Monday, November 22, 2010

New foreclosure trouble brewing as late payments rise?

Several states across the Northeast are seeing a sharp jump in homeowners falling behind on their mortgages.

That's the word out from TransUnion, which released its third quarter mortgage delinquency numbers over the weekend. The biggest increases in late payments were seen in New Jersey, New York and Connecticut at the region's core, as well as in outliers like Maine and Delaware.

Pennsylvania and Maryland, as well as another swath of New England states - Vermont, New Hampshire and Rhode Island - saw less dramatic increases.

The regional rise bucks a national trend that is seeing a slow but steady decline in mortgage delinquencies from a record-shattering peak in 2009. (That is with the exception of the Great Depression, which saw half of all homeowners either fall behind on their payments or face foreclosure.)
While the national rate is up, year over year, at 6.44 percent, it has been falling steadily on a quarter-by-quarter basis, TransUnion reports.

A sluggish economy that still feels like a recession to many of us is clearly continuing to take a toll. Check out this Boston Sunday Globe story. Three quarters of all Massachusetts residents say the recession has not ended for them, with more than half seeing no break in the tough conditions for at least two more years, according to a Globe/Suffolk University poll.

Try as I might, I couldn't find third quarter data for Massachusetts. I will be calling the TransUnion public relations flak this morning to fill in that gap and will post the data when I get it.

The Bay State's delinquency rate stood at just over 5 percent of all borrowers in the second quarter, far above historical norms of 1.5 percent to 2 percent.

What's your take? Are you falling behind on your payments - or hesitating to buy because of a still uncertain economy?

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Tuesday, November 16, 2010

An Update on Home Foreclosures

Lately, very few things have been in the news more than the topic of home foreclosures. Depending on the source, it is estimated there have been over 4 million homes entering foreclosure over the past four years and about 300,000 are entering the first stage monthly.

Recently the attention has turned from the sheer volume of foreclosures to the procedural flaws in foreclosing that are threatening lenders' rights to foreclose because legal "ownership" of the mortgage may not be readily determined or because paperwork related to foreclosing was improperly executed.

The net result is that several major lenders have announced a moratorium on their foreclosure process to allow them time to review their documentation and to determine that they can legitimately move forward.

This means that the natural flow of homes through the pipeline is interrupted. Instead of having a predictable timeline, buyers must sit in limbo with respect to the actual availability of a particular home for purchase.

Except for the national attention and anxiety caused by the media saturation of this issue, the real economic effect will likely be very localized and concentrated. In communities with a large number of foreclosures where the mortgages on those homes are owned by lenders who are temporarily halting the process, it means those homes can't go on the market. So in turn, the decline in the amount of inventory being offered for sale could result in an increase on home prices in that area, until the foreclosure freeze is thawed out.

However as a national economic issue, the overall impact will probably not have a measureable or lasting effect on the housing market. That assumes, of course, that lenders move expeditiously to determine their ownership and identify steps necessary to deal with the process and documentation problem – such as, resuming the foreclosure process or indentifying loan modifications and workouts.

I will continue to monitor this situation very closely, and would encourage you to call or email me so we can discuss what this might mean to you.

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Thursday, November 11, 2010

Realtors Strive to Streamline Short Sales through HAFA

RISMEDIA, November 11, 2010—Realtors gleaned inside knowledge on the efforts being made to improve the short sale process through the Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives Program at the 2010 REALTORS® Conference & Expo. HAFA was intended to help homeowners who are unable to keep their home under the Making Home Affordable Modification Program avoid foreclosure by streamlining the short sales process and providing incentives to lenders that complete short sales. According to the National Association of Realtors’ most recent Realtors Confidence Index, 12% of all recent home buyers purchased their home through a short sale.

“Realtors from across the country are telling us that the current short sales process is time-consuming and cumbersome, discouraging buyers who would otherwise want to purchase a home in a short sale,” said NAR President Vicki Cox Golder, owner of a real estate company in Tucson, Ariz. “As the leading advocate for home ownership and housing issues, NAR has been urging lenders and servicers to approve reasonable short sale offers that allow homeowners to avoid foreclosure when a family is absolutely unable keep their home.”

HAFA includes uniform procedures, standards forms, and deadlines, but its success depends on effective servicer implementation and the cooperation of investors and subordinate lien holders.

Lenders have been criticized for cumbersome and confusing short sale processes, and JK Huey, senior vice president, Wells Fargo Home Mortgage REO and Short Sale, addressed some primary concerns and myths surrounding these transactions.

“There are a number of decision makers involved in a short sale, and the more parties involved, the more complex the process becomes,” said Huey. “It’s important to keep in mind that this is not a typical buy-sell transaction. Our Realtor partners’ expertise helps us deliver timely solutions to assist customers, minimize losses to investors, and help to rebuild and stabilize our communities.”

To address concerns related to the short sales process, Wells Fargo has increased staff resources by 57% over the past 12 months, implemented proactive marketing efforts to provide information and education on short sale workout alternatives to its customers, and worked with legislators and government agencies to help streamline processes.

Panelist Laurie Maggiano, director of policy for the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Homeownership Preservation explained how homeowners in need benefit from HAFA. HAFA provides $3,000 relocation assistance to homeowners after a successful closing and requires that the homeowner be fully released from future liability for the primary mortgage and also any subordinate liens.

“HAFA offers additional foreclosure avoidance options when other home retention options have been exhausted,” said Maggiano. “Being proactive can only positively impact the homeowner’s ability to buy a home in the future. For example, Fannie Mae will allow a homeowner to be considered for a home loan within two years of a short sale, whereas a homeowner who goes through a foreclosure will need to wait seven.”

Earlier this year, NAR produced a “Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives” brochure to explain the HAFA program to Realtors so they could help their home buyer and seller clients through the process. NAR also offers the SFR certification (Short Sales and Foreclosure Resource) to help Realtors obtain advanced training in managing the complexities of transactions that involve foreclosed homes and short sales.

The Realtors Confidence Index is a key indicator of housing market strength based on a monthly survey of over 50,000 real estate practitioners.

For more information, visit www.realtor.org.#END

 

THE CRECCO COMPANIES

Real Estate  Investment  Social Media

Anthony J Crecco

Short Sale and Loan Modification Expert

Thornwood NY  10594

914.269.8184

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Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Deliberately seek the company of people who influence you to think and act on building the life you desire."

"Deliberately seek the company of people who influence you to think and act on building the life you desire."

Napoleon Hill
1883-1970, Author

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Tuesday, November 9, 2010

NAR Buyer and Seller Survey Shows Value of Long-Term Home Ownership

RISMEDIA, November 9, 2010—Home buyers today have affirmed a long-term view of home ownership, the typical seller is experiencing positive returns and the vast majority of home owners see their property as a good investment, according to the latest consumer survey of home buyers and sellers. The study was released at the 2010 Realtors Conference & Expo.

The 2010 National Association of Realtors Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers is the latest in a series of large national NAR surveys evaluating demographics, preferences, marketing and experiences of recent home buyers and sellers.

Although typical sellers had been in their previous home for eight years, up from seven years in the 2009 study, first-time buyers plan to stay for 10 years and repeat buyers plan to hold their property for 15 years.

NAR 2010 President Vicki Cox Golder, owner of Vicki L. Cox & Associates in Tucson, Ariz., said the pattern of home buyers taking a long-term view has solidified over the past few years. “This underscores two simple facts—home ownership encourages stability, and the longer you own, the better your investment.”

Even with several years of price declines, the typical seller who purchased a home eight years ago experienced a median equity gain of $33,000, a 24% increase, while sellers who were in their homes for 11-15 years saw a median gain of 40%.

“Sellers who purchased at the top of the market and had to sell in a short time frame were hurt by the price correction, but the vast majority who are able to stay for a normal period of home ownership generally built enough equity to make a trade-up purchase,” Golder said. “Despite swings in the housing market in recent years, the fact is most long-term owners see healthy gains in the value of their property.”

House flipping is virtually nonexistent in today’s market. “The primary exception is for experienced investors, many of whom pay cash and are making renovations or improvements after a careful study of properties, neighborhoods and market demand,” Golder explained. “The house flipping and quick gains which occurred during the boom period were abnormal, driven by risky, easy-money financing that should never have been allowed in the market.”

In the 2006 study, covering sellers during the close of the housing boom, 6% of sellers had owned their property for less than a year and a total of 30% had owned for three years or less. In the 2010 study, only 3% had owned their home for less than a year and a total of 11% had owned for three years or less.

Paul Bishop, NAR vice president of research, said the lion’s share of buyers view their home as a good investment. “Eighty-five percent of recent home buyers see their home as a good investment, and nearly half think that investment is better than stocks,” he said. “Even with the turmoil created by the housing boom and bust, this indicates the long-term view of home ownership as a fundamental goal and value remains sound. In fact, the single biggest reason most people buy a home is the simple desire to own a home of their own, cited by 31% of respondents, including 53% of first-time buyers.”

The next biggest reasons for buying, identified by all home buyers, were desire for a larger home, 9%; a change in family situation and the home buyer tax credit, cited by 8% each; a job-related move, 7%; and the affordability of homes, 6%. Twelve other categories were 5% or less.

The number of first-time home buyers rose to a record high 50% of all home sales from 47% in the 2009 study, building on success of the home buyer tax credit which began in 2009. The previous cyclical high for first-time buyers was 44% in 1991; records date back to 1981.

The profile shows the median age of first-time buyers was 30 and the median income was $59,900. The typical first-time buyer purchased a 1,540 square foot home costing $152,000, with 93% using the first-time buyer tax credit.

First-time buyers who made a downpayment used a variety of sources: 74% used savings, 27% received a gift from a friend or relative, typically from their parents, and 9% received a loan from a relative or friend. Eight percent tapped into a 401k fund, and 6% sold stocks or bonds. Ninety-five percent chose a fixed-rate mortgage.

The shares of entry-level buyers receiving a gift or loan were modestly higher than 2009 when 22% received a gift and 6% a loan from a relative or friend. “It appears more parents were motivated to help their children to take advantage of the home buyer tax credit and very favorable affordability conditions,” Bishop said.

Fifty-six percent of entry level buyers financed their purchase with an FHA loan, while another 7% used the VA loan program. Forty-two percent said financing their first home was more difficult than expected and 9% had been rejected by a lender.

Fifty-eight percent of all buyers are married couples, 20% are single women, 12% single men, 8% unmarried couples and 1% other.

Bishop noted that women buyers have accounted for roughly one out of five transactions since the late 1990s, and single men have been at the one in 10 level since 1981. “A modest increase in the share of single men buyers may result from the home buyer tax credit, but this is the highest share for single men in the history of the study,” he said.

Buyers searched a median of 12 weeks and viewed 12 homes. Fourteen percent of buyers own two or more homes.

The typical repeat buyer was 49 years old, earned $87,000, and purchased a 2,000 square foot home costing $215,000.

The median downpayment of all home buyers was 8%, ranging from 4% for first-time buyers to 14% for repeat buyers.

The median age of home sellers was 49 and their income was $90,000. Sellers moved a median distance of 18 miles and their home was on the market for 8 weeks, down from 10 weeks in the 2009 survey. Half traded up in size, 28% bought a comparably sized home and 21% traded down.

Sixty-four percent of sellers chose their agent based on a referral or had used the same agent in the past. Reputation was the most important factor in choosing an agent, cited by 35% of respondents, followed by trustworthiness at 23%. Eighty-four percent of sellers are likely to use the same agent again or recommend to others.

Forty-four percent of sellers offered incentives to attract buyers, such as home warranties or assistance with closing costs. The typical home sold for 96% of the listing price, compared with 95% in the 2009 profile.

Home buyers thought the most important services agents offer are helping find the right house, and negotiating sales terms and price. Buyers also most commonly choose an agent based on a referral from a friend, neighbor or relative, with trustworthiness and reputation being the most important factors.

Buyers use a wide variety of resources in searching for a home: 89% surf the Internet, 88% use real estate agents, 57% yard signs, 45% attend open houses and 36% look at print or newspaper ads. Although buyers also use other resources, they generally start the search process online and then contact an agent.

When asked where they first learned about the home purchased, 38% of buyers said the Internet; 37% of buyers from a real estate agent; 11% a yard sign or open house; 6% from a friend, neighbor or relative; 4% home builders; 2% a print or newspaper ad; 2% directly from the seller; and less than 1% from a home book or magazine.

Eighty-five percent of home buyers who used the Internet to search for a home purchased through a real estate agent, while 70% of non-Internet users were more likely to purchase directly from a builder or from an owner they already knew in a private transaction.

Local metropolitan multiple listing service websites were the most popular Internet resource, used by 59% of buyers; followed by Realtor.com, 45%; real estate company sites, 43%; real estate agent websites, 42%; other websites with real estate listings, 41%; and for-sale-by-owner sites, 15%; other categories were smaller.

Seventy-seven percent of all buyers purchased a detached single-family home, 9% condo, 8% a townhouse or rowhouse, and 6% some other kind of housing.

Commuting costs continue to factor strongly in buyer decisions, with three-quarters of buyers saying transportation costs were important.

Environmentally friendly features remain a significant factor: 88% of buyers said that heating and cooling costs were important, 71% desired energy efficient appliances, and 69% wanted energy efficient lighting.

Fifty-two percent of all homes purchased were in a suburb or subdivision, 18% were in an urban area, 17% in a small town, 11% in a rural area and 1% in a resort or recreation area. The median distance from the previous residence was 12 miles.

Not surprisingly, for-sale-by-owner transactions reached a record low, accounting for 9% of sales in the 2010 study, down from 11% in 2009. The share of homes sold without professional representation has trended down since reaching a cyclical peak of 18% in 1997. “In a market as challenging as today, it’s clear most home sellers need professional assistance,” Bishop said.

As seen in previous studies, many FSBO properties were not placed on the open market. Factoring out private sales between parties who knew each other in advance such as family or acquaintances, the actual number of homes sold on the open market without professional assistance was a record low 5%—the rest were unrepresented sellers in private transactions. The market share of open-market FSBOs is half of what it was six years ago—10% were sold on the open market in 2004.

The median home price for sellers who used an agent was $199,300 vs. $140,000 for a home sold directly by an owner, but there were important differences. The median income of unassisted sellers was $64,000, in contrast with $93,200 for agent-assisted sellers. Unassisted sellers were much more likely to be selling a somewhat smaller home, and they were more likely to be in a rural area. Combined, these factors suggest a lower value for FSBO properties.

The most difficult tasks reported by unrepresented sellers are getting the right price, preparing and fixing the home for sale, understanding and performing paperwork, and selling within the planned length of time.

NAR mailed an eight-page questionnaire in July 2010 to a national sample of 111,004 home buyers and sellers who purchased their homes between July 2009 and June 2010, according to county records. It generated 8,449 usable responses; the adjusted response rate was 7.9%. All information is characteristic of the 12-month period ending in June 2010 with the exception of income data, which are for 2009. Because of rounding and omissions for space, percentage distributions for some findings may not add up to 100%.

For more information, visit www.realtor.org.

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Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Designing a Successful Day


All success requires you to make a decision to succeed. Here are five thoughts to consider:

  1. Success is more difficult to live with than failure. You must know why you want to succeed so that it has purpose. Otherwise it is a non-fulfilling experience.
  2. Success in any endeavor requires you to pay the price. Short-cuts never win you the world-championship.
  3. Success is not a one-time thing, it's an all-the-time thing. You never play to lose but every loss teaches you how to play to win.
  4. Success is a habit–so is failure.
  5. Success is on the inside first before it ever translates to the outside. Feel good about you or you'll never be able to compete.

The quality of your life is in direct proportion to your commitment to excellence.

Based on the above, what's your dream day? If your "success canvas" was without the blight of your current challenges, how would you paint it? How would you answer the following questions:

  • What kind of work would you do?
  • How would you feel?
  • How many hours would you work?
  • What time would you start?
  • What time would you end?
  • How much money would you earn?
  • How much money would you save?
  • What memories would you create?
  • What one-on-one experiences would you have with your spouse?
  • How about with your kids?
  • How would your attitude be?
  • What would be the things you would not do?
  • How much more time would that give you?
  • How peacefully would you sleep?
  • How much inner peace would you have?

These are important questions, the kind of questions that determine your destiny. Highly successful people design their perfect days and they strive to adhere to that agenda. Use the above questions to help you determine if your choices are adding to or taking away from your success.

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Monday, November 1, 2010

GSEs Instruct Servicers to Help Unemployed Through State Programs

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have both issued notices to servicers that they must work closely with state housing finance agencies to provide mortgage assistance to homeowners who’ve lost their jobs.

The Treasury Department has awarded $7.6 billion for housing agencies in certain states to develop programs that provide temporary relief to unemployed homeowners.

Effective immediately, GSE servicers are instructed to accept all monthly mortgage payments from housing finance agencies (HFAs) on behalf of borrowers enrolled in state-specific programs for unemployment mortgage assistance or mortgage reinstatement plans.

The directive applies to mortgage loans held in the GSEs’ own portfolio, in a mortgage-backed securities (MBS) pool with the special servicing option, or a shared-risk MBS pool for which the GSEs market the acquired property.

Specific program details vary by HFA, but the assistance provided generally falls under one of two types. An unemployment mortgage assistance program pays portion of or the full monthly mortgage payment amount for qualifying borrowers so that they may seek employment or obtain job training without fear of losing their homes. A mortgage reinstatement program provides a one-time lump sum payment to assist in restoring a delinquent mortgage to current status.

A borrower participating in an HFA program may not simultaneously receive assistance through another loss mitigation program, including the federal government’s Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP).

Servicers have been instructed that they may not determine borrower eligibility or communicate qualification for a state HFA program to a borrower. Servicers can, however, refer potentially eligible borrowers to the HFA in accordance with relevant state requirements.

The GSEs’ stressed, though, that servicers must not deny or delay consideration of a borrower for a relief or workout option pending approval for HFA mortgage assistance and must not require a borrower to first request financial assistance from an HFA as a condition of consideration for a relief or workout option.

Regarding protocol for foreclosures related to loans that qualify for an HFA program, Servicers are not required to accept mortgage assistance payments if a notice of trustee/sheriff sale has been recorded and is scheduled less than seven days from the date the servicer is notified of borrower approval by the HFA.

If the notice of borrower approval from the HFA is received seven or more days in advance of a scheduled foreclosure sale, Fannie says a servicer still should not suspend the foreclosure proceedings unless it has actually received funds from the HFA to cover the borrower’s mortgage payment.

Freddie stressed that if servicers suspend foreclosure proceedings, they must ensure that appropriate action is taken to re-commence foreclosure proceedings should the borrower’s mortgage payment not be received from the HFA in the month in which it is due.

Fannie Mae noted that it has elected not to participate in any principal reduction options that may be offered by some HFAs. Freddie Mac did not specify in its notice whether principal reduction was an approved means of assistance.

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