Archive for February, 2011

Raleigh Foreclosure Services

Tuesday, February 8th, 2011

Raleigh short sale experts have been helping families in the Raleigh area of North Carolina Avoid and Stop foreclosure. We specialize in Short Sales and Foreclosure Prevention.  Please enjoy this article written by James Foxx.

Buyers Find Pre-Foreclosure Homes Rising As Delinquency Rates Surge

By: James Foxx

A report by U.S. bank regulators showed that they find pre-foreclosure homes to have risen in numbers in various areas of the U.S. during the 2010 third quarter. The increase is expected to continue until the first few months of 2011 as the number of delinquent borrowers also increases in the country.

In California, San Jose foreclosures and foreclosed property totals in other metro areas of the state jumped during the July-September 2010 period. Statewide, foreclosed properties numbered 382,000 during the quarter, representing a 31.2% surge compared with the previous quarter and a 3.7% increase from the same 2009 period.

The state also recorded the highest number of applications for mortgage modifications during the quarter in focus. Owners of California foreclosures who sought mortgage modification totaled 50,407 for the period, with over 17,000 applications filed under the Home Affordable Modification initiative of the federal government. Meanwhile, almost 33,000 borrowers in the state sought modification under other programs.

California accounted for 21.6% of all modification applications in the U.S. for the July-September period, giving the area the number one spot among all 50 states in terms of the number of loan modification applicants. Buyers also find pre-foreclosure homes and foreclosed properties increasing further in the state during the quarter.

Nationwide, completed foreclosures totaled 187,000 for July-September, representing a 14.7% increase compared with the April-June 2010 quarter. Compared with the 2009 third quarter, the number of foreclosed properties nationwide rose by 57.5%. Along with a rise in foreclosed property totals, the number of borrowers who are behind in their loan payments for a period of 30 to 59 days also increased, with figures rising by 4.3% compared with the 2010 second quarter.

Despite a rise in foreclosure and in the number of delinquent borrowers, some positive statistics did emerge during the period in focus. For one, nationwide delinquency rates among borrowers behind in payments for at least two months declined by 6.4% compared with the previous quarter.

For another, home retention activities also increased during the period, with mortgage servicers reporting that more than 470,000 retention actions were implemented. Analysts are hoping that this will find pre-foreclosure homes and foreclosed properties declining in the coming months, particularly when national foreclosed property totals have already reached 1.2 million in the third quarter.

Raleigh Short Sale Help

Tuesday, February 8th, 2011

Raleigh Short Sale Experts, help families avoid or stop foreclosure in the Triangle area of North Carolina. For all your short sales need please give us a call. 

This is a great article written By: Tamara E. Holmes for Bankrate.com.

If you can no longer make your mortgage payments and your home is now worth less than you owe on it, foreclosure may not be your only option.

A short sale, in real-estate terms, is the sale of a house for less than what the owner still owes on the mortgage. If the lender agrees to a short sale, the rest of the homeowner’s debt typically is forgiven. Lenders sometimes agree to the procedure in order to take a small loss and avoid the lengthy and costly foreclosure process.

While there are some significant negative consequences to a short sale, an ever-increasing number of properties are being advertised with that label.

Short sale: Win-win-win situation
The beauty of short sales is that they can be a win-win-win situation for seller, buyer and lender. Here’s how:

The seller gets out of the mortgage liability without facing bankruptcy.

The buyer gets the home at a reduced price.

The lender agrees to a loss it considers minimal without going through a foreclosure and being saddled with an unsalable property.

While it may seem surprising that lenders would agree to accept less than what they are owed, they benefit from the process, too.
“The lender benefits by not having to go through the protracted process of foreclosing on the borrower and then having to put the property on the market and go through the whole marketing process,” says Stuart Wilson, a real-estate agent with Paragon Real Estate in San Francisco.

A market saturated with foreclosures can cost lenders billions — and as much as $50,000 per foreclosure — according to a study by the congressional Joint Economic Committee.

A buyer’s dream
For a buyer, a short sale is a boon since he or she is getting a property at a reduced price. However, the process of waiting for a lender to decide whether to agree to a short sale can make a lengthy home-buying process longer and more arduous.

Wilson, who has represented both buyers and sellers in short-sale deals, advises working with an agent who’s familiar with short sales.

He also suggests that buyers looking to negotiate a short-sale deal come armed with enough documentation to convince the lender that settling for the lower price is the best option.

“You’d better be armed with recent comparables that show unequivocally that the lender’s price is out of line,” says Wilson. “You can’t do this with a cover letter or a conversation. It will need to be done with the kind of documentation that an appraiser would come up with.

“When you go into a short sale, you have an institutional lender, and it is an anonymous entity,” Wilson continues. “You don’t get a chance to talk to these people, you don’t know what their guidelines are, you don’t know what their time frames are, and you don’t know if your contract will be approved in six weeks or six months. It’s a real crapshoot.”

Lenders are most concerned with the financial situations of the seller when they ultimately make their decisions. If a seller can handle the mortgage payment, there’s no motivation for the lender to let the seller out of the mortgage at a lower price.

“A lot of lenders aren’t even going to consider a short sale unless it seems like (the homeowner) is in financial distress,” says Natalie Lohrenz, director of counseling for Consumer Credit Counseling Service of Orange County in Santa Ana, Calif.

Also, if the home has a second mortgage with another institution, a short sale is less likely to be approved, since that second institution would have to agree to forfeit all or part of the money it’s owed.

Last gasp only
While getting a lender to agree to a short sale may seem like an answer to the prayers of a homeowner who wants to unload a house, it’s not a good move if you’re merely looking to find a new place. It’s generally a last-ditch effort when the only other option is foreclosure.

Should you go for a short sale? It depends on how deep a financial hole you’re in and how likely it is you’ll be able to overcome those financial difficulties.

“If they’re just having a short-term problem — short-term disability or maternity leave or layoffs, but they have good prospects to find something soon and they can weather the storm and hold on to the profit through that — obviously they wouldn’t want to think about a short sale,” says Lohrenz.

“But if the choice is foreclosure or short sale, generally a short sale is going to be a better idea.”

Before you think about asking your lender to consider a short sale, it would be a good idea to get your paperwork lined up.

Be ready to show the lender you are serious about your situation. Get together a hardship letter (an honest explanation of your financial situation and how it occurred), pay stubs, bank statements, tax returns, an appraisal and documentation of your debts.

3 critical safeguards
If you’re considering a short sale, experts advise you to take the following steps to meet potential negative consequences head-on.

1. Get it in writing. Make sure the lender agrees in writing that the short sale will absolve all debts.

“If they owe $300,000 on the house and the short sale is for $280,000, is there any possible way that the lender’s going to come after them for the $20,000?” Lohrenz says. “Most lenders will put that in the agreement that they’re not going to come after the deficiency.”

2. Protect your credit rating. Ask the lender how it will report the short sale on your credit report.

“Most of the time, a short sale shows simply that a debt is satisfied,” says Lohrenz. “But theoretically, a short sale could reflect on the credit report as ‘settled for less than the full balance.’” Such a designation is a negative mark on your credit report, though it wouldn’t hurt your credit as much as a foreclosure would.

3. Get professional tax advice. Short sales often have tax repercussions, since lenders can claim the forgiven debt as income that they provided you.

That means if you agreed to a short sale for $50,000 less than what you owed the lender, the lender could issue you a 1099 for $50,000, which you would have to pay taxes on.

But there are two “outs,” says Lohrenz. “If you meet the IRS’ definition of insolvency at the time the debt was forgiven, then you generally don’t have to pay taxes on it.”

Or, if your home loan is a nonrecourse loan, you’re also likely to escape this tax. With a recourse loan, whoever signed the note is personally liable for the debt, and in a short sale, the debtor would have to pay tax on the difference. A nonrecourse debt is one secured by the loan collateral — such as the house itself — and the debtor would not have to pay tax on the sale shortfall.

The most common case is that mortgages secured by the property — especially for buyers who made a 20% or more down payment — is a nonrecourse loan. But it is absolutely critical you consult a tax attorney before you make such a move to ensure that you don’t dig a deeper financial hole as a result of the tax situation.

This story was reported and written by Tamara E. Holmes for Bankrate.com.