Disaster in Japan: How to Help

on Wednesday, 16 March 2011. Posted in Real Estate News

The NATIONAL ASSOCIATION of REALTORS® has watched with horror at the events in Japan since a 9.0-magnitude earthquake struck off shore on March 11, triggering a tsunami, unimaginable devastation and a nuclear crisis that is still unfolding.

As in the case of the recent earthquakes in New Zealand, NAR has identified four funds that the association believes are well equipped to provide disaster-relief services. NAR urges members who want to make a donation to consider one of these four organizations.

“REALTORS® build communities here in the U.S., but we also have a role to play in the global community, as well. With that in mind, we want to express our heartfelt concern and support for the people of Japan during these trying times,” says NAR President Ron Phipps.

Jason Watabe of Mercer Island, Wash., NAR President’s liaison to Japan’s four real estate associations, is working with the Seattle-King County Association of REALTORS® to develop additional support programs. “We cherish our business relations in Japan,” he said. “And we have to show our friendship by extending financial support in providing the victims food, water, heat and shelter for tonight and tomorrow.”

Here are brief descriptions of the NAR-recommended funds along with helpful giving tips from CharityNavigator.org.

AmeriCares
AmeriCares is a nonprofit global health and disaster relief organization whose passion to help is matched by its ability to deliver. In times of epic disaster, daily struggle or civil conflict, AmeriCares restores health and saves lives by delivering donated medicines, medical supplies and humanitarian aid to people in need around the world and across the United States. Donate to AmeriCares’ Japan relief.


Habitat for Humanity International
Founded in 1976, Habitat for Humanity International (HFHI) is an ecumenical Christian housing ministry. HFHI seeks to eliminate poverty housing and homelessness from the world, and to make decent shelter a matter of conscience and action. Donate to HHI’s Japan relief.

UNICEF-USA
The United States Fund for UNICEF was founded in 1947 to support the work of the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) by raising funds for its programs and increasing awareness of the challenges facing the world's children. The oldest of 37 national committees for UNICEF worldwide, we are part of a global effort to save, protect and improve children's lives. Donate to UNICEF’s Japan relief.

World Vision
World Vision is a Christian humanitarian organization dedicated to working with children, families and their communities worldwide to reach their full potential by tackling the causes of poverty and injustice. Donate to WorldVision’s Japan relief.

Short Sales Tips for Sellers

Written by Chris Herr on Monday, 14 March 2011. Posted in Home Sale

Navigating Short Sales: What to Do When the Sale Price Leaves You Short


If you're thinking of selling your home, and you expect that the total amount you owe on your mortgage will be greater than the selling price of your home, you may be facing a short sale. A short sale is one where the net proceeds from the sale won't cover your total mortgage obligation and closing costs, and you don't have other sources of money to cover the deficiency. A short sale is different from a foreclosure, which is when your lender takes title of your home through a lengthy legal process and then sells it.

1. Consider loan modification first. If you are thinking of selling your home because of financial difficulties and you anticipate a short sale, first contact your lender to see if it has any programs to help you stay in your home. Your lender may agree to a modification such as: 

  • Refinancing your loan at a lower interest rate
  • Providing a different payment plan to help you get caught up
  • Providing a forbearance period if your situation is temporary 

When a loan modification still isn’t enough to relieve your financial problems, a short sale could be your best option if 

  • Your property is worth less than the total mortgage you owe on it.
  • You have a financial hardship, such as a job loss or major medical bills.
  • You have contacted your lender and it is willing to entertain a short sale. 

2. Hire a qualified team. The first step to a short sale is to hire a qualified real estate professional* and a real estate attorney who specialize in short sales. Interview at least three candidates for each and look for prior short-sale experience. Short sales have proliferated only in the last few years, so it may be hard to find practitioners who have closed a lot of short sales. You want to work with those who demonstrate a thorough working knowledge of the short-sale process and who won't try to take advantage of your situation or pressure you to do something that isn't in your best interest. 

A qualified real estate professional can: 

  • Provide you with a comparative market analysis (CMA) or broker price opinion (BPO).
  • Help you set an appropriate listing price for your home, market the home, and get it sold.
  • Put special language in the MLS that indicates your home is a short sale and that lender approval is needed (all MLSs permit, and some now require, that the short-sale status be disclosed to potential buyers).
  • Ease the process of working with your lender or lenders.
  • Negotiate the contract with the buyers.
  • Help you put together the short-sale package to send to your lender (or lenders, if you have more than one mortgage) for approval. You can’t sell your home without your lender and any other lien holders agreeing to the sale and releasing the lien so that the buyers can get clear title. 

3. Begin gathering documentation before any offers come in. Your lender will give you a list of documents it requires to consider a short sale. The short-sale “package” that accompanies any offer typically must include 

  • A hardship letter detailing your financial situation and why you need the short sale
  • A copy of the purchase contract and listing agreement
  • Proof of your income and assets
  • Copies of your federal income tax returns for the past two years 

4. Prepare buyers for a lengthy waiting period. Even if you're well organized and have all the documents in place, be prepared for a long process. Waiting for your lender’s review of the short-sale package can take several weeks to months. Some experts say: 

  • If you have only one mortgage, the review can take about two months.
  • With a first and second mortgage with the same lender, the review can take about three months.
  • With two or more mortgages with different lenders, it can take four months or longer. 

When the bank does respond, it can approve the short sale, make a counteroffer, or deny the short sale. The last two actions can lengthen the process or put you back at square one. (Your real estate attorney and real estate professional, with your authorization, can work your lender’s loss mitigation department on your behalf to prepare the proper documentation and speed the process along.) 

5. Don't expect a short sale to solve your financial problems. Even if your lender does approve the short sale, it may not be the end of all your financial woes. Here are some things to keep in mind: 

  • You may be asked by your lender to sign a promissory note agreeing to pay back the amount of your loan not paid off by the short sale. If your financial hardship is permanent and you can’t pay back the balance, talk with your real estate attorney about your options.
  • Any amount of your mortgage that is forgiven by your lender is typically considered income, and you may have to pay taxes on that amount. Under a temporary measure passed in 2007, the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act and Debt Cancellation Act, homeowners can exclude debt forgiveness on their federal tax returns from income for loans discharged in calendar years 2007 through 2012. Be sure to consult your real estate attorney and your accountant to see whether you qualify. 
  • Having a portion of your debt forgiven may have an adverse effect on your credit score. However, a short sale will impact your credit score less than foreclosure and bankruptcy.

The Short Sale

Written by Chris Herr on Friday, 21 January 2011. Posted in Home Sale

A short sale is the sale of a home in which the amount owed to the lender(s) is more than the amount that the home can be sold for. Instead of the home owner having to bring in money to complete the sale, the sale is completed through negotiations with the existing lender(s) and the lender(s) agree to accept less than the full amount owed to satisfy the debt and allow it to be paid off “short.”

 A short sale is a real estate transaction that requires an approval from the lender. It’s not some complicated legal process that requires paying an attorney.

 Short sales are different than a regular real estate transaction because once you stop making your mortgage payments, the clock starts ticking and you’ll get one shot to do a successful short sale. If your agent is inexperienced at short sales, makes mistakes, gives up, slacks off, or simply doesn’t know how to negotiate with the banks, you’ll wind up being foreclosed on.

 A foreclosure will devastate your credit. Your credit score can be lowered by as much as 300 – 400 points and you’ll be hounded day and night by your lender. Even worse, you’ll have difficulty getting credit cards, auto loans or even renting a home or an apartment for the next 7 years.

 Your lender does not want to foreclose on your home.

It’s true. They would much rather have you stay in your home and continue making your payments, or have you sell it and get it off their books, even if it requires them taking a financial loss. Remember, banks are in the lending business, not the real estate business, which brings me to my next point:

It makes absolutely zero difference whether your lender is Indymac, Wells Fargo, Chase, Countrywide / Bank of America, Downey Savings, CITI, Chevy Chase, Washington Mutual, Wachovia, World Savings, First Franklin, Flagstar, GMAC, Greenpoint, Homecomings, HSBC, Irwin, Novastar, Option One, Aurora, Deutsche Bank…

I've worked with them all and they all work the same – if you submit a sensible offer and a clean package and have the systems and resources in place to consistently and continuously follow up on the file, it will get accepted and your home will be sold “short.” You’ll pay nothing. You’ll owe nothing. You’ll avoid having a foreclosure on your credit report and you’ll survive to fight another day!

More Foreclosure Chatter!

Written by Chris Herr on Wednesday, 13 October 2010. Posted in Real Estate News

More foreclosure chatter, and the impact on bonds; Chase earnings solid; rates edge temporarily higher

“Clearly, no one should be foreclosed on improperly – even if it’s a technicality.  We should support the calls by some politicians for a national foreclosure moratorium by upping the ante and proposing a national “payment moratorium”.  That’s right – as long as some Americans are being given the enormous benefit of not having to make a housing payment – all Americans should share in that benefit. So, starting next month – no more housing payments.  It’s time the entire country receive the “same treatment the banks got.”  Enough is enough. To heck with the banks.  Or, maybe we can take it one more step – let’s simply forgive all housing debt in America.  Fair is fair.  Rather than criticize the person who hasn’t made a housing payment in two years while his neighbors dutifully pay each month – let’s let those neighbors off the hook too…  Wait.  Better idea.  How about a national moratorium on tax payments?  Now we’re cooking with gas.  I bet we can find some loopholes in the way the government administers taxes.”

So wrote someone yesterday. Yes, that is “tongue in cheek”, but many in the business have frustrations to vent. A spokesman said that President Obama supports an investigation by state attorneys general into troubles with home foreclosures. However, the president is opposed to a nationwide suspension of foreclosures because of possible “unintended consequences” that could hurt the housing market. Senator Christopher Dodd said a nationwide moratorium would do harm to the economy. GMAC Mortgage announced hiring “several leading legal and accounting firms to conduct independent reviews of its foreclosure procedures in each of the 50 states.” “In addition to the nationwide measures, the review and remediation activity related to cases involving judicial affidavits in the 23 states continues and has been underway for approximately two months.  As each of those files is reviewed, and remediated when needed, the foreclosure process resumes.  GMAC Mortgage has found no evidence to date of any inappropriate foreclosures.”

There are 40 state attorneys general out there who are as happy as Chilean miners. They will be announcing an investigation into the mortgage-servicing industry. Why should the Federal Government, and every servicing operation, have all the fun, especially with the elections coming up? Accusations are that servicers submitted fraudulent documents in thousands of foreclosure proceedings nationwide, whereas the servicing units say the document problems are technical-largely the result of papers approved by so-called robo-signers with little review-and don’t reflect substantive problems with foreclosures.

Delaying the foreclosures, of course, leads to an entirely new set of problems. Having a buildup of properties hitting markets around the country at the same time will not be good. Delaying the process raises the chance for “deeper losses to bondholders as taxes and insurance payments are fronted” according to an article in Reuters. Investors such as pension funds, mutual funds, and insurance companies will be hit, and any servicers fronting the money obviously will suffer from that. But prices of mortgage securities have not been hit – for now. http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN1225221120101012.

The mortgage security market had some pretty big news yesterday. In spite of the sell off and rates worsening, the Bank of America trading desk reported that Fannie 3′s (3% pass through rate, consisting of 3.25% to 3.625% 30-yr mortgages) traded at a price of about 98.75. That is a 1.25 point discount to par, but if an investor were to add some servicing released premium onto the price, it comes darn close to par! Cantor Fitzgerald reports that September’s $141 billion MBS issuance was the largest since mid-2009, and so far in October 30 year 4.0%’s account for 50% of all production and 30 year 3.5%’s are up to 9%.

Economics can be pretty interesting sometimes. Deutsche Bank reports that the corporate sector is in much better financial condition than us private citizens. “In point of fact, the level of cash as a proportion of total corporate assets is 3.7%, the highest reading since Q4 1968 (3.9%). This is up sharply from an all-time record low of 1.7% in Q4 2008. Recent history suggests this share should move lower, because it has never remained significantly above 3% for any length of time.” But in the current cycle, the ratio has trended higher due to the extreme uncertainty about the economic outlook. When it moves up to these levels, it takes about one quarter to head back down. And how does it move lower?  Deutsche believes this situation will eventually correct itself as companies become more committed to increasing payrolls. When this happens, investors will in turn become more confident in the sustainability and durability of economic activity.

Speaking of activity, JPMorgan Chase (#3 residential volume lender in the first half of 2010) reported a 3rd Quarter net income of $4.4 Billion on revenue of $24.3 billion. Critics quickly pointed out that a portion of this was caused by the adjusting reserve levels that had been set aside to cover bad loans. Of course the opposing thing happened when the reserves were initially set aside, and apparently Chase feels that the reserves are adequate. The mortgage division did well, earnings-wise. “Mortgage repurchase reserves increased $1.0 billion, and Card Services reduced loan loss reserves $1.5 billion. Corporate results included $1.3 billion pretax of additional litigation reserves, including those for mortgage-related matters.”

U.S. Bank Home Mortgage Wholesale Division adjusted maximum LTV’s downward a few ARM programs for loan amounts between $650,001 and $1,000,000. Depending on the whether or not the property is in a declining market, they moved down 5% for the specific programs.

PHH notified clients that beginning today, “the Conventional Underwriting Guidelines have been updated to reflect that Property Inspection Waivers (PIWs) will be permitted for all WCL business sources as determined by the DU or DO findings. Previously, property inspection waiver eligibility was restricted based on business source.” Underwriters know that the PIW is a fieldwork recommendation whereby DU accepts the value submitted as the market value for the subject property. The loan is eligible for delivery to Fannie Mae without an appraisal or property inspection if the property inspection waiver is exercised by the lender. In addition, the lender is eligible for representation and warranty relief on the value, condition and marketability of the subject property when the property inspection waiver is exercised. PHH Mortgage does not accept property inspection waivers under certain situations, and clients are advised to read the bulletin for details.

Yesterday the fixed-income markets started off well enough. There was some concern in the Asian equity markets, which helped rates. But then we had the $32 billion 3-yr auction. In the past this auction has gone well, but yesterday’s was viewed as “sloppy”, and down we went. Soon afterward the minutes from the last FOMC meeting indicated that further accommodation may be appropriate sometime in the near future, hinging on future economic performance, which put more pressure on the markets. By the end of the day the 10-year note lost about .375 in price (2.42%), and MBS prices were mixed with 3.5s and 4s losing (worsening) about .250 and .125, respectively, while higher coupons improved by about .125. $2.9 billion in MBS’s were put out into the market. Investors had intra-day price changes. Still, no one expects higher rates are in the cards. Excess cash continues to sit in safe-haven assets because of employment and housing problems that will last for many months, if not years.

This morning we learned that September import prices were down .3%, and export prices were +.6%. These numbers usually don’t move markets, and today was no exception. Of more interest was the MBA’s mortgage application index. Apps were up last week by almost 15%, and apps to refinance rose for the first time in six weeks, increasing 21%. Of course, lock desks everywhere knew this already, right? The four-week moving average of mortgage applications, which smoothes the volatile weekly figures, was up 3.0 percent. We still have a $21 billion 10-yr note auction at 1PM EST ahead of us, but that pretty much does it for scheduled news today. Currently the 10-yr yield is up to 2.45% and mortgage prices are a shade worse, depending on coupon.
Two Mexican detectives were investigating the murder of Juan Gonzalez.
“How was he killed?” asked one detective.
“With a golf gun,” the other detective replied.
“A golf gun! What is a golf gun?”
“I don’t know. But it sure made a hole in Juan.”

               

Pricing and Prep that Sells Your Home

Written by Chris Herr on Thursday, 30 September 2010. Posted in Home Sale

Visit houselogic.com for more articles like this.

Copyright 2010 NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®

Eight Reasons to Hire a Real Estate Professional!

Written by Chris Herr on Monday, 27 September 2010. Posted in Home Sale

Here are eight reasons to hire a Real Estate Professional to help you find a home and negotiate your transactions to successful closing.

1.  Real estate professionals are market specialists.  No matter where you live, your housing market favors either sellers or buyers.  Your agent will help you prepare your home to sell for the highest possible amount and educate you about the current market conditions.  If you are looking for another home, your agent will help you with your new home.

2.  Real Estate professionals are neighborhood experts.  While they are licensed to sell and manage real estate anywhere in the state, most real estate professionals wisely limit themselves to certain neighborhoods or types of homes such as new homes or condominiums.  If you've never sold a home before, your agent can help you understand the selling process, including your responsibilities and those of the buyer.

3.  Real estate professionals have more information about homes than you do.  While it's fun to drive through neighborhoods and pop into open houses to see what your home may be competing against, you may not realize there is a vast amount of informaiton about homes that may not be available to you unless you are working with your own agent.  For example, some homes are sold without ever going into the local multiple listing service (MLS).  If you don't know about them, how can you use them to help you determine the asking price of your home?

4.  Real estate professionals save you time.  If you want to sell your home quickly, put an agent to work for you.  Over 85 percent of homes for sale in the United States are represented by agents.  An agent acting as your listing agant (an agent who takes information about your home, packages it as a "listing" for their brokerage, and also enters it into the MLS and in advertising media to home buyers) is committed to getting you the best price and terms possible.

5.  Real estate professionals can work with you athe way you want to work.  If you were in court, you'd want a good attorney by your side.  As a seller, you also want an advocate.  You can hire an agent as your exclusive fiduciary, which means he or she can't represent the buyer at the same time.  Or you can hire a transactional broker who can handle both sides of the transaction with out fiduciary preference to either side.  While these agents are frequently paid on the back end of the transaction at closing, you can also hire an agent to perform certain tasks for an up-front fee, such as creating a comparable analysis for you, helping you with negotiations, or helping you find your next home.

6.  Real estate professionals share your risk.  With an agent by your side, you'll be less likely to make uninformed decisions because you'll know what issues you should consider carefully and why.  All houses are imperfect, but some are more imperfect than others.  While real estate agents don't tke the place of home inspectors or contractors, they can certainly tell you what it will take to bring your home up to the market's standards and to help you with your disclosures to the buyer.

7.  Real estate professionals work to protect you from unqualified buyers.  While some buyers try to buy homes behond their means, lenders and buyers' agents work to make sure that buyers know what they can afford and what range of homes they should be considering.

8.  Real estate professionals know how to close a deal.  Putting a home into the local MLS is the easy part.  Getting the transaction to clsoing is the challenge, as so many factors can derail a home's sale, from makret conditions to problems buyers may have in qualifying for your home due to rising interest rates, or problems selling their home so thay can buy yours.  Homeowner's insurance companies that withdraw from certain markets due to mold or damage from natural disasters cut new buyers off without warning (as recently happened in California and Texas).  Inspection reports may reveal big problems you didn't know you had with your home.  An agent will know exactly whom to call and what to do to solve any issue that threatens to keep the sale from moving toward closing.

Buyers and sellers share the same ultimate goal but have different priorities for achieving it.  You want the most money and the best terms, while the buyer wants your home for the least amount of money and the best terms.  It takes a skilled negotiator to keep the transaction moving forward.

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Testimonials

I know other realtors would have given up, but Chris can get the job done no matter how difficult.  Thank you Chris for your patience and entusiasm, heaped with honesty, caring and integrity.  In a world filled with people whose only concern is to make money, Chris was most concerned with my happiness in my new home.  He is an amazing Realtor and now also a good friend.  I highly recommend him to anyone. He will get the job done no matter how difficult.

- C. Baxter