Tag Archives: tallahassee foreclosures

Will Harp 2.0 Really Work?

Watch this video and you tell me…

Here are a few things to consider…

1) There are 11,000,000 underwater owners in the US. (and growing). Estimates are that HARP 2.0 can only ‘help’ 10% of those underwater owners. Why only 10%?  The biggest reason is that the owner must be current on their mortgage. If you are late, don’t apply. Of the estimated 11 million underwater owners nearly half are already behind on their payments and in default.

2) HARP 2.0 has nothing to do with homes already foreclosed. There are millions of homes readying to become REO listings over the next 12-24 months. Millions of homes that will be put for sale and discount prices. What effect will this have on property values?

3) Did HARP 1.0 work? The HARP program in its current form has fallen well short of its intended target of 4-5 million homeowners, helping just 894,000 of which only 70,000 were significantly underwater.

4) THE BANKS have to agree to participate in HARP 2.0. Its estimated that the banks will ‘lose’ 15,000,000,000 (15 BILLION) if they participate with this new program. Do you think banks will be eager to participate in 2.0?

5) AND THE BIG QUESTION….how many owners does the Obama Administration think HARP 2.0 will help? Their answer…’Time will tell’. In other words, they have no idea.

So, I ask you….is the new HARP 2.0 offering Hope or will this program follow the same path as all the other programs and be seen as Hype?

Information courtesy of Tim and Julie Harris at Real Estate Insider News.

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5 Reasons Why Banks Would Rather Foreclose

“Why won’t the bank just reduce the amount of my loan instead of taking my home and then selling it to someone else for way less than I would have been happy to pay?”

It’s a question that gets asked repeatedly these days, especially by people who are facing foreclosure or are upside down on their mortgages.

1. The buck stops there.

The decisions to reduce principal loan amounts are made by the firms that service mortgages — the same folks who brought the country the robo-signing scandal. As servicing firms, anything they decide must be in the financial interest of their client — that’s your lender, not you. If they depart from customary practice — and writing down loan balances is a departure from customary practice — the buck stops with them, Guttentag says. In other words, who’s going to take the risk of reducing Joe Homeowner’s loan amount and then have to explain it to the boss? To take Nancy Reagan out of context: They just say no.

2. Banks are in the business of making money.

No lender is going to write down the balance of a loan in default just because you owe more than the home is worth. Truth is, there is no benefit to the lender to helping Joe Homeowner keep his house instead of selling it to the next guy. Plus, to help Joe would eliminate the possibility that the bank could also get a deficiency judgment against him. Banks are in this for the squeeze and think of Joe as just the orange. Nothing personal, of course.

3. In this economy, you will likely default anyway.

Sure, you want to believe that the economy is going to turn around and the value of your home will again rise to what you paid for it. After all, hasn’t listening to a fairy tale been a surefire way to fall asleep?

From the lender’s standpoint, the only reason to write down a loan balance is that it will reduce the chance that you will default. And evidence has shown that people who are heavily underwater — that’s deep in negative equity territory — are more likely to default than those who aren’t. Truth is, negative equity discourages people from making their mortgage payments. They figure: Why keep throwing good money after bad?

4. Banks are short-staffed and the staff they do have is untrained.

Most interactions between mortgage borrowers and servicers are handled by computers or relatively unskilled employees, says Guttentag. Borrowers in serious trouble are referred to a smaller number of more skilled and specialized employees, but until you enter the red zone, you are likely to encounter frustration.

Guttentag says that at the onset of the mortgage crisis, servicers were caught short-handed and the sheer volume of foreclosures in the pipeline hasn’t allowed them to catch their breath.

5. Mortgage insurance works against you.

When mortgages carrying mortgage insurance go to foreclosure, banks are protected up to the maximum coverage of the policy, which generally is enough to cover all or most of the loss. This discourages modifications, says Guttentag. Why would a bank do a modification for $15,000 if the $40,000 foreclosure cost is going to be paid by the mortgage insurer? Even if the insurance coverage falls short of the foreclosure cost, the shortfall has to exceed the modification cost before modification becomes financially more attractive.

So there you have it. A five-point plan for keeping homeowners on the hook for that hefty loan balance.

Information provided courtesy Jack Guttentag, the Mortgage Professor and Inman columnist.

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VA Loans Decreasing their Funding Fees

Good news  if you have VA eligibility! VA loans are going to be decreasing their funding fees beginning Oct. 1st, 2011.

So, not only do Veterans get 100% financing at rates of 3.75% (rates are subject to change daily), they also have lower funding fees, making their payments even lower. Another benefit of VA financing is that there is no Private Mortgage Insurance which saves at least $85. per month* on your mortgage payment (*figure based on a mortgage loan of $200,000.).

If you are a Veteran, and you’ve been thinking about making a move, this is a good time to think about moving forward. Contact your Realtor today to see what is available and how you can get qualified for this special financing. There has never been a time when both home prices and interest rates are this low.

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HUGE Surge in Bank of America Foreclosure Filings

Bank of America is ramping up its foreclosure processing, sending out far more notices of default to borrowers in August than in previous months, well over 200 percent more month-to-month.

A notice of default is the first stage of the foreclosure process. The notice of default is usually sent when a borrower is 90 days or more overdue in payments, but that timeline has been extended significantly during this housing crisis, due to the so-called “robo-signing” processing scandal and the sheer volume of troubled loans.

Other banks will probably follow soon because if other banks see Bank of America pushing more loans to foreclosure, meaning more properties heading out for sale, they may want to get in before that glut of properties pushes prices down even further.

Bottom line…the foreclosure pipeline is filling up again.



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Tallahassee Listed in Top 10 College Towns for Buying Foreclosures

It’s the time of year when proud parents are sending their kids off to Florida State while  the Boosters are revving up for this weekend’s BIGGEST College Football Game between Florida State and Oklahoma. What better time to consider one of the best college towns for investing in foreclosures?

For parents, buying a home off campus for their kids to live in can be a very pragmatic business decision. Investing in college-town real estate can also make sense for alumni or other investors looking for a property that generates a steady cash flow in a location they love — if they’re willing to put up with the heightened potential for property damage, continuous repairs and occasional evictions from student tenants who don’t feel responsible for taking care of the property.

According to foreclosure sales data compiled by Foreclosure News Report for the first half of 2011, Tallahassee has been included in the Top 10 List of College Towns for Buying Foreclosures.

The primary criteria for these Top 10 were the average discount on a foreclosure purchase — the percentage difference between the average sales price of properties in foreclosure and the average sales price of properties not in foreclosure — along with the percentage of all sales that were of properties in foreclosure.

By the way, Tallahassee, was also rated one of the nation’s Top 10 Bargain Retirement Spots by U.S. News & World Report earlier this year.

For the first half of 2011, the home of the Seminoles had 339 foreclosure sales, a 14 percent increase from the previous six month period and up 11 percent from the first half of 2010. Foreclosure properties in the area sold for an average sales price of $112,790 — a 35 percent discount. Foreclosure sales accounted for nearly 29 percent of all home sales during the period.

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With an average foreclosure discount of 44 percent, these 10 college towns offer parents, alumni and other prospective real estate investors plenty of opportunity to purchase a bargain property in a stable housing market anchored by a large university providing a steady stream of potential renters.

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This article was excerpted from the August 2011 issue of the Foreclosure News Report,

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