Showing posts with label Foreclosures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Foreclosures. Show all posts

Friday, May 29, 2009

Banks Vow Smoother Short Sale Process

Sharon and I are always on the look out for all the latest news and articles regarding today's real estate market. Short sales are on the rise here in the Sacramento real estate market, and we believe they are here to stay for a while before our market rebounds.

Just last week, I checked the statistics in three popular zip codes. 95758, 95834, and 95835. (Laguna, and Natomas neighborhoods) There were 650 homes for sale and 500 of them were short sales! Only 86 homes were Bank REO's. WOW. Stay tuned, Sacramento!

We found this very interesting article, and wanted to pass it along to you. One of the most frustrating problems with Short Sales, is the waiting period. With the pressure from the federal level, we are hoping to see a more smoother process.

If you would like more information on short sales and or know anyone who needs assistance, please pass them our information.

Lenders, including Bank of America and Wells Fargo, say they are making it easier for delinquent borrowers to avoid foreclosure by selling their homes for less than they owe on them.

Their efforts dovetail with a strategy unveiled last week by the Obama administration to promote such short sales.

Demand for short sales has burgeoned because falling home prices have made it impossible for many homeowners to get high enough prices to repay their lenders if they run into financial trouble, such as a job loss.

A short sale has an advantage over foreclosure for the homeowner because it is less embarrassing and does less damage to his or her credit. And for the lender, it is less costly than having to repossess, market and maintain a vacant property.

Also, keeping a house occupied can help preserve a neighborhood.

However, because of the complexity of such transactions -- including the need for approval of a sales price by lenders, investors and mortgage insurers -- the sales often fall apart. Real estate agents complain that by the time they get an answer from the bank on an offer, the potential buyer has lost interest.

At Bank of America, the nation's largest mortgage servicer, more than 60 percent of approved short sales do not close, which is why the bank wants to streamline the process, said BofA Senior Vice President David Sunlin by telephone Thursday.

Sunlin, who manages short sales for the bank, said the bank's first goal still is to negotiate a mortgage modification that will let a borrower keep his home. But he said during those negotiations the bank can simultaneously obtain the documentation needed to qualify the borrower for a short sale if the modification doesn't work.

In the past, Sunlin said, the bank did not begin the lengthy process of qualifying a borrower for a short sale until it had received a purchase offer.

To expedite short sales, Bank of America has enlarged and updated staff training and set up a phone line dedicated to short sales that borrowers and their agents can use.

Also, Sunlin said, in 60 to 90 days the bank will roll out a Web program it will use to find and track the short sales of houses with mortgages that it services. He said the Web portal also will accept qualifying documentation from clients wishing to do short sales.

Sunlin said it typically takes 45 to 60 days for the bank to tell a client if a short sale offer can be accepted, and up to 90 days if an investor must approve it. The goal, he said, is to shorten the wait to a week.

"By doing this, we should see more private sales instead of more sales of bank-owned (houses)," he said.

Sunlin said short sales will also benefit from an amendment to President Barack Obama's Making Home Affordable program announced last week that will standardize short sale application and acceptance forms. It also provides monetary incentives to servicers and helps cover relocation expense for homeowners.

David Knight, senior vice president at Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, said in an interview that his bank has been working many months to reduce delays in the short sale process. He said the bank is working closely with borrowers' agents to increase the likelihood that the listing prices on a short sale will be accepted.

The lending and real estate industries have been on a crash course to learn about short sales since the housing market bust, Knight said. "The big challenge is none of us really understood the process," he said.

By LESLIE BERKMAN
The Press-Enterprise

Thursday, May 21st 2009



Thursday, March 12, 2009

Treasury announces relief requirements home loan modifications

On March 4th, The Obama Administration announced new U.S. Department of the Treasury guidelines to enable servicers to begin modifications of eligible mortgages under the Administration's Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan � announced by President Barack Obama just two weeks ago. The release of detailed requirements for the "Making Home Affordable" program facilitates implementation of the critical provisions that will help bring relief to responsible homeowners struggling to make their mortgage payments, while preventing neighborhoods and communities from suffering the negative spillover effects of foreclosure such as lower housing prices, increased crime and higher taxes.

Making Home Affordable will offer assistance to as many as 7 to 9 million homeowners, making their mortgages more affordable and helping to prevent the destructive impact of foreclosures on families, communities and the national economy.

The Home Affordable Refinance program will be available to 4 to 5 million homeowners who have a solid payment history on an existing mortgage owned by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. Normally, these borrowers would be unable to refinance because their homes have lost value, pushing their current loan-to-value ratios above 80%. Under the Home Affordable Refinance program, many of them will now be eligible to refinance their loan to take advantage of today's lower mortgage rates or to refinance an adjustable-rate mortgage into a more stable mortgage, such as a 30-year fixed rate loan.

GSE lenders and servicers already have much of the borrower's information on file, so documentation requirements are not likely to be burdensome. In addition, in some cases an appraisal will not be necessary. This flexibility will make the refinance quicker and less costly for both borrowers and lenders. The Home Affordable Refinance program ends in June 2010.

The Home Affordable Modification program will help up to 3 to 4 million at-risk homeowners avoid foreclosure by reducing monthly mortgage payments. Working with the banking and credit union regulators, the FHA, the VA, the USDA and the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the Treasury Department today announced program guidelines that are expected to become standard industry practice in pursuing affordable and sustainable mortgage modifications. This program will work in tandem with an expanded and improved Hope for Homeowners program.

With the information now available, servicers can begin immediately to modify eligible mortgages under the Modification program so that at-risk borrowers can better afford their payments.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

California Market Flash For The Month of July

JULY MARKET FLASH

SUMMER IS A-COMIN’ IN

Intro: Spring’s enthusiasm was certainly a relief from the gray, congealed market of last winter. As spring moves into summer, we don’t know quite what to expect—far, far too many factors are in play to encourage confident prediction—but we do know this: those who are prepared will profit most from whatever direction the market does take. Read on.

Statistics:

Statewide: The median resale price of a single-family detached home in California for May was $384,840, a decrease of just over 35 percent from May 2007 and almost 5 percent from last month. Unsold resale inventory represented an 8.4-month supply, compared to 10.7 months for the same period a year ago. Median number of days till sale was 50 in May, almost unchanged from 51 in May 2007.

County Statistics: (Med = median, Ac = activity, MOM = prior/this month, YOY = prior/this year)

CurrMed

MedMOM

MedYOY

CurrSls

AcMOM

AcYOY

Alameda County

$475,000

0.26%

-19.18%

1,186

-4.35%

-27.28%

Contra Costa County

$387,000

-2.03%

-34.41%

1,206

-4.66%

-11.71%

El Dorado County

$365,000

-3.69%

-25.05%

191

24.84%

40.44%

Marin County

$899,000

12.38%

5.76%

200

-7.41%

-44.29%

Monterey County

$350,000

-6.73%

-41.67%

232

9.43%

n/a

Napa County

$474,000

-4.24%

-24.16%

92

-8.00%

-17.86%

Nevada County

$360,000

-16.28%

-21.74%

97

5.43%

n/a

Northern California

$337,870

-2.42%

-12.44%

n/a

n/a

n/a

Placer County

$338,000

-3.29%

-20.47%

489

-1.01%

32.88%

Sacramento County

$225,000

-3.02%

-35.53%

2,028

10.16%

116.90%

San Benito County

$332,500

-12.90%

-43.64%

40

-13.04%

17.65%

San Francisco Bay

$517,000

-0.19%

-21.67%

6,216

-1.49%

-23.07%

San Francisco County

$799,500

4.24%

-4.25%

484

-20.00%

-21.43%

San Mateo County

$699,500

4.40%

-13.64%

444

-22.51%

-41.81%

Santa Clara County

$630,000

0.08%

-12.50%

1,173

-18.54%

-46.17%

Santa Cruz County

$543,750

-9.98%

-24.79%

156

2.63%

n/a

Solano County

$300,000

-6.25%

-31.66%

440

2.56%

-7.56%

Sonoma County

$414,000

0.12%

-20.31%

409

-7.47%

-29.24%

Yolo County

$308,750

2.07%

-27.35%

212

34.18%

89.29%

Alameda County: Though down from December, median held up for the month of May. This market may be reaching a price point that’s attractive to the general prospect, since May sales almost equaled April’s surprising surge and are more than double the recent low in January.

Contra Costa County: Median lost a sliver this month and continues at less than two-thirds of its recent record in June 2007. Sales are at levels not seen in the last year, driven by sales of steeply depreciated homes in attractive neighborhoods.

El Dorado County: Sales have exceeded the August 2007 peak of 185 and seem poised to crack 200. Median has lost roughly $100,000 in the last year but has more or less stayed stable since the beginning of this year.

Marin County: Sales seem to have shaken off winter doldrums and returned to the level of fall 2007. Some constraint is exerted by the region’s lowest proportion of foreclosure sales, about 6%, and by still-restricted availability of jumbo mortgages. Median has surged to within a hair of $900,000, but we must remember that Marin’s median has been relatively bulletproof in the current crisis; historical low of $750,000 came in January 2006, and since then it’s scarcely been below $800,000.

Monterey County: Median has shrunk by almost half in a year—from $600,000 last June to $350,000 today. But how much of this is depreciation and how much is due to high-end properties not moving the way they once did, we’re not sure. On the other hand, sales are now at their highest point in our records after essentially doubling since January.

Napa County: Sales have recovered from January’s scary low of 37 and are now flirting with the triple-digit levels of last summer.

Nevada County: Sales have a way to go to match last summer’s levels, but have been increasing without pause since January. Median was holding up well as recently as April, but then declined by $70,000 in May.

Placer County: Consistent sales of almost 500 demonstrate a welcome recovery from last September’s 216. Median, after being essentially flat for the last half of 2006 and first half of 2007, has declined steadily for the last year and lost a little over $80,000—possibly converging on a new price stability along with the rest of the Sacramento Region.

Sacramento County: Current median of $225,000 is the lowest we’ve ever seen, but the resulting affordability seems to be provoking a recovery. From a low of 751 in January 2007, sales have nearly tripled as of last month and doubled in the last four months. Perhaps prospects and buyers (largely investors) will push Sacramento out of its slump.

San Benito County: After a recent sharp rise, sales have regained the levels of 18 months ago, though median has fallen by a third in the last year.

San Francisco Bay: The Bay Area enjoyed a $660,000 median all last summer, but has fallen $150,000 since then. On the other hand, sales have risen by 50% since February.

San Francisco County: May sales declined about 20% from an April peak but are still at last fall’s levels, even with relatively few foreclosure sales. Median has been climbing steadily since December and is now, again, happily knocking on the door of $800,000.

San Mateo County: Median is down by about $100,000 in the last year. One figure or the other may improve in the near future, but the market must recover more generally for both to improve at once.

Santa Clara County: Even after a slight retreat in April, sales are double what they were in January. As jumbo loans become more available, this situation will improve further. Median has only dropped by about 10% in the last year.

Santa Cruz County: Sales almost doubled between March and April, then built on that gain in May. But a decline of $60,000 in median for the month means a loss of $180,000 for the year. This county is looking a lot better than it did over the winter and there’s hope it will regain the eminence it enjoyed when the market was hot.

Solano County: Sales have nearly doubled in the last three months, driven by foreclosure resales accounting for almost 60% of transactions. On the other hand, median has declined by a third since March 2007. Like many rural counties, Solano will probably participate strongly in the general recovery when it comes.

Sonoma County: Three months of increases have at least brought the median back above $400,000 and a sustained increase in sales has brought activity back to the levels of last summer. Sonoma, together with Solano and Contra Costa counties, is an affordability champ for the region this month. (And incidentally, Sonoma city took CAR’s Most Improved Median in May with a 61% improvement year-over-year.)

Yolo County: Yolo’s loss of over $110,000 in median for the year makes it look superficially like a lot of other counties—but exciting things are happening in the shorter term; since January, sales have doubled while median has actually increased. Happily, this county will have its share in the greening of greater Sacramento.

Interest Rates: 30-year fixed, 6.26%; 15-year fixed, 5.78%; 30-year nonconforming, 7.32%. A spread of more than 1% between 30-year fixed and 30-year jumbo underscores the difficulty of finding loans appropriate to California’s coastal markets. 5/1 ARM is exactly the same percentage as 30-year fixed, which is one reason (the other being borrower wariness about resetting loans) that the proportion of new 5/1 ARMs in the market is dropping.

During the third week in June, Freddie Mac was deeply concerned that if rates rose even slightly on conforming loans, sales would slow drastically as prospects had less incentive to look for bargains. Since then, pressure has eased as 30-year fixed has backed off about 20 basis points, but we all know that’s only a breather. Affordability in Northern California is still so fragile that if inflation—or, for that matter, Federal Reserve conservatism—kicks rates higher, the market’s current guarded optimism may collapse again. Cross your fingers.

Inventory: What you see is what you get. Availability now is unpredictable depending not only on location, but on the type of buyer (first-time, move-up, rental property, overseas) who may be interested in the specific area. Foreclosures are flooding some neighborhoods with properties, but hardly touching others. Overall, inventories still won’t be one of your major concerns, but they’re bound to figure into your calculations more than they did six months ago.

Overall Assessment: Optimism feels so good and for the first time in months, we’re feeling optimistic! Bargains abound, especially in areas away from the coast. The Bay Area’s average monthly mortgage amount has shrunk by 30% since its recent peak two years ago. Thirty year fixed mortgage rates were inching up for a while, but now seem to be retreating towards 6% rather than lunging for seven. In many parts of Northern California, for the first time in years, an attractive home can be called affordable. Remind your prospects of a contradiction that works in their favor: right now they may be facing a very brief opportunity to purchase a home that will suit them for a very long time.