<![CDATA[San Diego My Home - San Diego Real Estate - Blog]]>Thu, 17 May 2012 14:20:38 -0800Weebly<![CDATA[BofA increases relocation assistance payments]]>Thu, 17 May 2012 13:04:46 -0800http://sdmyhome.com/3/post/2012/05/bofa-increases-relocation-assistance-payments.htmlBank of America has launched a nationwide program that offers delinquent mortgage customers increased assistance with relocation expenses – from $2,500 to $30,000 – at the completion of a qualifying short sale.

To qualify for the enhanced relocation assistance payments under the new program, the seller must work proactively with the bank to obtain a preapproved sales price prior to submitting a purchase offer to the bank. A short sale must be initiated by the end of 2012 and close by Sept. 26, 2013, to be eligible for the payment. Qualifying short sales that have already been started but have not closed may be eligible for the relocation assistance.

Frequently Asked Questions:

Q: Do I have to do anything special when initiating or completing the short sale?
A: No. But act quickly by initiating the short sale at agent.equator.com. This is a limited-time offer that your won’t want to miss out on.

Q: If a short sale is initiated with an offer, will it qualify for this relocation assistance?
A: No. This relocation assistance is only available on preapproved price short sale programs. Short sales initiated at the time an offer is received do not qualify for the enhanced relocation assistance funds.

Q: Will the relocation assistance funds be reported on the HUD-1?
A: Yes, funds received at closing will be documented on the HUD-1, and a 1099-MISC will be issued.

Q: Can the relocation assistance funds be used to pay off existing liens?
A: Yes, the homeowner may use funds to pay off existing liens or to help with relocation expenses.

Q: Is the relocation assistance added to any other incentives, such as the HAFA or Bank of America proprietary program incentives?
A: The homeowner incentive will be inclusive of the $3,000 HAFA incentive. For example, if the homeowner is eligible for a $5,000 homeowner incentive, $3,000 will be from the HAFA incentive, and $2,000 will be from the homeowner incentive.

Q: Is the enhanced relocation assistance available for other programs?
A: Currently, the enhanced relocation assistance is only available to short sale programs initiated without an offer. However, as we gauge the success we may extend this incentive to other programs.
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<![CDATA[Real Estate News: Shadow Inventory: 46 Months to Clear Distressed Housing Supply ]]>Tue, 15 May 2012 08:57:06 -0800http://sdmyhome.com/3/post/2012/05/real-estate-news-shadow-inventory-46-months-to-clear-distressed-housing-supply.htmlIt will take 46 months to clear the market’s supply of distressed homes, or the shadow inventory, according to estimates from Standard & Poor’s Rating Services based on first-quarter 2012 data.

The agency’s latest estimate came in one month shy of the liquidation timeline determined in the fourth quarter of 2011.

While national residential mortgage liquidation rates appeared stable over the first three months of this year, these rates varied widely between local markets, which prevented any significant reduction in S&P’s months-to-clear estimate, the agency explained in its report.

Regional variations in how quickly servicers can clear the backlog of nonperforming loans are primarily due to differences in foreclosure procedures, judicial vs. non-judicial.

As of first-quarter 2012, S&P says its months-to-clear estimate in judicial states was almost 2.5x as long as non-judicial states. 

S&P includes in the shadow inventory all outstanding properties on which  the mortgage payments are 90 or more days delinquent, properties in foreclosure, and properties that are REO. The agency also includes 70 percent of the loans that became current, or “cured,” from 90-day delinquency within the past 12 months because S&P says these loans are more likely to  re-default.

S&P’s calculation of the months to clear the shadow inventory is the ratio of the total volume of distressed loans to the six-month moving average of liquidations. Although S&P’s analysis of the shadow inventory uses only non-agency loan data, the agency’s analysts believe the months-to-clear is similarly high for the market as a whole.

The volume of these distressed U.S. non-agency residential mortgages—which excludes loans from government sponsored entities, such as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac—remained extremely high at $354 billion in the first quarter, according to S&P. The agency does note, however, that the industry’s distress volume has declined in each quarter since mid-2010.

To put the shadows into perspective, S&P says this latest number, which is based on the original balances of the loans, represents slightly less than one-third of the outstanding non-agency residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) market in the United States.

The New York City metropolitan statistical area (MSA) has the highest months-to-clear in the nation, at 202 months.

S&P also reported that the U.S. monthly first default rate fell to 0.67 percent in March 2012, the lowest level since May 2007. The first default rate is the percentage of loans that became 90-plus-days delinquent in that month for the first time, as a percent of all loans that have never before been at least 90 days or more past due.

This means that properties are entering the shadow inventory at a slower rate. S&P says with this improvement, the speed at which servicers can liquidate or cure nonperforming loans will determine the size of the shadow inventory going forward.

Default rates have been falling since first-quarter 2009 and the average national liquidation rate has stabilized, according to S&P—both factors that  bode well for getting a handle on the magnitude of the industry’s shadow inventory and its inevitable impact.

Source: DSNews.com
Reported by Carrie Bay
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<![CDATA[Short Sale News: Barclays Advocates Short Sales to Lower Loss Severities]]>Tue, 15 May 2012 08:41:41 -0800http://sdmyhome.com/3/post/2012/05/short-sale-news-barclays-advocates-short-sales-to-lower-loss-severities.htmlWith vacant homes stretching the capacity of banks’ balance sheets and homebuyer demand lackluster at best, short sales are becoming a top loss mitigation choice for private lenders and investors, particularly in especially hard-hit markets.

According to Barclays Capital, the benefits of pursuing a short sale are compelling for servicers and investors who are able to liquidate delinquent loans in an expedited fashion with fewer payment and interest (P&I) advances and who take “quasi” possession of the property in better condition and at better prices than REO, lowering severities.

Barclays’ analysts say they’ve found much of the reduction in severities from utilizing a short sale over an REO sale are explained
by better composition and trimmed timelines. While the discount stemming from the stigma associated with an REO due to upkeep and vacancy still plays a role, it accounts for only about 30-40 percent of the severity difference, they explain.

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<![CDATA[Video Blog: What are the qualifications for a short sale? ]]>Mon, 30 Apr 2012 13:57:51 -0800http://sdmyhome.com/3/post/2012/04/video-blog-what-are-the-qualifications-for-a-short-sale.html
Mark Kunce discusses the qualifications for a Short Sale.
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<![CDATA[New Listing! Chula Vista 3BR Home $285000 ]]>Fri, 27 Apr 2012 10:45:06 -0800http://sdmyhome.com/3/post/2012/04/new-listing-chula-vista-3br-home-285000.htmlWe have listed a new property in Chula Vista.
Don't pass up this opportunity! This 3 bedrooms home features newer exterior paint, updated light fixtures, beautiful wood flooring, large master bedroom, separate dining room, breakfast nook in kitchen, patio, nice size backyard. Located in a quiet neighborhood and street near downtown Chula Vista.
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<![CDATA[Short Sale News: Short Sales Surpass Foreclosures as Banks Agree to Deals]]>Fri, 20 Apr 2012 09:18:54 -0800http://sdmyhome.com/3/post/2012/04/short-sale-news-short-sales-surpass-foreclosures-as-banks-agree-to-deals.htmlThe number of U.S. home short sales surpassed foreclosure deals for the first time as banks became more agreeable to selling houses for less than the amount owed on their mortgages, according to Lender Processing Services Inc. (LPS) 

Short sales accounted for 23.9 percent of home purchases in January, the most recent month available, compared with 19.7 percent for sales of foreclosed homes, data compiled by the Jacksonville, Florida-based company show. A year
earlier, 16.3 percent of transactions were short sales and 24.9 percent involved foreclosures.

“It’s a fairly recent phenomenon that short sales have been increasing,” Jonathon Weiner, a vice president in the applied analytics division of Lender Processing Services, said in a telephone interview. “Short sales should be the dominant way of disposing of assets” in distress, he said.


Lenders are catching up to short sales after being slow to provide the staffing and incentives necessary to complete the deals, Weiner said. The transactions typically fetch a higher price for banks than sales of homes that  have gone through foreclosure. In January, foreclosed homes sold for an average of 29 percent less than comparable non-distressed properties, compared with a 23 percent discount for short sales, according to Lender Processing Services. The gap has narrowed as short sales become more common, Weiner said.


Distressed-Property Inventory The growing percentage of short sales, which don’t require going through the drawn-out foreclosure process, is a sign that the U.S. is making progress in working through its inventory of distressed properties, Weiner said. The increase in short sales also may help values find a floor quicker. 

“Our baseline scenario is that home prices will hit a bottom at the end of this year,” he said. 

The Federal Housing Finance Agency ordered loan servicers to respond to all short-sale offers within 30 days, and approve or reject them within 60 days, in an effort to expedite a process that can take months longer than conventional home sales, the agency said in a statement today.

The FHFA, which oversees mortgage companies Fannie Mae andFreddie Mac, wants to improve the short-sale process “to prevent foreclosure, keep homes occupied and help maintain stable communities,” Edward J. DeMarco, the agency’s acting director, said in the statement. Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae completed 125,456 short sales last year, the most recent period for which figures are available. 

Cash Incentives Banks including Wells Fargo & Co. (WFC) and JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM)last year began giving cash inducements as high as $35,000 to selected homeowners who agreed to a short sale as a way of speeding up the process. 

Bank of America Corp. paid $19.9 million in the first two months of this year for 22,534 homeowners to relocate after short sales and deeds in lieu of foreclosure, when borrowers agree to return the property deed in exchange for debt forgiveness, the Charlotte, North Carolina-based company said March 16. Its short sales rose 31 percent in January  and February from a year earlier. 

Banks have struggled to reduce losses from delinquent mortgages. Almost 4.4  percent of homes with loans had received a notice of foreclosure sale at the end of 2011, the 11th consecutive quarter the rate has been higher than 4 percent, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

Falling Foreclosures Foreclosure filings, including notices of defaults and bank repossessions, fell 16 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier after lenders under legal scrutiny slowed actions against delinquent homeowners, RealtyTrac Inc. reported April 12. 

Lender Processing Services, a 2008 spinoff from title-insurance company Fidelity National Financial Inc. (FNF), counts short sales by tallying mortgage and property transfer documents filed with county recorders, Weiner said. 

Other reports haven’t shown the same magnitude of short-sale growth. The National Association of Realtors reported that 13 percent of transactions were short sales and 22 percent were foreclosures in January. In February, short sales increased to 14 percent and foreclosure-related transactions declined to 20 percent, the group said March 21. 

Showing an ‘Uptick’ The Realtors collect their data from transactions on the Multiple Listing Service, a database of homes on the market, and a survey of about 3,000 members, said Walter Molony, a spokesman for the association. 

“The February data is showing a bit of an uptick,” he said in an e-mail from Washington.  “We’re hearing the process is going a bit more smoothly now, so that comes as no surprise.” 

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development reported a preliminary 19,600 short sales in January, compared with the Lender Processing Services tally of 48,721. An April 6 HUD report showed that the number of short sales rose 4.3 percent from a year earlier as the number of real estate owned, or REO, sales -- another name for foreclosure sales -- fell 39 percent.

Before agreeing to accept a loss on a short sale, lenders usually require homeowners to show evidence of hardship, such as inability to afford their mortgage payments or the need to relocate for a job, said Weiner of Lender Processing Services.

California, Arizona Short sales outnumbered foreclosures in states with some of the largest shares of homes facing foreclosure, such as Arizona,California, Florida, Nevada and New Jersey, Lender Processing Services reported. 

In New Jersey, short sales have exceeded REO deals every month since June 2010. In January, short sales accounted for more than 15 percent of the 3,033 New Jersey homes sold, compared with 3.9 percent for foreclosures. It took 966 days for banks to repossess a home in New Jersey, second only to New York, according to RealtyTrac. Both states require judicial hearings for foreclosure approval.

In New York, where it takes 1,056 days to repossess a home, 7.9 percent of purchases in January were short sales while 2.3 percent involved bank-owned properties. 

“In general, markets where larger incentives are provided usually have extended foreclosure timelines, such as Florida,”Tom Goyda, a spokesman for Wells Fargo, said in an e-mail from Ellisville, Missouri. Wells Fargo, which doesn’t disclose its short-sale totals, offers homeowners as much as $20,000 to relocate, he said. 

Florida Short Sales In Florida, the number of short sales has exceeded foreclosures since July, according to Lender Processing Services. That’s about nine months after banks imposed a moratorium on home seizures amid allegations they used improper documentation and forged paperwork to claim title to properties with delinquent mortgages. The five largest loan servicers, including Wells Fargo, Bank of America and JPMorgan, agreed in February to a $25 billion settlement of the
allegations. 

In California, which has the largest number of homes facing foreclosure,  short sales have outnumbered sales of bank-owned homes since August. In January, 37.2 percent of homes sold in the state were short sales compared with 25.8
percent for foreclosures, according to Lender Processing Services. 

Banks have sped up the short-sale approval process, requiring less paperwork to prove hardship, especially for homeowners who haven’t made a mortgage payment for months on their primary residence, said Ethan Gregory, a broker with First Coast Realty Associates in Jacksonville, Florida. Banks have offered his clients as much as $13,000 to relocate, an incentive that gets the homeowners engaged in selling the home, he said. 

Banks “embraced it before the settlement, but the settlement pushed them to do more streamlining,” said Gregory, whose firm handles about 50 short sales a year. “They understand it’s really the best exit for them.”

Source: bloomberg.com
Reported by John Gittelsohn
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<![CDATA[Short Sale News: Fannie and Freddie Set Timeline Requirements for Short Sales]]>Thu, 19 Apr 2012 08:33:41 -0800http://sdmyhome.com/3/post/2012/04/short-sale-news-fannie-and-freddie-set-timeline-requirements-for-short-sales.htmlBeginning June 15, real estate agents working with distressed homeowners whose loans are backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac should expect to receive a decision on a short sale offer within 30-60 days.

The GSEs issued new guidelines Tuesday that fall under the Servicing Alignment Initiative rolled out last fall and aim to bring greater transparency to the short sale process and expedite decisions related to these
pre-foreclosure sales.

Not only is a short sale an effective foreclosure alternative when home retention is no longer an option, but it keeps homes
occupied and helps to maintain stable communities, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA).
Addressing real estate practitioners’ No. 1 complaint about short sales, FHFA directed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to
establish a new uniform set of minimum response times that servicers must follow in order to facilitate more efficient short sale transactions.

The GSEs’ new short sale timelines require servicers to make a decision within 30 days of receiving either an offer on a property under the companies’ traditional short sale programs or a completed Borrower Response Package (BRP)
requesting short sale consideration, whether it’s through the federal government’s Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternative (HAFA) program or a GSE program.

f more than 30 days are needed, servicers must provide the borrower with weekly status updates and come to a decision no later than 60 days from the date the BRP or offer was received. According to the GSEs, this 30-day add-on will provide some leeway for servicers who may need more time to obtain a broker price opinion (BPO) or a private mortgage insurer’s approval for a short sale. All decisions must be made within 60 days.

In the event a servicer makes a counteroffer, the borrower is expected to respond within five business days. The servicer must then respond within 10 business days of receiving the borrower’s response. The GSEs plan to use the new short sale timelines to evaluate servicer compliance with the Servicing Alignment Initiative.

Edward DeMarco, acting director of the FHFA, says the GSEs new borrower communication and timeline requirements for short sales “set minimum standards and provide clear expectations regarding these important foreclosure
alternatives." GSE servicers must comply with the new minimum communication time frames for all short sale evaluations conducted on or after June 15, 2012, although servicers are encouraged to begin implementing the new requirements
sooner.“ I applaud Fannie and Freddie for finally coming out with real guidance with real world timelines for their servicers,” commented Anthony Lamacchia, broker/owner of McGeough Lamacchia Realty Inc., which specializes in short sales. “There is no question that this will help short sales and the market as a whole.”

 Last year Freddie Mac completed 45,623 short sales, a 140 percent increase since 2009. Fannie Mae’s short sale completions shot up by 101 percent over the same period, totaling around 79,800 in 2011.

Source: DSNews.com
Reported by Carrie Bay


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<![CDATA[Video Blog: Short Sale and HOA Dues, San Diego Short Sale]]>Mon, 16 Apr 2012 13:13:20 -0800http://sdmyhome.com/3/post/2012/04/video-blog-short-sale-and-hoa-dues-san-diego-short-sale.html
Mark Kunce talks about Short Sales and HOA Dues.
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<![CDATA[Video Blog: What is the short sale? ]]>Thu, 12 Apr 2012 11:05:35 -0800http://sdmyhome.com/3/post/2012/04/video-blog-what-is-the-short-sale.html
Mark Kunce talks about Short Sales.
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<![CDATA[Short Sale News: Strategic defaults to continue throughout 2012]]>Wed, 11 Apr 2012 10:25:40 -0800http://sdmyhome.com/3/post/2012/04/short-sale-news-strategic-defaults-to-continue-throughout-2012.htmlA FICO survey of bank risk professionals found that 46 percent expect the volume of strategic defaults in 2012 to surpass 2011 levels, as more than 25 percent of  U.S. homeowners owe more on their mortgages than their homes are worth.

Concerns about strategic defaults were also reflected in response to a question about the consumer payment hierarchy. When asked if the current generation of homeowners considers their mortgage to be their most important credit obligation, 49 percent of bankers said no and 29 percent said yes.

Although concerns remain regarding strategic defaults, other signs point to growing stability in the housing market. More respondents (26 percent) expected delinquencies on mortgages to decline in the coming months than at any previous time in the two years FICO has been conducting this survey. Furthermore, 53 percent of respondents said the housing market would improve by the end of 2012, compared with 24 percent who said the market would deteriorate.

More than half of survey respondents (56 percent) expected the supply of credit for residential mortgages to fall short of demand over the next six months. A similar majority (53 percent) expected the supply of credit for mortgage refinancing to fall short of demand, indicating that lenders remain  cautious about the risks in the real estate market.

Source: fico.com

If you are interested in a strategic short sale, please call 619-663-7139 or email me directly at mark@sdmyhome.com.
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