes that they owned. Further, the borrower’s major obligation is to his family, not to his lender. If the financial gain from letting the house go to foreclosure more than offsets the pain of having their credit trashed and having to find a new place to live, then that is what the borrower should do.
There is an economic dimension to this quandary. If those who are upside down could be assured that house prices had hit bottom and within a year or two they will be right side up, there is little doubt that most would elect to stay the course. Unfortunately, no economist in good conscience can provide such assurance today.
Finally, there is a policy dimension. Upside down borrowers would be encouraged to stay the course if they had some reason to believe that the government will help them get right side up. Right now, the prospects for this are extremely murky. But don’t write the possibility off just yet.
CAROL PERDEW
(209) 239-7979
wwwCentralValleyHomes.com
Posted in Central Valley Homes, Home Loans, Loan Information, Loans Modification, Short Sale | Tagged: California Department of Real Estate, Central Bank Owned Homes, Central Valley Employment, Central Valley Foreclosures, Central Valley Home Search, Central Valley Homes, Central Valley Interest Rates, Central Valley Jobs, Central Valley Property, Central Valley Real Estate, first time home buyer, Home Loan, Home Sales, Lathrop Bank Owned Homes, Lathrop Real Estate, Loan Modification, Manteca Bank Owned Homes, Manteca Real Estate, Merced Bank Owned Homes, Modesto Bank Owned Homes, Modesto Real Estate, mortgage, Mt House Real Estate, Mt. House Bank Owned Homes, Prudential California Realty, realtor, Relocation, Rentals, REO, Ripon Bank Owned Homes, Ripon Real Estate, San Joaquin Bank Owned Homes, Short Sale, Stanisluas Bank Owned Homes, Stockton Bank Owned Homes, Stockton Real Estate, Tracy Bank Owned Homes, Tracy Real Estate | 1 Comment »
Posted by caperdew on November 2, 2008
Fannie: First-time buyers need counseling
REAL ESTATE BRIEF by Inman News
Fannie Mae is reinstating required homeownership counseling for first-time buyers who don’t have a solid credit history or are seeking loans tailored for low- and moderate-income buyers.
Beginning Jan. 1, Fannie Mae will require counseling for home buyers relying on nontraditional credit or obtaining a MyCommunityMortgage loan to purchase a single-family home. Fannie Mae already requires pre-purchase counseling, including landlord education for borrowers purchasing a two- to four-unit property using a MyCommunityMortgage loan.
Counseling must be provided prior to closing by an independent and certified third-party agency or counselor, Fannie Mae said, and cover topics including budgeting and credit, selecting a home, and obtaining a mortgage. Homebuyers will receive a personalized assessment of their financial position and readiness for homeownership, and an analysis of their credit history and current financial situation.
Although Fannie Mae will encourage face-to-face counseling, borrowers who can’t attend sessions in person or don’t have an eligible provider in their area will be allowed to conduct sessions over the phone. Online counseling programs developed for and provided by mortgage insurance companies will also be permitted.
Counseling must meet standards established by the National Industry Standards for Homeownership Education and Counseling or standards of comparable quality established by other organizations, Fannie Mae said in a bulletin to lenders.
Evidence of completion of the home-buyer education session must be documented in the individual loan file by a certificate or letter from the counseling provider.
Fannie Mae offers counseling resources, including a “Find a Counselor“
search tool, on its Web site.
CAROL PERDEW
Prudential California Realty
(209) 239-7979
wwwCentralValleyHomes.com
Posted in Central Valley Homes, Home Buying, Home Search, Homes for Sale, REO, first time home buyer | Tagged: Central Homes, Central Valley Bank Owned Homes, Central Valley Employment, Central Valley Foreclosures, Central Valley Home Sales, Central Valley Home Search, Central Valley Interest Rates, Central Valley Jobs, Central Valley Loans, Central Valley Property, Central Valley Real Estate, Lathrop Bank Owned Homes, Lathrop Real Estate, Manteca Bank Owned Homes, Manteca Real Estate, Merced Bank Owned Homes, Modesto Bank Owned Homes, Modesto Real Estate, mortgage, Mt House Real Estate, Mt. House Bank Owned Homes, Rentals, REO, Ripon Bank Owned Homes, Ripon Real Estate, San Joaquin Valley Bank Owned Homes, Short Sales, Stanislaus Bank Owned Homes, Stockton Bank Owned Homes, Stockton Real Estate, Tracy Bank Owned Homes, Tracy Real Estate | Leave a Comment »
Posted by caperdew on October 27, 2008
Foreclosure filings down 12% in September
New state laws slowing foreclosure process
By Inman News
New state laws that require loan servicers to give advance notice before filing a notice of default helped push down foreclosure-related filings by 12 percent nationwide in September, data aggregator RealtyTrac.
California, which accounts for nearly one-third of foreclosure activity, passed legislation that took effect in September requiring lenders to make contact with borrowers 30 days before filing a notice of default. Notices of default in California dropped 51 percent in September, with a corresponding “significant impact” on national numbers, RealtyTrac said.
RealtyTrac said notices of default fell 66 percent in North Carolina, a state that now requires lenders to provide homeowners and the state commissioner of banks 45 days’ advance warning of plans to file a notice of default.
Lenders file notices of default as the first step in the foreclosure process, in most cases after borrowers fail to make two or more payments. A notice of default starts the clock ticking on a forced auction sale or bank repossession of a delinquent borrower’s home.
Foreclosure-related filings include default notices, auction sale notices and bank repossessions. Because many borrowers refinance, get current again on their loans, or negotiate a short sale or loan modification with their lender, not all properties subjected to filings are actually repossessed or sold by lenders.
But in many instances, the new laws governing notice of default filings may only delay lenders from initiating the foreclosure process.
After a new Massachusetts law took effect in May requiring that lenders give homeowners a 90-day right-to-cure notice, initial foreclosure filings were lower than normal for the following three months. But initial foreclosure filings were up 465 percent from August to September, RealtyTrac said, as the first loans subject to the new rule emerged from the 90-day window.
Nationwide, RealtyTrac counted foreclosure related-filings on 265,968 properties in September, down 12 percent from August but up 21 percent from a year ago.
At the state level, Nevada saw foreclosure-related filings jump 11 percent in September. The rate of foreclosure-related filings in Nevada — one for every 82 homes — was the highest in the nation, and more than five times the U.S. average of one filing per 475 homes.
With one filing for every 178 homes, Florida moved from fourth place to second on the list of states with the highest foreclosre rates.
In California, the dramatic decline in notices of default contributed to a 32 percent decrease in foreclosure-related filings. Still, one in 189 homes was subjected to a filing, the third-highest rate in the nation.
Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Ohio, New Jersey, Indiana and Colorado rounded out the list of the 10 states with the highest foreclosure rates.
For the third quarter, RealtyTrac counted foreclosure filings on 765,558 homes, up about 3 percent from the second quarter and 71 percent from a year ago.
Six states — California, Florida, Arizona, Ohio, Michigan and Nevada — accounted for more than 60 percent of foreclosure-related filings.
The 10 cities with the highest foreclosure rates among the nation’s 100 largest metropolitan areas in the third quarter were located in California, Florida, Arizona and Nevada.
They were Stockton, Calif.; Las Vegas, Nev.; Riverside-San Bernardino, Calif.; Bakersfield, Calif.; Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; Phoeniz, Ariz.; Sacramento, Calif.; Orlando, Fla.; Fresno, Calif.; and Oakland, Calif.
Search Bank Owned Homes at CentralValleyHomes.com
CAROL PERDEW
Prudential California Realty
(209) 239-7979
Posted in Bank Owned Homes, Central Valley Homes, Foreclosure Info, Foreclosure Relief, Home Search, Homes for Sale, Loans Modification, REO, Short, Short Sale | Tagged: California Department of Real Estate, Central Valley Bank Owned Homes, Central Valley Employment, Central Valley Foreclosures, Central Valley Home Search, Central Valley Homes, Central Valley Homes Loans, Central Valley Jobs, Central Valley Loans, Central Valley Property, Central Valley Real Estate, first time home buyer, Lathrop Bank Owned Homes, Lathrop Real Estate, Manteca Bank Owned Homes, Manteca Real Estate, Merced Bank Owned Homes, Modesto Bank Owned Homes, Modesto Real Estate, mortgage, Mt House Real Estate, Mt. House Bank Owned Homes, Prudential California Realty, Relocation, Rental, REO, Ripon Bank Owned Homes, Ripon Real Estate, San Joaquin County Bank Owned Homes, San Joaquin Stanislaus Bank Owned Homes, San Joquin Bank Owned Homes, Short Sale, Stockton Bank Owned Homes, Stockton Real Estate, Tracy Bank Owned Homes, Tracy Real Estate | Leave a Comment »