Posts Tagged Real Estate

BofA Offers Help to Homeowners Underwater

With hopes of encouraging more participation from homeowners in programs of modification, the Bank of America now has a brand new approach on modifying loans that are extremely underwater.
First, it looked at principal forgiveness when modifying adjustable-rate and subprime mortgages that qualified for the NHRP. These also had to meet the most basic qualifications of the Home Affordable Modification Program.

This approach focuses on mortgages that are extremely underwater and have high delinquency rates, most of all Pay-Option ARMs and subprime loans.

The Bank of America has seen a lot of homeowners that owe a lot more on mortgages than on what their homes are actually worth but are reluctant to accept solutions that focus merely on the payment without balance reductions from their loans.
When it comes to these mortgage modifications, the Bank of America is going to take principal reduction into consideration to reach reasonable payments that are equal to around 31% of the household income. If it is a necessity to get extra savings to reach that target of payment, a reduction of interest rates will also be taken into consideration.
Under this new approach, the qualified homeowners will get an offer of interest-free principal forbearance, which can become forgiven principal – a result of up to 30% in loan principal balance reduction.

For the initial three years, the forgiveness installments will be set to a level of 20%. In the last two years, this amount will rely on the property’s updated value to make sure that the LTV won’t go below 100% because of principal forgiveness.
Earned principal forgiveness can help homeowners

    and it even focuses on and recognizes the interests of the mortgage investors by making sure that forgiveness does not entirely depend on the performance of the homeowner. Under the new terms, this lowers the chances of future defaults from happening and changes the overall amount to forgiveness because of the property value gains that might happen during a recovery of the economy.

    Aside from this new approach, the Bank of America has also started to provide two other sustainable and reasonable payment solutions when it comes to certain Pay-Option ARMs.
    If negative amortization is the case, they will think about offering up HAMP modification to get rid of negative amortization and to forgive some of the amounts for principal reductions. If pending Pay-Option ARM recasts appear to increase the monthly payments of a customer, however, a preemptive modification which gets rid of negative mortgage amortization and changes it to a completely amortizing market rate loan might be taken into consideration.
    The latest NHRP components will come about next month and they are expected to offer up improved solutions to principal reduction to around 45,000 customers that qualify for the HAMP modification. This would result in around a total of $3 billion of reduced principal.

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Brand New Rules in Favor of Flipping

Residential real estate never used to like the term “flipping”, but things have changed since then. The latest changes in policies actually encourage flipping in order to sell more foreclosed homes, which are already horribly damaged – something that area realtors are also in favor of. There are hopes of this helping today’s struggling home market.

Back in the days when there was a boom in real estate and home values had risen, flippers could buy homes to sell them for a profit without increasing the value of the homes in any way. To stop this practice from going on, the rules were changed to forbid property flipping on properties financed with FHA-insured mortgages.
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Real Estate Problems in California

Norm Miller is CoStar Group’s vice president who hopes to start up a five-star and 100-point scale system by the end of the year which can be used for building comparisons in each market. With it, investors will then be able to find out whether one office building is as great as another building.

Right now, Miller is trying to quantify the various factors that could be affecting real estate rent values, testing them and discarding those that do not have any effects whatsoever. Here are some real estate observations that Miller has seen in San Diego.
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The Realtors’ Outlook on Commercial Real Estate

It does not seem like 2010 will be the recovery year of commercial real estate. In fact, vacancy rates look like they are about to rise, while rents look like they are about to drop.

Not a pinch of meaningful recovery seems to be expected before 2011 due to problems with consumer confidence, unemployment and various other conditions of the economy.
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Short Sale May Get Easier, Good for Everyone

Do you remember last year being the year of foreclosures? Well, this year looks like it is about to become the year of short sales.

In Phoenix alone, the amount of finished short sales, in which lenders sold homes for a lower mortgage value, went up by 60% at the end of 2009. Last month, bank-owned home sales went down by 25% compared to a year before, as traditional sales went up by 9% and short sales went up by 16%.
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FHA Flipping Foreclosures

It seems that the government is hitting three birds at once with a single far-reaching change in policy. The government wants to help the investors that fix foreclosures, communities troubled with a lot of foreclosed and bank-owned houses, as well as homebuyers with low down payments all at the same time.

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Should Bankers Worry about Commercial Real Estate?

Alarm bells are starting to sound in the industry of banking due to today’s commercial real estate meltdown. Signs seem to show that banks are going to get hit, but there is quite a difference between the foreclosures of several homes and those of offices, shopping centers and hotels with steeper prices.

Belly-ups that occur within more expensive properties also make the pain worse for the people who hold their debts. Because of this, the financial industry is predicting waves of bank failures within the next few years.

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All about Short Sales

Real estate short sales are getting to be extremely common in Dublin, California. In fact, out of 255 pending or active homes in Dublin, 133 of them happen to be short sales. In a nutshell, if your home was purchased between 2003 and 2008, your loan debts are probably much more compared to your actual home’s worth. And, if you keep living there while paying the mortgage, your overall credit rating will probably not get a significant impact if your loan is “upside down”.

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15 Mortgage Companies Subpoenaed by HUD

The HUD says that it is currently taking a much closer look at several mortgage companies in order to find out why there have been so many problems when it comes to mortgages insured by the FHA.

There are 15 companies in total, all of which were given subpoenas recently and demanded data and documents related to loans that have failed and which have ended in claims that were paid out by the FHA’s fund of mortgage insurance.

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IRS Releases Form for Home Buyer Tax Credit

The IRS has recently released a form, which eligible homebuyers have to claim in order to get the first-time credit of homebuyers this tax season. They have also announced tax returns processing and brand new requirements in documentation to deter any fraud that may be related to first-time credit of homebuyers.

This brand new form follows major changes that were made a few months back, which extended credit to a wider array of home purchasers while adding new requirements of documentation to avoid fraud and making sure that taxpayers properly get credit at the same time.

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