Showing posts with label short sales. Show all posts
Showing posts with label short sales. Show all posts

Thursday, June 09, 2011

Short Sales Tips For Seller

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; or 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.

 

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Home Values and Prices Around The USA

According to PMI Group Monthly Analysis:  In previous house price boom and bust periods,
house prices moved above their fundamental values only to fall below them for a while. While this simple analysis can help to identify areaswhere house prices appear to be out of line with incomes, it can’t tell us when a correction will occur.

As a result, while some areas appear to have already fallen well beyond their fundamental values, they could still fall further. What the analysis does say, however, is that at some point, there should be a recovery in house prices in these markets that will bring them back into balance with incomes.

States where house prices are too low, although they had no bubble Indiana is a good illustration of a surprising pattern seen for areas where prices tracked incomes quite closely even during the housing bubble, but then still got hit by declining house prices as a result of the Great Recession. Other states
with similar patterns include Arkansas, Kentucky, Kansas, Iowa, Mississippi, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, and Wyoming. It is likely that house prices in these areas will recover along with job growth, which is already happening in manufacturing and agriculture.

Since disposable income is not available at the state level, we made a minor adjustment to the state-level per capital income data by adjusting it for how national disposable per capita income compares to national per capita income over time. 

There are many measures of affordability, some based on prices relative to monthly house costs, including taxes, insurance and mortgage payments, while other measures compare house prices to rents. Here, we compare house prices and adjusted per capita income1 in order to study how they evolve over time. Over time, house prices and income should grow at similar rates, otherwise housing would become either increasingly affordable or unaffordable. We used two different measures of house prices, the CoreLogic House Price Index (HPI) built on all transactions and the CoreLogic HPI excluding distressed sales, since they tell somewhat different stories. 

States where house prices have over-corrected from the boom and are very affordable Michigan is an example of a state that had a housing boom, with prices moving upward at a pace much faster than the capacity of homeowners to pay for them – but where prices appear to have significantly over-corrected.

The data for Michigan suggest house prices were overheated in the decade before 2007, but have since
overshot too far to the downside of income, both relative to a 1995 base year of 100. 1995 as the base year because it was a relatively stable period for both housing and the overall economy). An index value of 120, for example, would signify that income or the HPI is 20 percent higher than it was in the base year of 1995.

Since there is some concern that the house price indices which include distressed sales undervalue properties not sold as short sales or from REO, we also show the CoreLogic HPI that excludes distressed sales.

Comparing the different HPIs, the index that excludes distressed sales lessens the underpricing
seen in most areas, but it only explains a portion of the under-pricing relative to incomes. Other states that have a broadly similar pattern to Michigan include Alabama, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois,
Missouri, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, and West Virginia.
 
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Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Foreclosures, Bank Owned Homes, Reos, Short Sales and Notice of Defaults News

DID YOU KNOW?
  1. Notices of Default in California – 12/2010 – 21,510
    Notices of Default in California – 12/2009 – 27,182
  2. Back to Bank – REO – 12/2010 – 9,261
    Back to Bank – REO – 12/2009 – 17,460 
  3. Sold to 3rd Party – 12/2010 – 2,140
    Sold to 3rd Party – 12/2009 – 2,670
  4. Notices of Default but no sale scheduled – 12/2010 – 128K
    Notices of Default but no sale scheduled – 12/2009 – 141K 
  5. Bank Owned REO – 12/2010 – 110K
    Bank Owned REO – 12/2009 – 96K

Find Foreclosures, Reo, Short Sales, Notice of Defaults on This Website

Thursday, February 03, 2011

Foreclosure and Delinquent Real Estate Market as of December 2010

The situation we are seeing is the worst housing crisis since the Great Depresion with 10.9 million U.S. families in trouble:

  • 7 Million delinquent or some stage of Foreclosure.
  • 4 Million are not current on their Mortgage.
  • 3 Million are HAMP ( Home Affordable Mortgage Program) elegible 60+ day delinquent loans with 1.3 million elegible for HAMP Modifications.
  • As of November 2020, there are 504,648 active permanent modifications.
  • Total U.S. delinquency rate is 9.29% and down from 10.14% a year ago.
  • Long term unemployment 6.2 million as of December 2010
  •   Unemployment rate Nationwide 9.8%, in CA at 12%
  • Any Borrower who either fails or is denied a loan mofification is someone who should consider foreclosure alternative options.
With all this craziness happening in Real Estate, a lot of home owners are either going to be ended up either in Foreclosure or doing a Short Sale. Short sale process takes usually 45 to 60 days to get an approval from the lender (s). Short sale is a better option for homeowners comparing to foreclosures, since they can buy a house in 3 years comparing to 7 years to a foreclosure.  What is a short sale: Is a home sale process when the homeowners house is upside down ( they owed more that the actual house value).

If you have more question about foreclosures or short sale, advantages and disadvantages, do not hesitate to get in touch with me by e-mail or by phone, my contact information is here on this blog.

CLICK HERE TO VIEW ALL AVAILABLE HOMES FOR SALE IN LOS ANGELES COUNTY

Alberto Pacheco
Realtor Calbre Lic 01200694
818 481 9211
Keller Williams Porter Ranch
Real Estate Consultant
http://www.granadahills.kwrealty.com  Real Estate News, Mortgages, Trends

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

La Crescenta California Home Sales Statistics For May 2010

New Listings: 41

Average Listing Price: $ 684,482

Listings Under Contract: 9

Average Listing Price: $ 567,977

Sold Listigs: 11

Average Listing Price: $ 579,581

% Sales Price Versus Listing Price: 101.59 %

% Sales Price Versus Old Listing Price: 98.25 %

Average Days on The Market: 138

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

City of Redondo Beach California Real Estate Home Sales Statistics For 2007


New Listings: 5

Average Listing Price: $ 836,560

Listings Under Contract: 3

Average Listing Price: $ 724,963

Listings Sold: 1

Average Sols Selling Price $ 660,000

%Direfence Between Listing Price versus Selling Price: 100.15%

%Sales Price Versus Old Listing Price: 0%

Average Days on The Market: 155

http://www.sfvalleyhotproperties.com

Thursday, February 21, 2008

City of Monterrey Hills California Real Estate Home Sales Statistics for 2007

New Listings: 4

Average Listing Price: $462,962

Listings Under Contract: 0

Average Listing Price: $ 0

Listings Sold: 3

Average Selling Price: $426,666

%Direfence Between Listing Price versus Selling Price: 96.24%

%Sales Price Versus Old Listing Price: 90.78%

Average Days on The Market: 61

http://www.sfvalleyhotproperties.com