Search Tool & Options

Login/Create Account My Saved Searches My Favorites
Start New Search Recently Viewed Listing Recent Searches

Luxury Homes Languish as Wall Street Pinches Wealthy

RISMEDIA, June 5, 2010—(MCT)—Looking for a bargain? Actor Eddie Murphy’s 30-room Englewood, N.J., mansion, which went on the market in 2004 for million, can be yours for .75 million.

And hip-hop entrepreneur Russell Simmons’ 35,000-square-foot mansion in Saddle River, N.J.,—offered for .9 million in 2007—is now listed for .9 million, not much more than the .5 million Simmons paid in 2001.

Although it once seemed that markets catering to the richest Americans would be immune to an economic downturn, there’s a different story in the luxury home market of northern New Jersey, with its proximity to New York City. As stock portfolios swooned last year and Wall Street cut thousands of jobs, wealthy people held off on buying multimillion-dollar homes. As a result of the slower demand, prices have plummeted, often by millions of dollars.

“I didn’t feel that at this level of income, people would be affected,” said Stephanie Rosken of Prominent Properties Sotheby’s International Realty in Tenafly, N.J. “But the market that I felt was not going to be affected was very much affected by this volatile economy. Very, very little is selling.”

According to figures from the New Jersey Multiple Listing Service, sales of multimillion dollar homes fell sharply from 2007 highs in wealthy Bergen County, N.J. Jeffrey Otteau, an East Brunswick appraiser who tracks the real estate market statewide, recently estimated that there is a seven-year supply of properties priced above .5 million in Bergen County.

Developer Stephen Sweeney has been trying to sell a new 13,000-square-foot chateau in Saddle River for more than two years. Despite high-end finishes and a price cut from .5 million to just under million, the house is still for sale. “It’s a prom queen with no date,” said Sweeney. “At the end of the day, the most beautiful home is the home that’s sold.”

The sales slump was caused in large part by upheaval in the financial markets, starting with the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008. Real estate agents say that even wealthy people were shaken, and pulled back on spending.

“Wall Street definitely affected us,” said Peggy Mann of Prominent Properties Sotheby’s International Realty, who has an .7 million home listed in Alpine, N.J. Even people with good jobs “didn’t know what the future was holding,” she said.

“Those people went into hiding,” said Frances Aaron, also of Prominent Properties Sotheby’s, a nine-office agency that has the largest share of the most expensive listings in Bergen County. “People were just shocked and just held on to everything they had. They lost lots of confidence.”

They also lost access to financing. While many well-off people buy homes with cash, those who needed mortgages found them hard to get after the credit crisis of autumn 2008. Many so-called jumbo mortgages were financed by mortgage-backed bonds.

“The people who have wealth and liquidity are holding onto their money, and the banks are doing the same thing. They’re not lending money,” Sweeney said. “You could lower your prices as much as you want. It’s not a function of price; it’s that there is no market. “If you’re selling an million home, even if the buyer has a 50% down payment, they still have to get a million loan, and there are not a lot of lenders willing to consider that kind of concentrated risk.”

“A lot of that mortgage money was coming through Wall Street, and that came to a grinding halt late in 2008,” said Keith Gumbinger, vice president for HSH Associates, a company in the Pompton Plains section of Pequannock that follows the mortgage market. To fill that gap in the market, banks have started making large loans to affluent home buyers, Gumbinger said. But they’re acting slowly and conservatively, requiring pristine credit records and high down payments, he said.

As a result of the slower demand, prices on luxe homes have come down. Consider an eight-bedroom Englewood chateau, complete with tennis court, basketball court and indoor and outdoor pools. Its original price of .5 million was recently cut to .9 million.

Then there’s a newly constructed six-bedroom home in Saddle River that includes two staircases, three fireplaces and a heated driveway. The property is listed for just under .7 million. “In the heyday, we would have easily said million,” said Nelson Chen of the Chen Agency in Fort Lee, the listing agent on the home.

Dennis McCormack, a broker with Prominent Properties Sotheby’s, said that well-located homes have held their value best. “Proximity to New York—that’s it,” he said, adding that when wealthy buyers come to see a property, their first question is: “How long does it take to get to Manhattan?”

McCormack said sales remain slow in the – million range, but he has been surprised by activity in more expensive markets this year. He is currently involved in a pair of vacant land sales in Alpine—both 2-acre lots, one selling for just under million, the other for just under million. In both cases, the buyers plan to spend millions more to build gigantic custom houses.

McCormack is the listing agent on the county’s most expensive property, the Frick estate, a 27-acre Alpine property with an asking price of million. The property was owned by Henry Clay Frick II, a doctor who was a grandson of the coal and steel magnate Henry Clay Frick.

High-priced homes tend to attract entrepreneurs, professional athletes, entertainers, CEOs and hedge fund and Wall Street managers. These buyers expect elevators, home theaters, indoor and outdoor pools, tennis courts and often indoor squash or racquetball courts. (Murphy’s house includes a bowling alley and a music recording studio).

Luxury-market agents hope declining home prices and the recovering economy will begin to lure wealthy buyers back.

“All last year, buyers were under a rock,” said Michele Kolsky of Coldwell Banker in Fort Lee, who has four listings for over million. “They weren’t going to be caught buying a property that they could buy a year later for less money, and in fact they are getting it for less money now.”

“It takes time to find the right person to buy a very high-end home, but there’s definitely money out there,” Aaron said. “I think there’s an energy again; people are looking again,” said Mann, who recently sold a .6 million house in Tenafly.

McCormack is also the listing agent on Eddie Murphy’s house, which he said has languished because it was “priced incorrectly” when it was first marketed at million. (According to tax records, Murphy paid .5 million in 1985). At the current price of .75 million, McCormack said, the house is attracting offers.

Charles Gildea of Marron Gildea & Donohue Realtors in Saddle River said not all sellers have gotten the message about the new price climate. “Some people are continuing to ask for those home-run prices,” he said. But buyers aren’t willing to pay top dollar.

“Buyers are very savvy,” Gildea said. “They’re shopping around and they know the market well. We find them to be very aggressive about putting lower offers in. They’re not as worried about hurting the sellers’ feelings.”

(c) 2010, North Jersey Media Group Inc.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

RISMedia welcomes your questions and comments. Send your e-mail to: realestatemagazinefeedback@rismedia.com.

RISMedia » Home Buying 101

Posted on by admin | Posted in Home Buying | Leave a comment

New Search Engine Optimization Technology Ready to Revolutionize Real Estate Industry Online

RISMEDIA, June 4, 2010—The real estate industry has seen a huge number of changes over the past 20 years with the advent of pagers, cell phones and the Internet, and a new one coming out now for search engine optimization will do the same thing with how agents market themselves online in 2010 and beyond.

Since 1999, the real estate industry has seen less than 1% of home sales come from the Internet to over 80% in the last 2 years.

The changes keep coming and real estate agents and brokers are doing their best to keep up by creating websites and search engine rankings to get to where the buyers are coming from.

Agents spend of thousands of dollars and more to pay for SEO work and marketing to get first page rankings for a few major keywords in Google, Yahoo and other major search engines. Pay per click offers some traffic, but the costs can get expensive and many agents are not happy with the results they get.

All of that will be changing very soon as a new IDX/MLS search engine marketing system begins to hit the real estate industry over the next 12 months.

It is a new “SEO” technology that will indeed revolutionize the real estate industry one more time and enable real estate agents in the middle to low class to compete with the “whales.”

What is it?
It is a technology that breaks down an agents IDX feed and creates thousands of Web pages all targeting long tail keywords and adds them to their website.

Why is it powerful?
Because over 70%+ of all keywords typed into Google looking for real estate are long tailed keywords. Long tail keywords are normally 6-7 plus word searches for real estate like:
“2 bedroom condo for sale in la jolla”
“gated home for sale in del mar”
“3 bedroom oceanfront condo for sale san diego”

Compared to short tail keywords where most agents are bunched up like:
“san diego home for sale”
“san diego real estate”
“san diego condo for sale”

This technology first grabs up hundreds of long tailed keywords and then begins to also pull short tailed keywords over time.

When agents start getting hundreds of Web pages ranking in Google, they are going to start seeing much better results in the form of home sales plus the long tailed keywords normally convert into a better quality lead since the searches are much more specific.

Why will it revolutionize the real estate industry?
1. Because it is going to put agents using it at a huge advantage against agents and brokers who do not. Agents who have hundreds of pages ranking in Google will start getting better results than agents with a handful or couple of keywords. It is no longer about who can spend more, but rather where you are spending your marketing dollars that matters. The costs are low enough so anyone can afford it, which levels out the playing field for agents.

2. It is a technology that goes after where the vast majority of searches are being done online (long tail keywords) and it is very affordable. After reviewing data last week from Google Analytics, the total number of long tailed keyword searches amounted to 80% of the total searches being done. Most agents and SEO experts do not realize how many searches being done are coming from these long tailed keyword phrases.

Considering the fact you can create a couple thousand pages and target hundreds of keywords for 0 makes this affordable to the everyday agent looking for ways to maximize their marketing budget.

Also consider the options that most real estate SEO companies offer now which is “spend ,000 to ,000 for search engine optimization and get 3-5 keywords on the first page of Google.” The cost is much cheaper than traditional SEO packages and the results are greater because relevant data from the listings in the MLS is being used to provide the content and pages are not created from scratch. You are not just ranking in Google for 3-5 keyword phrases but rather “hundreds” of keyword phrases, which when added together become significant.

The long tailed keyword pages will eventually get rankings for short tailed keyword phrases after doing long term link building. This is a much cheaper way to get results than what the vast majority of companies are charging.

3. This is a low cost form of SEO which targets hundreds of keywords and creates a massive blanket of Web pages which are attached to the agents existing website. You keep the website you have and add thousands of pages to it. The option for starting with a new website is available as well but many agents have had the same website for years and are happy with it, so this creates a cutting edge way to add to it and keep building it out.

How many companies offer this type of service?
The fact is there are a few companies who have versions of this technology, but they either charge ,000 for the build out or they simply take the MLS data and paste it on the Web pages. This is not as effective as re-writing all the title lines and anchor text for each listing and re-classifying it for multiple categories.

This new technology is different because it re-writes all the title lines and anchor text, and classifies the listings according to how they are being searched for. This puts the content on static Web pages for search engines while still staying compliant with the MLS boards on how the information can be displayed.

It updates all the pages and listings as the MLS data updates and is able to transfer ASP data into static feed data and create the static feed data on the fly for anyone who is tech savvy. If you do not understand that, do not worry since all you need to know is that 1. It works very well and 2. it is cheap to get started. A couple thousand Web pages can be created for 0.

Because most companies simply copy the data, they can only offer the content to one agent per market place because if they build it out for anyone else it would be duplicate content. This new technology can spin and re-write the data so that Phoenix as an example could have 3,000+ agents all with different Web pages and content.

Not MLS limited – What do you mean?
The fact is that other companies who offer similar versions are limited to offering this service only to areas where they can get an MLS feed. With over 900 MLS boards around the country, this is very limiting since each board has different costs and access to vendors making this a real big pain to deal with. This technology can use the MLS feed when available or use GOOGLE BASE, if the MLS provider is too expensive or difficult to work with. This means that this service is available anywhere in the United States and Canada.

This technology is also patent pending, meaning the company that developed it not only has spent millions of dollars and many years to create it, but has also had a patent pending for 6 years on this technology. Technology patents normally take 6-8 years to get approval.

What is happening now with this technology?
After spending 6+ years to develop this technology and rolling out 500 test sites, the data is in and the results are amazing to say the least. Agents and brokers who bought up these sites are buying them up and expanding in large numbers with one broker buying up 500 more after seeing the results.

A few large website companies are also now looking at using it for their clients since many website companies need something to keep their cancellation rates low and also something to give them an edge over their competition. Everyday agents who are tired of pay-per-click and poor results with other forms of marketing are starting to invest in setting up these massive Web page grids and pull in more buyers off the Internet.

This is not the last time you will hear about this technology, but it may be the first time you are hearing about it.

The sooner you can put it to use, the faster you will see the power of this technology and how effective it is as a low cost way to target Internet buyers and traffic and start expanding the number of home sales and search engine exposure you are getting.

Notes
These SEO pages must have some link building done to ensure the best possible results.

Agents can build inbound links by doing press releases, directory submissions, building Google Web pages, blogging, posting on message boards etc…

If you do not have the time or experience to do this buy a link building package which will do it for you. As more links are added to these pages, you will see more short tailed keywords added to the search results you are getting from Google. These pages normally take 60-90 days to begin indexing and seeing results, although agents do get traffic in the first 30 days as well.

Summary

As an Internet marketing consultant for the last 10 years, I have had a ton of success and seen a lot of new technology introduced to real estate agents, but nothing can compare to this new Search Engine Optimization technology, which is set to revolutionize the way real estate agents market themselves online and get in front of Internet buyers and sellers in 2010 and beyond.

For more information on this new SEO service for real estate agents and mortgage lenders, call Sean Callahan at 858-731-7278 or e-mail info@multimediaicon.biz.

Sean Callahan is an Internet Marketing Consultant and founder of Real Estate Marketing Nerds. He has worked with thousands of real estate agents and brokers over the last 10 years providing Internet marketing services and information. He is also a public speaker and has helped teach thousands of small business owners how to effectively market themselves online. For more information, visit www.realestatemarketingnerds.com.

RISMedia welcomes your questions and comments. Send your e-mail to: realestatemagazinefeedback@rismedia.com.

For more top headlines on RISMedia.com, be sure to see:
10 Staging Tips to Help Your Home Sell
In the Trenches – Actively Staying Involved

RISMedia » Real Estate

Posted on by admin | Posted in Real Estate | Leave a comment

How bad is a previous foreclosure on credit?

Unfortunately, it is a pretty bad blemish. A property foreclosure is one of the most damaging events in a borrower’s credit record. In terms of the effect on your credit history, a deed in lieu of foreclosure – where you voluntarily “give back” your property to the lender – or a short sale – when the lender agrees to write off a portion of the loan that is higher than the value of the home – is not as adverse as a forced foreclosure.

RISMedia » Financing a Home

Posted on by admin | Posted in Mortgage | Leave a comment

New Home Sales Bounce Almost 27% Higher in March 2010

RISMEDIA, April 28, 2010—(MCT)—Sales of new homes broke out of a four-month winter slump with a bang in March 2010, soaring 26.9% over February, the government recently said, evidence that federal tax incentives for buyers due to expire next week are giving the housing market a boost.

The March figures were meager by historical standards, bouncing off an all-time low in February, and analysts said job creation was paramount for the momentum to sustain itself.

“It shows that the tax credit still has some punch, and we will probably see some better sales numbers for April,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s Economy.com. But “if we don’t get more jobs, the housing market is going nowhere.”

The news came after a report showed that sales of previously owned homes rose 6.8% in March. Although new-home sales make up a much smaller share of home-buying activity, economists are watching the data carefully as an indicator of whether the beleaguered construction industry will begin to add jobs in substantial numbers.

Home builders’ stocks climbed, with the Standard & Poor’s index of 12 major builders increasing nearly 11%.

Last year, housing was a drag on economic growth, but that could turn this year, said David Crowe, chief economist for the National Association of Homebuilders. Housing should contribute positively to the nation’s first-quarter growth when the government’s report on gross domestic product is released, he said.

New-home sales in March jumped the most in markets hit by February’s winter storms. They rose 43.5% in the South, 35.7% in the Northeast, 5.7% in the West and 4.3% in the Midwest.

The data are estimates based on surveys and are reported as an annual sales pace adjusted to take seasonal variations into account. The March sales pace hit an annual rate of 411,000 homes.

February’s revised annual rate of 324,000 was the lowest since the government began tracking such statistics in 1963. That made it easy for March figures to show a surge.

Zandi estimated that, stripping out the effects of February’s inclement weather and the influence of the tax credit, last month’s sales pace was closer to 350,000.

“The one thing to keep in mind is that these are still really horrible numbers,” said Patrick Newport, U.S. economist for the consultancy IHS Global Insight. “The only reason they look good is because February’s were the worst numbers ever.”

Sales are likely to fall once the tax credit expires but will recover later this year if the economy picks up steam, he said.

Newport was encouraged that about a third of homes bought in March had not begun construction, which suggests the shoppers, who were unlikely to close their sales in time to qualify for the government’s tax credit, were tempted by factors such as cheap prices and low interest rates.

Richard Voith, a real estate expert at the consulting firm Econsult Corp. in Philadelphia, predicted that the momentum would continue. “It will be a decent summer,” he said.

Inventory declined to levels not seen since March 1971, with the seasonally adjusted estimate of new houses for sale at the end of last month standing at 228,000. That represents a supply of 6.7 months at the current sales rate. The median sales price of new houses sold in March was 4,000.

Builders have suffered significantly from the recession, the credit crunch and competition from bank-owned properties. As a result, they have changed their business models, constructing smaller, cheaper dwellings to attract first-time buyers and putting up fewer houses that don’t have buyers lined up in advance.

Despite slumping sales this year, builders have begun construction on homes at a faster rate than last year, with many counting on a boost from the federal tax credit of up to ,000 for first-time purchasers and ,500 for some current homeowners.

“New homes are selling, so builders were smart,” Newport said. “They are not going to slow down the pace.”

(c) 2010, Tribune Co.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

RISMedia welcomes your questions and comments. Send your e-mail to: realestatemagazinefeedback@rismedia.com.

For more top headlines on RISMedia.com, be sure to see:
Monday Morning Mobile: The Mobile Frontier
More Government Help Coming to Homeowners in California, Arizona, Nevada, Florida and Michigan

RISMedia » Home Buying 101

Posted on by admin | Posted in Home Buying | Leave a comment

HomeFinder.com Launches Cash to Close Sweepstakes with $25,000 in Total Cash Prize Giveaways

RISMEDIA, June 4, 2010—HomeFinder.com, the site where homes and people find each other and connect with real estate professionals, announced the launch of its Cash to Close Sweepstakes. From June 1 through July 15, 2010, home buyers can enter for their chance to win one of three cash prizes of ,000, ,000 or ,000, respectively, to use toward closing on the home of their dreams. The online entry form and official sweepstakes rules can be found at www.homefinder.com/sweepstakes.

“We timed this promotion to launch on the heels of the federal home buyer tax credits which expired April 30,” said Tim Fagan, CEO of HomeFinder.com. “We wanted to do our part to provide our own stimulus plan to help home buyers make the ultimate investment of owning their own home.”

According to the company, the Cash to Close Sweepstakes was created to continue the momentum the federal tax credits generated, helping to incite potential home buyers to make their move in this market of affordable home prices, reasonable mortgage rates and record inventories. It runs from June 1 through July 15 and requires no purchase to enter. Unlike the federal program, which offered eligible first-time buyers ,000 and repeat buyers ,500 in tax credits, the Cash to Close Sweepstakes puts cold, hard cash in the hands of three lucky winners, and lets them spend it as they see fit.

HomeFinder.com’s website, one of the fastest growing in the real estate category, currently lists more than 3.5 million homes for sale. By launching the Cash to Close Sweepstakes, HomeFinder.com hopes to help three buyers find their perfect home and realize their dream of purchasing that home, by giving them the cash they need for closing costs.

“We realize buying a home is one of the most important and fundamental purchases a person or family will ever make in their life,” Fagan said. “Our goal is to help make that more attainable, or at the very least, generate some excitement to help serious home buyers take the next step.”

The Cash to Close Sweepstakes is open to legal residents of the 50 United States and District of Columbia who are 18 years of age or older as of today and who are not otherwise ineligible. Potential prize winners will be randomly drawn from among all eligible entrants the week of July 23, 2010.

Potential winners will be notified directly, but all entrants are also encouraged to “like” the HomeFinder.com Facebook fanpage at www.facebook.com/homefinderdotcom to get the latest sweepstakes updates and announcements, as well as valuable home buying and selling info.

Entries must be submitted between June 1, 2010 at 12 A.M. EST and July 15, 2010 at 11:59:59 P.M. EST.

There are two ways to enter
Online entry:
Eligible entrants may go to www.homefinder.com/sweepstakes and then follow the instructions on the promotional website to enter the Sweepstakes.
Mail-in entry:
Eligible entrants may hand print their name, complete address, phone number (area code included), and date of birth either on a postcard or on a separate piece of paper no larger than 8½ x 11 inches, and mail the postcard or paper in an envelope with proper postage affixed to: HomeFinder.com Cash to Close Sweepstakes, 175 West Jackson Blvd., Chicago, IL 60604. Mail-in entries must be postmarked by July 15, 2010 and received by July 22, 2010. Mail-in entries postmarked before June 1, 2010 will be disqualified.

For more information, visit www.homefinder.com.

RISMedia welcomes your questions and comments. Send your e-mail to: realestatemagazinefeedback@rismedia.com.

RISMedia » Real Estate

Posted on by admin | Posted in Real Estate | Leave a comment

How can I protect my home from creditors?

Check with your state. It may provide special protection through the filing of a homestead exemption, which exempts some or all of the value of your equity in the homestead – the home that you live in and the land on which it sits – from claims of unsecured creditors.

Whether to file a homestead exemption will depend on your situation. Contact your county recorder’s office for details.

RISMedia » Financing a Home

Posted on by admin | Posted in Mortgage | Leave a comment

More Than 1 in 4 Homes for Sale in Price Reduction Report Have Seen Reduction

87506703RISMEDIA, November 21, 2009—Trulia, Inc. has announced that 25.6% of homes currently on the market in the United States as of November 1, 2009 have experienced at least one price cut during the past 12 months. More than 40% of the top 50 major metros across the U.S. are experiencing price reduction levels above 30%, significantly higher than the national average. The average discount for price-reduced homes continues to hold steady at 10% off of the original listing price.

Northeast Continues with Most Homes Reduced
The Northeast continues to see the highest level of price reductions, with 29% of current listings experiencing at least one price cut – Connecticut, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and New Hampshire are all seeing over 30% of listings with price reductions. (Regions according to the U.S. Census Bureau)

-Northeast – 29% of listings with price reductions
-Midwest – 28% of listings with price reductions
-West – 25% of listings with price reductions
-South – 24% of listings with price reductions

“With mortgage rates still low and the expansion of the tax credit to trade-up buyers, we could see significant inventory – both new and ’shadow inventory’ – hit the market during the next four-to-six months,” said Pete Flint, Trulia co-founder and CEO. “Inventory levels this quarter are poised to be atypical of a normal real estate market, which could create tremendous pressure on sellers to price their homes competitively and move their property before the tax credit expires on April 30th.”

Cities experiencing significant increases in percentage of listings with price reductions from June 2009 to November 2009 include:

-Kansas City, MO – 59% increase in price reductions
-Colorado Springs, CO – 43% increase in price reductions
-Omaha, NE – 39% increase in price reductions
-Louisville, KY – 37% increase in price reductions
-Milwaukee, WI – 30% increase in price reductions

Cities showing signs of the highest percentage of declines for listings with price reductions from June 2009 to November 2009 include:

-Las Vegas, NV – 34% decrease in price reductions
-San Jose, CA – 25% decrease in price reductions
-San Antonio, TX – 18% decrease in price reductions
-Los Angeles, CA – 16% decrease in price reductions
-Oakland, CA – 16% decrease in price reductions

Luxury Market Still Hardest Hit
Luxury homes (those listed at two million dollars and above) continue to bear the brunt of discounts being offered with an average of 14% being slashed from the original asking price compared to the national average of 10%. Additionally, luxury homes represent less than 2% of all current listings on Trulia, but are responsible for 25% of the .1 billion in home price reductions.

For more information, visit www.Trulia.com.

RISMedia welcomes your questions and comments. Send your e-mail to: realestatemagazinefeedback@rismedia.com.

RISMedia » How to Sell Your Home

Posted on by admin | Posted in Home Selling | Leave a comment

The Foreclosure Crisis: Navigating Mortgage Payment Difficulties

RISMEDIA, November 24, 2009—If you or someone you know has fallen behind on their mortgage, take heart; there is hope. Not from the government though; you’ll have to fight this one on your own, but you are not alone. And soon, your numbers could grow into a powerful army as more and more borrowers find out the truth and learn the reason why lenders of securitized mortgages are having difficulty foreclosing.

In the last few weeks, I have written a number of articles on various aspects of securitized mortgages, foreclosures, loan modifications and short sales, and I am being flooded by requests for more information on what to do when you cannot get a modification and how to fight foreclosure.

I’m sorry I have not been able to respond to all. Almost all of the questions, searches for information, background, judicial opinions and requests for help are addressed in detail on my blog, http://www.realtown.com/gwmantor/blog.

According to Aldo Svaldi, in an article in the business section of Sunday’s Denver Post regarding the limited success in modifying these loans, “The program’s way of dealing with consumers and handling paperwork is definitely outdated and a source of frustration, housing counselors and consumer advocates say.”

But, what if there were another way?

Up to now, most borrowers have been approaching loan modifications with their hats in hand, sending tons of documentation and, both literally and figuratively, begging for a trial modification that in all likelihood will never result in a permanent modification.

By everyone’s admission, that isn’t working. But, if you are one of approximately fifty to sixty million borrowers whose loan was securitized, the balance of power may possibly revert to you.

I’ve seen a lot of self serving advice columns aimed at people who cannot pay their mortgages, and most of it is bad. Take for example, “When you realize that you might not be able to make your payment, call your lender immediately.”

Why? In all likelihood they are not even legally allowed to modify your loan, so no modification is permanent, nor are they intended to be. And who exactly are you supposed to call?

The originator is probably out of business, the funder got their money back, and the investor was insured. And, tax payers bailed out the insurers. That leaves the collector of the payments.

More than likely the servicing rights to your loan were probably sold to a collection agency that collects and distributes the payments for a small percentage of the payment. But, they also have the right to keep 100% of all late fees, forbearance programs, and any other monies they can squeeze out of fearful, mislead, misinformed homeowners. This has lead to numerous instances of conflict of interest.

Companies that are actually collection agencies are acquiring the servicing rights to mortgage loans, not to process checks, but to put the borrower over a barrel and then offer more and more expensive “solutions.” True, they don’t want your house and would not be the ones entitled to the proceeds of the auction. They do want every spare dime you can fork over. They don’t care one way or the other what happens to your home; they’re just a collection agency.

I believe that servicing companies have gone from passive collectors and distributors of other people’s money to active, predatory, hard-money lenders targeting sub-prime borrowers.

In my opinion, calling the servicing company is the equivalent of placing a sign in your front yard advising to burglars that you will be away for a while. Here are some suggestions for navigating mortgage payment difficulties:

Your first objective is to buy time—time to find a job if you are unemployed, time to save some money, time to find another place to live if you are out of a home.

The next step is to analyze your situation and set a strategy.

Do you want to keep your home or just prolong the foreclosure? Set aside for the minute that you may be underwater and answer the underlying question, do you want to keep your home?

If so, the next thing you want to discover is if your loan was sold as part of a securitized pool of mortgage backed investments. There are two types of entities who package and sell loans. Government agencies such as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have been doing it for years.

But, private label players began entering the market in the early nineties coining the phrase sub-prime and finding an enormous market for loans outside the Fannie/Freddie guidelines, including non-conforming loan amounts, alt-A, sub-prime, non-residential property, and other debt packages such as student loans, car loans, and credit card debt.

It now appears that some of that activity has created a legal roadblock to foreclosing on many of the securitized loans.

If you want to keep your home and you live in a state that does not require the foreclosing entity to take you to court, a non-judicial foreclosure state, you’ll need to sue them. Many people counter that they do not have the money, but if you have the facts on your side, the law on your side, and a fair judge, you could wind up owning your home without a mortgage. That is definitely worth the money.

For those who are facing foreclosure, you have real skin in the game, and you need to assess your situation to determine if you have grounds to challenge and win. For those who have already lost their homes, many of you have standing to get them back.

Do you have a MERS loan?

If the word MERS appears on your trust deed, it is almost certain to have been securitized. This will require a visit to your County Recorders Office to see if MERS is recorded on your deed. Depending on where you live, this information may be available online. If your loan has been assigned through MERS, they may have separated the note and the trust deed, or not be able to produce the note at all.

In a judicial foreclosure state, such as Florida or Illinois, they will be suing you. During the discovery process, you will demand to see the original note, not a copy. Your purpose in identifying the current note holder is to seek additional discovery regarding TILA and RESPA violations in your loan.

In a non-judicial foreclosure state, like California, you will have to sue to stop the foreclosure. Either way, I strongly suggest that you retain counsel to assist you in determining your legal position and establishing a strategy. This is going to be a fight. They will have their lawyer and, if past cases are any indication, they may attempt a fraud upon the court and manufacture evidence.

Are there RESPA and/or TILA violations in your loan documents?

In a non-judicial foreclosure state, this is the heart of your case. This is what will bring the major issues into focus for the Judge. The different levels of fraud are the basis for probable cause. Loan paperwork is pretty sloppy and interested parties are greedy. In all likelihood, your loan will contain one or more violations of the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) or Truth in Lending Act (TILA).

You will need a legitimate Forensic Loan Audit to determine the existence of these violations and their potential legal remedies which may include rescission of the contract and damages. This should range from 0 to ,500.

Armed with that analysis, your lawyer will know how to craft your pleading. Be very cautious of modification scams and unqualified loan audits. See my blog, do your homework and know your rights.

This column is not intended to be legal advice. Its opinions are solely those of the author and not RISMedia.

George W. Mantor is known as “The Real Estate Professor” for his wealth building formula, Lx2+(U²)xTFP=$? and consumer education efforts. During a career that has spanned more than three decades, he has amassed experience in new home and resale residential real estate, resort marketing, and commercial and investment property. He is currently the founder and president of The Associates Financial Group, a real estate consulting firm.

Mantor can be reached at GWMantor@aol.com.

For more real estate related headlines on RISMedia.com, be sure to see:
A Fix-Up Strategy Works in Long Run: If You Have Time on Your Side, Improve and Enjoy Your Home
More Than an Agent—Today’s Real Estate Advisor

RISMedia » How to Sell Your Home

Posted on by admin | Posted in Home Selling | Leave a comment

End of Home Buyer Tax Credit Unlikely to Deter Most Real Estate Buyers

RISMEDIA, April 29, 2010—The expiration of the 2010 Home Buyer Tax Credits on April 30 is unlikely to put off Americans looking to purchase homes who believe now is a good time to buy and are confident that home prices will rise according to a survey released by Prudential Real Estate and Relocation Services, Inc., a Prudential Financial, Inc. company. The survey of 1,000 Americans between the ages of 25-64 with at least ,000 household income was conducted during April 15-20, 2010.

More than 90% of consumers believe that the home buyer tax credits have helped both first-time home buyers and the U.S. housing market overall. Among consumers actually shopping for homes, 65% believe that the end of the tax credits will have little or no effect on their interest in purchasing a home.

While consumers remain unsure about the direction of the housing market, the survey reveals that they are optimistic about real estate values with 46% of consumers expecting real estate prices in their area to increase over the next year. Just 12% expect prices will decline. Over the next five years, 79% expect real estate prices to increase, with 20% expecting prices to increase substantially.

“The survey underscores the key role the federal home buyer tax credits played in stimulating residential real estate market activity and the U.S. economy,” said James Mallozzi, chairman and chief executive officer of Prudential Real Estate and Relocation Services, Inc. “It also shows that most consumers believe the market has hit bottom and are more optimistic about the future.”

Survey respondents identified concerns about rising mortgage interest rates and unemployment as the most important factors affecting their decision to purchase a home, along with more stringent lending criteria and fewer mortgage-backed securities purchased by the Federal Reserve. The expiration of the tax credits placed lowest on their list of concerns. Among those who have recently purchased a home, 61% cited low mortgage interest rates as “very important” to their decisions – an amount greater than either the tax credit or even cheaper prices. The 66% expecting interest rates to rise underscores potential headwinds for the market.

“The tax credits clearly helped stimulate the market when consumer confidence was low and housing inventory was high,” said Earl Lee, president, Prudential Real Estate and Relocation Services, Inc. “While the tax credit expiration is a concern for many, the bigger issues now are the availability and cost of financing as well as if they will have a job.”

Despite the significant downturn in the real estate market, the survey underscores that the dream of homeownership and the perception that owning a home is a good investment remain intact. Among current renters, 75% still believe owning their home is a better long-term choice for their needs than renting.

The majority of consumers also believe that homeownership is a better investment than individual stocks or bonds (75%), mutual funds (72%), or savings accounts (74%).

“The real estate market is precariously balanced. Consumers are clearly motivated to take advantage of the opportunities the current low interest rates and prices afford,” Lee notes. “While the market is picking up in terms of sales and confidence, and the majority still believe that owning a home is a good investment, the outlook for the market remains highly dependent upon the direction of the economy overall.”

For more information, visit www.prudential.com.

RISMedia welcomes your questions and comments. Send your e-mail to: realestatemagazinefeedback@rismedia.com.

For more top headlines on RISMedia.com, don’t miss:
Is It the Beginning of the End for Housing Crisis?
Utilizing Online Mailing Services – Make the Most of Direct Marketing

RISMedia » Home Buying 101

Posted on by admin | Posted in Home Buying | Leave a comment

In Post-Meltdown Muddle, Lenders Tighten Standards

RISMEDIA, May 1, 2010—(MCT)—As a consumer with good credit and a 10-year history of paying his mortgage on time, Ed McLaughlin expected that his record would put him in good stead with his bank.

But when he approached his lender, Charlotte, N.C.-based Bank of America, about refinancing his existing mortgage or qualifying for a new loan, McLaughlin felt like a brand-new customer just off the street.

“They said new banking laws required that I jump through all the hoops, which I thought was a little odd because my record with Bank of America had been good,” said McLaughlin. “All the new paperwork, all the new guidelines they were now required to administer. All that was going to complicate it.”

McLaughlin wasn’t being singled out—he was simply finding out firsthand how the residential mortgage industry has changed since the housing meltdown. After a period when too many lenders focused just on getting people into homes—and not on whether they could afford them—the pendulum has swung back in the other direction.

The number of mortgage products offered to consumers has shrunk, while the amount of income documentation required of borrowers has increased.

“It’s going back to how things were done 10 years ago,” said Jim Bennison, a senior vice president with Raleigh-based Genworth Mortgage Insurance.

The new landscape can be particularly jarring for borrowers used to the recent go-go years, when some lenders required little proof of a borrower’s income and liabilities and enticed them with a range of exotic loans with variable interest rates.

The underwriting standards for borrowers are now being dictated almost entirely by three government entities that have come to dominate the mortgage market: the Federal Housing Administration, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

A bank today is highly unlikely to issue a mortgage that won’t be guaranteed by one of these three. A few years ago, a buyer might have found the house of her dreams and then worried about how to finance it. Now, getting pre-qualified for a loan should be one of the first steps.

“People need to call a mortgage professional earlier in the process than they think,” said Todd Barbour, vice president of Meridian Residential, a mortgage company in Cary, NC. “The very moment you think, ‘I might want to buy a house,’ someone like me should be the next phone call.” Given how severe the housing downturn has been, Barbour said, many people assume they won’t be able to get a loan. That’s a mistake, he said, because there are good loans available for qualified buyers and interest rates are at historic lows.

One of Barbour’s clients recently purchased a home for 5,000 in Wake Forest, NC. The couple got a 30-year mortgage with an interest rate of less than 5%. “It went crazy smooth for us,” Lauri Moore said. “It was literally a miracle how smooth it went.” The Moores had great credit and made a 20% down payment, something not all buyers are in a position to do.

One option that has become attractive, particularly for first-time home buyers, is FHA loans, which require borrowers to put down just 3.5% if they have a credit score of 580 or above. By comparison, to qualify for a low-rate conventional mortgage, a buyer will need a credit score of about 740. The number of loans being insured by FHA has exploded in the past three years as Wall Street stopped buying up mortgage-backed securities.

FHA loans don’t require a borrower to have private mortgage insurance, but anyone else who can’t put 20% down is typically required to get PMI. For a borrower such as the Moores, PMI would have come to about 0 a month, Lauri Moore said. PMI providers such as Genworth offer borrowers additional benefits such as assistance in the event of unemployment and help in reworking mortgages to help families avoid foreclosure.

During the housing boom, many borrowers avoided having to buy mortgage insurance by getting a so-called piggyback loan, which is a second mortgage taken out at the same time as a first mortgage. Today, fewer banks are offering customers piggyback loans, which typically have a higher interest rate than the first mortgage.

Although borrowers should pay close attention to their credit score, that number is just one of several indicators a lender will use in evaluating a borrower. Lenders today want documentation of a borrower’s income for at least the last two years plus information about total debt, which includes any assessments, credit card balances and auto loans as well as how much cash is available for a down payment.

“People have to be organized,” said John Cross, Bank of America’s regional sales executive for North Carolina. “That means keeping copies of your tax records, having access to your bank statements, your W-2s. A little bit more fiscal responsibility has probably been put on the borrower.”

Both first-time home buyers and repeat buyers should expect lenders to take into account what their loan-to-income ratio is.

Mark Goldhaber, a Genworth senior vice president, said from 2002 to 2006 it was not unusual to see homeowners whose total debts, including their mortgage payment, took up 55% or more of their income. Today, banks want total debt to be in the 40-45% range, which is in line with historical lending standards.

“A consumer who is educated and informed is really the best underwriter of all,” Goldhaber said. “If you know what you can afford, then you’re not going to get yourself into too much house.”

(c) 2010, The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.).

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

RISMedia welcomes your questions and comments. Send your e-mail to: realestatemagazinefeedback@rismedia.com.

RISMedia » Home Buying 101

Posted on by admin | Posted in Home Buying | Leave a comment
Page 89 of 94« First...1020308788899091...Last »