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This just in from the National Realtor Association thought it would be of some interest to people.

“A huge volume of cash sales, supported by the recovery in the stock market, show that smart money is chasing real estate. This implies that there could be a sizeable pent-up demand if mortgages become more readily accessible for qualified buyers,” Yun said. “The problem isn’t with interest rates, but with the continuation of unnecessarily tight credit standards that are keeping many creditworthy buyers from getting a loan despite extraordinarily low default rates over the past two years.”

Yun said that if credit requirements returned to normal, safe standards, home sales would be 15 to 20 percent higher. He added that some parents are buying homes with cash for their children, and offering them loans which provide better returns than bank accounts or CDs.

Yun projects the Gross Domestic Product to grow 2.5 percent this year and 2.7 percent in 2012, adding 1.5 million to 2 million jobs yearly over the next two years. The unemployment rate should decline to 8.8 percent by the end of 2011 and average 8.6 percent next year, returning to a normal level of 6 percent around 2015.

Housing starts are forecast to rise but remain below long-term trends, reaching 603,000 in 2011, up from 595,000 last year, and continue growing to 908,000 in 2012. New-home sales are seen at a record low 320,000 this year, rising to 487,000 in 2012. “A recovery in new homes will be slow because of the extra price discount in the existing home market,” Yun noted. In March, the typical new single-family home cost $53,300 more than an existing home.

Inflation appears to be relatively modest for now, with the Consumer Price Index rising 2.9 percent this year. “We’ll be closely watching the impact of fuel costs on consumer spending and inflation — that would slow economic growth, job creation and home sales,” Yun said.

Apartment rents are trending up, and are likely to rise at faster rates as vacancies decline. Following the correction in home prices, it has now become more affordable to buy in most of the country. “Twice as many renters had enough income to buy a home in 2010 in comparison with 2005, so we have a much larger pool of financially qualified renters,” Yun said. “Rising rents and excellent housing affordability conditions will encourage potential buyers who’ve been on the sidelines.”

Yun expects the median existing-home price to remain near $170,000 over the next two years, which would mark four consecutive years of essentially no meaningful price change.

Frank Nothaft, chief economist at Freddie Mac, holds similar views on the outlook. “Economic activity will accelerate this year — there will be no double dip in the economy,” he said. Nothaft is more optimistic on job growth, expecting 2.0 million to 2.5 million jobs created in 2011 with unemployment dropping to 8.4 percent by the end of the year.

Nothaft expects the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage to trend up to 5.25 percent by the end of the year, and for home sales to rise 5 percent. “National home price indices are close to a bottom and prices are likely to bottom sometime this year,” he said.

Refinancing activity in 2011 will be only half of what it was last year. “As a result, banks may become more willing to lend to home buyers,” Nothaft said.

If you are facing foreclosure and need some help out, contact www.foreclosurehelpofflorida.com we are “Real People with Real Solutions”

Here at Foreclosure Help of Florida we have already helped several of our clients get CASH in their pockets from their foreclosing banks, by completing a successful short sale.  Continue reading and then give us a call 772-237-5335, or visit us at wwwforeclosurehelpofflorida.com. Let us help you get money in YOUR pocket too.

By Mary Shanklin, Orlando Sentinel-

10:24 p.m. EDT, October 10, 2011

 

 

Bank of America is testing Florida’s foreclosure waters with an incentive program for defaulting homeowners to “short sell” their homes instead of enduring a foreclosure, which can take years.

Almost unheard of five years ago, a short sale must be approved by the lender because the sale amount winds up being less than the mortgage owed on the house. Foreclosures have come to cost lenders so much in terms of sunken prices, deteriorated properties and legal fees that Bank of America announced last week that it would give $5,000 to $20,000 to qualified borrowers who submit a short-sale request to the lender by Nov. 30. A seller would be paid if the house is sold by Aug. 31, 2012.

“It’s an incentive for people who are delaying foreclosures or who are in a foreclosure process,” said Alan Randel, broker/owner of Orlando-based AmeriTeam Realty Inc. “They stop paying their mortgage, and it can take a year of or more. … This is an opportunity to get cash out and be relieved of the deficiency.”

Guidelines for Bank of America’s new Florida Enhanced Short Sale Relocation Assistance program state that a borrower may use the incentive to pay off existing liens or for relocation expenses. FHA, Ginnie Mae, VA and USDA loans are not eligible.



Short-sale incentives are an outgrowth of earlier, “cash for keys” programs offered by lenders and real-estate companies. Also, the U.S. Treasury Department has tried to boost the number of short sales with its Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives program, which provides $3,000 for borrower-relocation assistance, $1,500 for servicers to cover administrative and processing costs, and as much as $2,000 for investors who meet certain requirements.

Other programs currently available:

Wells Fargo offers incentives of $10,000 to $20,000 to certain homeowners who opt for a short sale or who transfer a home’s title back to the bank. The program is aimed at properties in Florida and other states known for protracted, judicial foreclosures. The money is available only on first-lien loans that the company owns, which is about 20 percent of its portfolio. Details: 1-800-678-7986.

JPMorgan Chase has not reported how much it offers for short-sale incentives, though real-estate agents have reported sellers getting $20,000. The lender also has declined to specify how it determines the amount of its incentives. Details: 407-248-3945.

Citibank has reported it offers an average of $12,000 for borrowers when it owns the mortgage. The amount is determined upfront and varies depending on a borrower’s financial circumstances and mortgage-payment history. The money is disbursed when the short sale closes.

If you would like more information on how you can get some of this cash give me a call 772-237-5335 or visit us at http://www.foreclosurhelpofflorida.com.

Pending home sales declined in July but remain well above year-ago levels, according to the National Association of Realtors®. All regions show monthly declines except for the West, which continues to show the highest level of sales contract activity.

The Pending Home Sales Index,* a forward-looking indicator based on contract signings, slipped 1.3 percent to 89.7 in July from 90.9 in June but is 14.4 percent above the 78.4 index in July 2010. The data reflects contracts but not closings.

Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said sales activity is underperforming. “The market can easily move into a healthy expansion if mortgage underwriting standards return to normalcy,” he said. “We also need to be mindful that not all sales contracts are leading to closed existing-home sales. Other market frictions need to be addressed, such as assuring that proper comparables are used in appraisal valuations, and streamlining the short sales process.”

The PHSI in the Northeast declined 2.0 percent to 67.5 in July but is 9.7 percent above July 2010. In the Midwest the index slipped 0.8 percent to 79.1 in July but is 18.8 percent above a year ago. Pending home sales in the South fell 4.8 percent to an index of 94.4 but are 9.5 percent higher than July 2010. In the West the index rose 3.6 percent to 110.8 in July and is 20.6 percent above a year ago.

“Looking at pending home sales over a longer span, contract activity over the past three months is fairly comparable to the first three months of the year, and well above the low seen in April,” Yun said. “The underlying factors for improving sales are developing, such as rising rents, record high affordability conditions and investors buying real estate as a future inflation hedge. It is now a question of lending standards and consumers having the necessary confidence to enter the market.”

This artical is complements of The National Association of Realtors®, “

Governmental property taxes convert into a lien on a property as soon as they are due — even before they fall behind, in most areas. That just means that your escrow provider and/or title insurer have to clear those tax liens, making sure they are paid up to the date of closing, before they are able to transfer clear title to the buyer.In terms of the back property taxes you owed on the home, you should be free and clear of them going forward. In the average short-sale situation, what happens is that the seller’s bank(s) has to direct some of the proceeds of the sale to covering any back taxes on the property, agent commissions, transfer taxes and such before they can apply the rest of the sale price to cover the outstanding mortgage balance(s). When escrow closes, and I mean starting the day of or the day after, the buyer is responsible for property taxes incurred from that day forward. For more information abour Short Sales please visit our site at http://www.foreclosurehelpofflorida.com Foreclosure Help of Florida we are Real People with Real Solutions

Governmental property taxes convert into a lien on a property as soon as they are due — even before they fall behind, in most areas. That just means that your escrow provider and/or title insurer have to clear those tax liens, making sure they are paid up to the date of closing, before they are able to transfer clear title to the buyer.In terms of the back property taxes you owed on the home, you should be free and clear of them going forward. In the average short-sale situation, what happens is that the seller’s bank(s) has to direct some of the proceeds of the sale to covering any back taxes on the property, agent commissions, transfer taxes and such before they can apply the rest of the sale price to cover the outstanding mortgage balance(s). When escrow closes, and I mean starting the day of or the day after, the buyer is responsible for property taxes incurred from that day forward. For more information abour Short Sales please visit our site at http://www.foreclosurehelpofflorida.com Foreclosure Help of Florida we are Real People with Real Solutions

 All this talk about the AAA credit rating …So what does all this mean for the housing and mortgage markets?

Mortgage financiers Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and 10 of the 12 Federal Home Loan Banks also had their senior debt issue ratings cut from AAA to AA+ by S&P Monday morning. (The Federal Home Loan Banks of Chicago and Seattle were already rated AA+ prior to the U.S. sovereign downgrade.)

S&P says the downgrades were the result of the institutions’ “direct reliance on the U.S. government.” The agency warned back in April that the rating of the U.S. would have a direct impact on the ratings attached to the debt of these government-sponsored entities.

Reuters notes that a downgrade of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac could also affect billions of dollars of debt issued by public housing authorities, debt that is secured by federally guaranteed mortgages.

The markets are bracing for an eventful week ahead, with expectations that the value of the dollar will slip and Treasury yields will begin to rise. The trajectory of mortgage rates typically goes hand-in-hand with Treasury yields.

But market participants point out that mortgage rates are already at historical lows, and it still hasn’t done much to boost demand from homebuyers. Economists and housing experts alike were expecting mortgage rates to head higher later this year, even before the rating downgrade. According to Paul Dales, senior U.S. economist for the research firm Capital Economics, “[A]ny spike in Treasury yields and/or fall in the dollar should be relatively short-lived. Once the dust settles, attention will turn back to the economic fundamentals, which are certainly consistent with low Treasury yields.”

The analysts at Barclays Capital don’t expect the ensuing shock to the market to run very deep.

“Treasuries are not going to sell off…but longer-run the fiscal problems are likely to mean a weaker dollar,” Barclays said.

The firm also stressed that for many observers, it was really a question of when the downgrade would happen rather than if it would since S&P had been very clear about its expectations.

“But it is yet another milestone in the ongoing financial crisis: another once-unthinkable event has taken place,” Barclays said. “For decades the 10-year U.S. government bond yield was the definition of the long-run risk-free interest rate; now that has been declared a less than top-notch credit risk.”

S&P is the only one of the three major ratings agencies to downgrade the United States.

This information was brought to you by Realty Trac.

Short-sale disputes were designated as the most significant legal issue facing real estate professionals, according to the recent National Association of Realtors’ 2011 Legal Scan: Legal Issues Facing Real-Estate Professionals. REO-related issues also ranked high on NAR’s and 76 percent predict it will be one of the top three legal issues they face in the future.

“Several real-estate commissions also believe disputes involving short sales are increasing,” according to the Scan. One of the major causes of short-sale disputes, according to respondents, is a lack of sufficient short-sale training among agents. Similarly, respondents saw a lack in sufficient training in REO marketing and contracting processes. More than 48 percent of respondents believed REOs led to “a significant number of current disputes.” Of those, 58 percent ranked the issue among the top three current issues facing real estate professionals. About 60 percent of respondents believe REO disputes will increase over the next two years, while 76 percent list the issue as one of the top three issues they will face in the future.

In addition to short sales and REOs, agency issues, property condition disclosures, and the real estate settlement procedure act (RESPA) were ranked among the top legal issues real estate professionals face.

With Foreclosure Help of Florida you can rest assure you are getting the best trained and knowledgeable professional out there. We stay updated on all the government programs, the constantly changing bank short sale procedures. We read all the current articles pertaining to this industry. So if you are looking for help or just have a question, give Foreclosure Help of Florida a call today. What have you got to lose besides the stress of foreclosure? 772-237-5335 or log on to http://www.foreclosurehelpofflorida.com

Helpful Information

This information was brought to my attention here recently from a Title Company that we work with. It is news from Chase Bank. They have a new program that may be of interest to some of you facing foreclosure. Here is the letter they are sending out to Chase Bank customers; maybe you have already received one.

Dear Homeowner,

We’re contacting you because we have a new program that could be right for you.  Don’t lose hope – you have options that may help you avoid foreclosure and make a fresh start.

You may be able to owe nothing more on your mortgage and get $20,000 after you sell your home!

We would like to talk with you about the possibility of selling your home for less than the amount you owe.  If we agree on a lower sale price and a few other terms and you sell your house for that amount before foreclosure, you will get $20,000.

After your home is sold through this program, you will not owe any future payments for this mortgage.  

Avoiding foreclosure is possible.

Sincerely,

John Rieger

Vice President

If you would like to know more about this program and others, call  Foreclosure Help of Florida We are real people who will sit down with you and explain situations like this and others that may be available to you. Call us today 772-237-5335 or visit us at www.foreclosurehelpofflorida.com
and together we can help you get back to living your life.

Good News & Bad news

This was so interesting I just had to share with everyone. People who are underwater on their homes this is for you. And here in Florida that is 46% of home owners right now. I know this is typical for the real estate industry, but there’s good news and bad news. Which do you want first?

Okay, I’m not really giving you an option here, so here goes:

Good news: the number of homeowners underwater is shrinking. Taking into account people actually underwater and those with near-negative equity the national statistics show 27.7 percent of all residential properties.

Bad news: if you’ve got a second mortgage (like a home equity line of credit) you’re almost 20% more likely to have negative equity, and those numbers are rising.

Basically, underwater homeowners with only one mortgage are on average under by $52,000. If you’ve got a second mortgage, that amount jumps to $83,000.

Nevada is still leading the pack with the hit their real estate market has suffered. 63% of mortgage properties are underwater. Arizona’s got 50%, Florida 46%, Michigan 36%, and California 31%.

So here is more good news, Foreclosure Help of Florida can help no matter how many mortgages you have. Foreclosure Help of Florida’s only job is to relieve you of this devastating burden and get you back to living your life.
Give us a call today; there is no obligation, no money out of pocket, no hassle.

What have you got to lose, except the stress of a Foreclosure?

Call us NOW! 772-237-5335

Something New

I recently read an article from The Short Sale Daily News that was very interesting, and wanted to share it. some people have this conception that
investors are shady and are trying to take advantage of a homeowners devastating situation, In my opinion after reading this article, they are the
ones who are keeping this housing market going right now…  Read this and tell me what you think.

The robo-signing scandal from Fall 2010 is proving to have a positive side effect for real estate investors. Foreclosures were completelyfrozen for a brief time and it has apparently taken a while to crank up the foreclosure machine again. Foreclosure sales on courthouse steps has been down in some states. For example, in Nevada these sales dropped 19.7% and in
Washington, 24.5%.

“The slowing foreclosure process has left fewer affordable homes available for sale,” said Foreclosure Radar CEO Sean O’Toole. “Foreclosure investors may be the only winner so far, benefiting by being able to resell homes purchased at foreclosure auction a little more quickly.”

Real estate investors are reselling the properties they previously bought at auction at a faster rate than the banks are getting rid of REOs, according to some sources. This is news to relay on to your current and potential real estate investors!

If you are thinking of giving up and letting your house go back to the bank please call us FIRST!  FORECLOSURE HELP OF FLORIDA