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Real Estate and *stuff *

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Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac Offer Troubled Home Owners New Foreclosure Alternative

April 9, 2013

stop-foreclosure1Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will offer a new, simplified loan modification program to help troubled borrowers avoid foreclosure and stay in their homes.

Beginning July 1, borrowers who are at least 90 days delinquent on a Fannie Mae- or Freddie Mac-guaranteed mortgage will be allowed to lower their monthly payments and modify their mortgage without having to fill out financial or hardship documentation.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guarantee about half of U.S. home mortgages.

Most foreclosure avoidance programs, including the federal government’s Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP), make you fill out financial forms documenting your income, expenses, and employment. Troubled borrowers say their lenders often lose that paperwork, while lenders often claim borrowers aren’t completing the paperwork.

The new Streamlined Modification Initiative program would also:

  • Lower your interest rate close to current rates.
  • Stretch out your mortgage to 40 years.

Those two changes will reduce the typical program participant’s monthly payment by about 30%.

If you owe more than your home is worth, you also won’t have to pay interest on as much as 30% of your outstanding mortgage amount.

Once you’re in the program, you’ll then have to make three on-time trial payments at the new rate. Do that and your mortgage will be permanently lowered under the new Streamlined Modification initiative.

If you opt for the program, you’ll be encouraged to document your income and financial hardship. That’s because the traditional foreclosure avoidance programs will likely net you a better deal.

The program, which expires Aug. 1, 2015, is open only to home owners with loans owned or guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.

If you qualify for the program, your lender must offer it to you. If you think you qualify and aren’t automatically offered the program, you can call your lender to ask about the program after July 2013.

To qualify:

  • You must be at least 90 days delinquent, but no more than 24 months delinquent.
  • Your mortgage loan amount divided by the current value of the property must be greater than or equal to 80%.
  • Your mortgage loan has to be a first mortgage.
  • You can’t have been 60 days late on a prior loan modification payment, or have failed at two or more prior modification plans.
  • You must have gotten your loan more than a year ago

To see if your mortgage is backed by Fannie or Freddie, go HERE

To stem foreclosures, committee recommends loan modication bill

May 14, 2012

Stop foreclosure! There are a variety of options for distressed home owners such as loan modifications, deed-in-lieu or a short sale. Find out which option helps you the best!

New news and new avenue for distressed home owners!  Please see the Boston Herald article reprinted below.  There is a new hotline in Massachusetts for residents facing foreclosure.  If you are facing foreclosure, there are a variety of options available to you.  Call or email to me to find out what they are.  You can also visit www.dontforeclosenow.com to review them.

“In an effort to stem the tide of foreclosures, a key legislative committee on Wednesday advanced a bill that would require banks to make loan modifications available to homeowners when financially feasible to prevent families from unnecessarily losing their homes.

The Joint Committee on Financial Services unanimously recommended passage of the bill (H 1219) on Wednesday, with 10 of the 17 committee members voting in favor of the legislation, which has been a priority for Attorney General Martha Coakley.

“This is a fair and balanced approach that brings both the bank and the borrower to the table to look at the mortgage,” said Rep. Michael Costello, a Newburyport Democrat and co-chair of the Financial Services Committee.

The bill, filed by Rep. Steven Walsh (D-Lynn), would require banks and other lenders to assess a borrower’s ability to pay and the value of a loan modification compared to the cost of foreclosure before entering into foreclosure proceedings. If a modified loan is worth more than the amount the bank expects to recover through foreclosure, the lender must offer a modified loan to the borrower, according to the bill.

The legislation also addresses two recent Supreme Judicial Court decisions by requiring that lenders produce proper documentation showing they are the legal holders of the mortgage before foreclosing.

Coakley, who says foreclosures are a major obstacle to a full economic recovery, applauded the advancement of the bill on Wednesday. Coakley has said that in addition to pushing families out of their homes, unnecessary foreclosures have led to more abandoned property in cities and towns.

“Addressing the foreclosure crisis is a critical step toward moving our economy forward. This bill would promote reasonable loan modifications that keep people in their homes, keep properties on the tax rolls, and without requiring banks to sacrifice the bottom line,” Coakley said in a statement.

Among those who cast votes, the bill received unanimous support in the Financial Services Committee. Ten members voted in favor, four did not vote and three Republicans reserved their rights. Sen. Michael Knapik and Reps. Nicholas Boldyga and Marc Lombardo reserved their rights, while Sen. Brian Joyce and Reps. Kevin Murphy, Lori Ehrlich and James Cantwell did not vote.

According to Costello’s office, more than 45,000 Massachusetts residents have lost their homes due to foreclosure since the start of 2007. In February, there were almost 1,400 new foreclosures started, more than double the amount from a year ago and showing that the problem has not gone away even as the economy has rebounded.

The Warren Group recently reported completed foreclosures in Massachusetts dropped more than 30 percent last year, compared to 2010, but analysts believe the drop was partly due to lenders slowing the process down.

With $44.5 million paid to Massachusetts as part of a national settlement over illegal foreclosures and loan servicing with Bank of America, JP Morgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and GMAC/Ally, Coakley two weeks ago launched a HomeCorps program featuring the hotline (617-573-5333), which makes loan modification experts available to advise residents.

Coakley said last week that the hotline had been inundated with calls from more than 1,000 homeowners calling in the first week, averaging 200 to 300 calls a day.

“We are going to try to help everybody we can to stay in their homes,” Coakley told Fox 25. “For a lot of people this can be real relief.”

Under the national settlement, the banks are also ordered to provide about $14.6 million in cash payments to Bay State borrowers and $257 million worth of mortgage relief across Massachusetts, money that Coakley said can be used for refinancing or principal reduction.

By Matt Murphy / State House News Service

Banks Tempt Underwater Home Owners with Cash — Would You Take It?

February 25, 2012 1 Comment

A short sale might be worth more than avoiding a foreclosure on your credit report. For some, it means cold hard cash.

If your lender offered you as much as five figures to move out of your home because you couldn’t make your mortgage payment, would you do it or wait for the lender to foreclose?

The answer would seem to be a resounding “hell, yes.” But many people sit tight.

When Bank of America offered short-sale incentives of $5,000 to $20,000 to 20,000 Florida home owners late last year, only 3,000 home owners expressed an interest in participating.

One reason? Folks can often live rent-free while the foreclosure process winds its way through the red tape.

But, a cash “bonus” paired with a short sale that lets you avoid a foreclosure on your credit history can be a sweet deal.

An incentive payment might be as little as $3,000 via the federal government’s Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives program. But private lender programs offer 10 times that much, depending on where you live, which short sale program you use, and which company holds your mortgage, says BusinessWeek.

“Banks are nudging potential sellers by pre-approving deals, streamlining the closing process, forgoing their right to pursue unpaid debt, and in some cases providing large cash incentives,” Moody’s Senior Credit Officer Bill Fricke told the magazine.

Of course, incentives have their catches. You have to:

1. Help the bank sell your home. In a short sale, you find someone willing to buy your home for less than what you owe on the mortgage and your lender agrees to take the sale price.

2. Move on without a fight.

3. Probably live in a state where it takes years, rather than months, for the bank to foreclose. In those areas, it’s cheaper for the bank to pay you to do a short sale than to pay the cost of a multi-year-long foreclosure.

If you bank makes an offer and you bite, these four steps will ensure the smoothest possible process:

1. Make sure the lender can’t come after you later to collect any shortfall between what you owe on the mortgage and what you’re selling your home for. Some, but not all, states prohibit that.

2. Talk to an attorney and a tax adviser so you know what will happen financially after the short sale. If you sell now through the end of 2012, the tax rules for short sales say you won’t owe any income tax on $1 million (singles) to $2 million in forgiven mortgage debt (married couples). Those tax rules, part of the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act, expire at the end of this year and only apply to your primary residence.

3. Hire a REALTOR® experienced in short sales to handle the transaction. Look for an agent who’s earned the CDPE (Certified Distressed Property Expert) designation.

4. Figure out where you’re going to move and sign a lease now because your credit score will likely drop if you stop paying your mortgage and short sell your home. A low credit score can make it difficult to get a rental home.

By the way, you can ask your bank if it’s willing to work with you on a short sale, but asking for an incentive too? That’s not how it works. Banks choose you for an incentive program, and how they decide isn’t clear, though they’re less likely to offer cash in states where it only takes a couple of months to foreclose.

So would you take the cash and short sale, or hold out?

Considering a short sale?  Visit www.dontforeclosenow.com to get more information.

Freddie Mac Announces Up to 12 Month Forbearance for Unemployed

January 11, 2012

Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae postponed foreclosures through the holidays but things are back on schedule now.  Freddie Mac has announced a forbearance if the home owner is unemployed.  This video explains how to obtain that:

http://youtu.be/CYDGuTQJ-yc

Not sure if Freddie Mac owns your loan – visit their site here:  https://ww3.freddiemac.com/corporate/

If you are struggling with your mortgage or know someone who is, please find out all your options.  This site will give you several different options depending on where you are in the foreclosure process:  www.dontforeclosenow.com

 

 

Watch this video on “What is a Short Sale?”

December 21, 2011

Have you fallen behind on your mortgage payments, and don’t know what to do? Watch this brief video, and find out what a Short Sale is, and why it may be the solution you have been searching for.

Then contact me at 508-784-0504 or amymullen@remax.net for a FREE consultation to find out if a Short Sale is right for you.  You can also visit www.dontforeclosenow.com to review all of your options.

 

Short Sales 101…or the rant of a short sale listing agent

December 19, 2011

Okay – I have to voice this or I might just explode!  I would love to get a few basic messages across to the various parties in a short sale in hopes of making this process easier and faster for the next person who utilizes just one of these tips.  Even if just one person takes a point from this – my day will be complete!

After working on several very difficult short sales in the past month I have found myself at a point of exasperation a few times while staring up at the ceiling of my office, or the soft top of the Jeep and talking to myself.  This is distributing to both myself and any passerby’s.  I know that short sales are difficult and they are especially hard on the home owners who are facing of variety of challenges in their lives BUT with these few simple tips…we can make them easier.

So…here you are…by party involved…my advice in simple terms:

BUYERS

  •  We do realize you are helping the sellers by offering to purchase their property and they hope that you will enjoy it and love it as much as they have.  They have raised families, enjoyed moments and poured money and physical effort into their homes to watch it sell at a loss.  This is difficult for them and your appreciation of that goes a long way.  So please – don’t treat the house as if it’s already a foreclosure and walk around it at will.  Make an appointment, have your Realtor with you and respect their personal belongings.
  • We also realize how hard it is to wait for an answer while the short sale is being processed through the bank.  If there is more than one lender involved – this is an even longer process.  It’s improved A LOT over the past year and we are now seeing very short processing times but we know that anything longer than a day is hard.  I have been a home buyer and I know how anxious you are – how excited you are – and how much you want to buy THAT house!  But please – don’t insist that your buyer’s agent call the listing agent daily to find out what’s going on.  Chances are – they don’t have an update and will let your Realtor know when they do.
  • You are enjoying almost instant equity in your purchase because short sales have a lower market value of identical properties that are traditional sales.  This is because of the risk associated with your patience and waiting.  Please don’t insist your agent submit insanely lowball offers – the bank will not accept them because they know what market value is, your agent will be embarrassed to do so and the seller will be insulted.   It wastes everyone’s time including yours and results in both sides of the transaction feeling slighted and unwilling to negotiate.  A well thought out offer with a reasonable price in comparison to market will get all the parties talking and result in a very good deal for you.
  • Use a lawyer who is experienced with short sales.  Your Realtor will more than likely have a few to recommend and consider their recommendations.  A short sale transaction is not a typical sale and the attorney in your corner needs to be able to navigate it.

 

BUYER’S AGENTS

  •  EDUCATE your buyers!  We deal with short sales every day but they don’t and might not ever again.  Please set a reasonable expectation prior to even showing your buyers a short sale listing so that they know what they are getting into.  Be sure they understand there is a process to it and that the closing time frame might not be what they expect.
  • Interview the listing agent ahead of time.  Have they done a short sale before?  How many?  With what lenders?  Who does the negotiating?  If the listing agent is experienced, holds a CDPE or other distressed property certification then you can proceed with some confidence that it will be handled well.  If not, then be prepared to take on more responsibility for the deal.
  • If you haven’t offered on a short sale property before –that’s OKAY!  But let the listing agent know so that they can be more educational for you during the process.  If they don’t have time, get an agent from your office to mentor you through the process and then you’ll be good for the next one.  Don’t have anyone nearby that is willing to do it but your buyers really really REALLY want that listing?  Refer it out – your clients will appreciate the maturity and experience that you demonstrate by knowing when you should seek help.
  • Please also treat the house with respect – it’s not a foreclosure and it’s not always vacant.  Don’t assume that an 8pm showing on Wednesday night is okay when you call at 6pm.  Short sales are an option so that the home owners can move on with their lives with a sense of dignity and responsibility – let’s help them do that.

 

LISTING AGENTS

  •  Please please please treat the house with respect!  (This is a reoccurring theme).  It’s still a listing and although some short sales are lacking some basic maintenance due to the home owner’s financial situation – they are still privately owned.  Take full pictures, disclose its short comings and present it in its best light.  A short sale listing should not look like it was an embarrassment to take.
  • Please list to market price and do so aggressively.  Your sellers need an offer quickly and pricing it way above market will only prolong their misery.
  • Please respond to showing requests in a timely manner and please let your seller know that there is a showing.  As much as the buyers have to demonstrate some restraint the sellers have to show some willingness and you are the first point of contact.  Set the tone and all the parties will appreciate it.
  • Please PLEASE do not take a short sale listing if you are not properly educated.  The risk involved for your clients is grave and a foreclosure is not quickly forgotten.  If you have not listed a short sale before then refer to a mentoring agent in your office.  If you are unable to, then refer the listing all together.  Your client’s financial future is at stake and this is not something that you can “try” and “see how it goes”.  Get educated and get someone to assist you through the process that has the experience and education.  Your clients will appreciate and value your expert assessment of your skills and the care and consideration you gave them.
  •  Please recommend a lawyer to your sellers who are experienced with short sales.  It makes a huge difference during the process and not all real estate lawyers have done short sales.

SELLERS

  •  Clean your house!  I know it’s hard to continue to put effort into your house when it has a foreclosure notice or an auction date.  Maybe you have already moved out or in the process of finding a new place.  When there are so many memories and it’s hard to be in the house at all, it’s even harder to clean.  BUT – it needs to be done.  You need the highest market offer possible and having a clean house is a great way towards that.
  •  Be open to what your listing agent is telling you.  A market price adjustment is not an attack on how you kept your house or what you did to it.  Look at the information he/she has and realize that they are working in your best interest.
  • Make sure you provide your listing agent with all the documentation items that they have requested.  They are not asking you to provide the information because they want you to have yet another unpleasant task – the banks require that information as part of the short sale and not providing it will only create delays.  They are bound by Massachusetts Privacy Laws to protect your information and take great care with it.
  • Understand that the buyers are excited about their new adventure just as you were at one point and will be again soon with a successful short sale.  This is a new chapter in their lives and they might be overly excited.  Give them a minute, they will realize the situation.
  • Understand that they buyers have been fed so many different pieces of information from the media that their low ball offer is not based on an educated opinion.  Give them a chance to come around and realize that a “short sale” is not an “Ocean State Job Lot House Day Sale”.
  • Please don’t yell at your listing agent when you want to yell at the bank.  We’re a tough bunch and we can take a lot but we really do care about you and your situation.  And if you have to yell at us…please remember to apologize.

What a relief to get all of that out!  This blog is not meant to be an instruction to Short Sales nor is it in reference to any listing currently on the market, expired, sold or foreclosed.  This blog was meant to make just one short sale transaction easier at a time and add to the recovery of our housing market!  Remember – the housing market is seen as setting the stage for almost every other sector of our economy – let’s get it back on its feet!  For more information on short sales visit www.dontforeclosenow.com.

 

 

10 Warning Signs of a Mortgage Modification Scam

December 6, 2011

In this environment, there are many people who truly do want to help a fellow home owner in distress.  There are also people who will gladly prey on the desperation of a distressed home owner and make the situation worse.

In some cases, home owners have a very limited amount of time to make decisions before they are made for them.  Making the wrong one can cost a lot more than the money paid up front.

The Office of the Comptroller of Currency has recently identified the top 10 slogans associated with a mortgage modification scam:

1. “Pay us $1,000, and we’ll save your home.”
Some legitimate housing counselors may charge small fees, but fees that amount to thousands of dollars are sign of potential fraud — especially if they are charged up-front.
2. “I guarantee I will save your home – trust me.” Beware of guarantees. Unrealistic promises are a sign that the person making
them has not considered your specific circumstances.
3. “Sign over your home, and we’ll let you stay in it.” Be very suspicious if someone offers to pay your mortgage and rent your home back to you in exchange for transferring the title. Signing over the deed gives another person the power to evict you, raise your rent or sell the house.
4. “Stop paying your mortgage.” Do not trust anyone who tells you to stop making payments to your lender and servicer, even if
that person says it will be done for you.
5. “If your lender calls, don’t talk to them.” Your lender should be your first point of contact for negotiating a repayment plan,
modification, or short sale.

6. “Your lender never had the legal authority to make a loan.” Do not listen to anyone who claims that “secret laws” or “secret
information” will be used to eliminate your debt and have your mortgage contract declared invalid.
7. “Just sign this now; we’ll fill in the blanks later.” Take the time to read and understand anything you sign. Never let anyone else fill out paperwork for you. Don’t let anyone pressure you into signing anything that you don’t agree with or understand.
8. “Call 1-800-Fed-Loan.” Some companies trick borrowers into believing that they are affiliated with or are approved by the government or tell you that you must pay them high fees to qualify for government loan modification programs.
9. “File for bankruptcy and keep your home.” Filing bankruptcy only temporarily stops foreclosure. If your mortgage payments are not made, the bankruptcy court will eventually allow your lender to foreclose on your home.
10. “Why haven’t you replied to our offer? Do you want to live on the streets?” High-pressure tactics signal trouble.

If you suspect that you are a victim of a mortgage modification scam, please call your Attorney General.

With the right assistance, the stress of facing foreclosure becomes manageable. CDPE-designated agents
have received the knowledge and training necessary to assess all possible foreclosure alternatives and pursue
homeowners’ best options. A CDPE-designated agent attends several days of intensive, thorough training on
foreclosure avoidance and how to negotiate short sales efficiently and ethically. The highly regarded CDPE logo means you are working with the most informed, up-to-date resource available.  Visit www.dontforeclosenow.com to find out more information about your options as a distressed home owner.

Chase Has followed Through With Large Short Sale Cash Incentive

November 16, 2011

Crawford Realty team has recently negotiated a $35,000 payment to their short sale client at closing.  In addition the seller also received another $3000 as a HAFA incentive for a total check to the seller at closing of $38,000.

Chase Bank is sending homeowners a solicitation letter offering up to $35,000 to do a short sale.  We listed the house, received an offer almost immediately, and closed the sales transaction in 80 days from listing to close.

Once an offer was obtained, the Crawford Realty Team submitted a short sale package to Chase, and worked co operatively with the buyer’s attorney and the seller’s attorney to get all incentives available.   After several weeks of negotiating Chase not only offered all incentives, paid back taxes, title v, smokes, seller settlement fees, Real Estate Broker commission, and waived the entire deficiency balance.

Chase is not the only lender offering incentives to the homeowner delinquent on their mortgage.  For more information about other incentives available, contact one of the Short Sale Partners of the Crawford Realty Team.  Click here for a confidential, private link to find out what your short sale options are:  avoid foreclosure.

What in the world is HAFA?

November 1, 2011

Think you might want to short sale?  Click here for more information

 

 



 

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Legitimate Website Resources for Foreclosure Help

August 16, 2011

Foreclosure is a hard fact in the current market and I speak with someone daily about it…a new client, someone looking for information, a seller who has to short sale to avoid it or a buyer who is looking for one thinking it’s the next great deal.  It’s a sad thing.

The latest estimate is that 2 in every 10 homes is facing foreclosure.  Part of my work is to help home owners avoid foreclosure by facilitating a short sale that will put them on a path to financial recovery.  It’s not the only solution though.  I want to share some of the free resources that are currently available to home owners who are in financial distress. Feel free to share this with someone you know.  It might help them start to get they help they need.

HOPENOW.COM
Research your options with this web form
Find your mortgage lender
Find a foreclosure counselor in your area
Focused on helping homeowners in crisis, this alliance helps you determine your options

FTC.GOV
Find a foreclosure counselor
Raise your own credit score
Fix mistakes on your credit report
The Federal Trade Commission has expert advice

FINDAFORECLOSURECOUNSELOR.ORG
Find a legitimate foreclosure counselor near you
This non-profit organization was created by Congress to provide financial support, technical assistance, and training for community-based revitalization efforts

MAKINGHOMEAFFORDABLE.GOV
Making Home Affordable
Making Home Affordable: short sale documents
Making Home Affordable: deed in lieu documents
The official government site for loan modifications and foreclosure alternatives

PORTAL.HUD.GOV
Find resources to avoid foreclosure in your state
Consult state and local resources

MYFICO.COM
Improve You Credit Score
Credit Q&A
Credit Basics

Understand credit and your credit scores

ANNUALCREDITREPORT.COM
See your credit report

Get all the details on late payments and other information, but not your actual credit score

RESPONSIBLELENDING.ORG
The Center for Responsible Lending
A non-profit organization that works to stop predatory lending practices

CREDITEDUCATION.ORG
Volunteer to be a credit counselor
Non-profit agency that works to provide financial literacy

LIVEUNITED.ORG
United Way
Donate or volunteer to decrease the number of families that are financially unstable

NCRC.ORG
Donate to the National Community Reinvestment Coalition
Send a donation to help NCRC “ensure that people in traditionally underserved communities are treated fairly and justly when applying for credit, opening a bank account, getting a mortgage, a loan, or other financial product or service.”

IRS.GOV
The Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act
Get the details about when you might owe taxes on any debt that is canceled through a short sale or deed in lieu of foreclosure

OCC.GOV
Download a PDF on identifying a loan modification scam
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency provides detail about scams, including “10 Warning Signs of a Loan Modification Scam.”

If you are not finding the information you need or if you are interested in talking about a short sale to avoid foreclosure – just let me know.  I would be happy to discuss the process with you to find out if it’s a good solution for you.