Roseville Ca Realtor’s Blog

Entries from May 2009

A Bail Out for First Time Home Owners?

May 15, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Do First Time Home Buyers have a bail out??

IF you are a first time home buyer and afraid to buy a home because you may lose your job- well if so, you GET A BAIL OUT. The government will cover you if you do. 

Read on this is taken from the The CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.)

They launched the C.A.R. Housing Affordability Fund Mortgage Protection Program (C.A.R.H.A.F. MPP), for first-time home buyers.

Through the Housing Affordability Fund Mortgage Protection Program, first-time home buyers who lose their jobs due to layoffs may be eligible to receive $1,500 per month,  for six months,  to help make their mortgage payments.  A qualified co-buyer also can participate in the program, and receive a monthly benefit of $750 per month for up to six months. Program benefits also include coverage for accidental disability and a $10,000 death benefit. C.A.R.’s Housing Affordability Fund is dedicating $1 million toward its Mortgage Protection Program, and estimates that as many as 3,000 families will benefit from the program this year.  To qualify for the Mortgage Protection Program, applicants must:

· Be a first-time home buyer – someone who has not owned a home in three or more years

· Open escrow April 2, 2009, or later, and close on or before Dec. 31, 2009

· Use a California REALTOR® in the transaction

 · Purchase the property in California

· Be a W-2 employee (cannot be self-employed)

To apply for the program, home buyers must request an application for the H.A.F. Mortgage Protection Program from their REALTOR®.

Here is a copy for your connvience- your Realtor must submit this form for you.

For examples on how the program works Click Here.
   
For a list of  Frequently Asked Questions Click here 

 The Home Team Girls care about you keeping you home.

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Categories: Uncategorized

I’m Late with My Mortgage Payment- HELP

May 15, 2009 · Comments Off

 Home Affordable Modifications    Avoid Foreclosure Free Counseling Loan Modification

Are you having a hard time making your loan payment? Are you hearing about all those loan modification programs on the radio and TV and do not know who to trust?  Did you know that there is free counseling that is available to you through government programs?

You are not alone- there are millions of families who are just like you who have either missed one or more of their mortgage payments and still desperately want to keep their home.

If you can no longer afford to make your monthly loan payments, you may qualify for a loan modification to make your monthly mortgage payment more affordable.

Am I eligible for a Home Affordable Modification? Answer these questions:

  1.  Is your home your primary residence?
  2. Is the amount you owe on your first mortgage equal to or less than $729,750?
  3. Are you having trouble paying your mortgage?
    For example, have you had a significant increase in your mortgage payment OR reduction in your income since you got your current loan OR have you suffered a hardship that has increased your expenses (like medical bills)?
  4. Did you get your current mortgage before January 1, 2009?
  5. Is your payment on your first mortgage (including principal, interest, taxes, insurance and homeowner’s association dues, if applicable) more than 31% of your current gross income?

 If you answered yes to these questions- you may qualify for a loan affordable modification Click here

If you have missed 1 or more of your mortgage payments- call your mortgage lender immediately or call 1-888-995-HOPE (4673) to reach a HUD-approved housing counselor. Their counseling is free.

The Home Team Girls want you to keep your home. Call us for any questions and we will direct you to people who can help. If you can not get a loan modification, call us to see if a short sale if right for you.

Avoiding Mortgage Scams

 

The Home Team Girls Realtors® Real Estate Team helping you with Investment properties, Homes For Sale, Relocations, Seller Strategies, Certified Buyer’s Agent, Serving the Military and Veterans, Bank Foreclosure Specialist, Short Sale Specialist. We use the service of a certified  Home Stager on all of our listings. For Roseville and Sacramento Realtor Services call on the Home Team Girls.

Categories: Bank Foreclosure · Loan Modification Info · Loan Process
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Where home prices crashed early, signs of a rebound

May 8, 2009 · Comments Off

Hard-hit areas, such as Sacramento, Las Vegas, parts of Florida and California’s Inland Empire, appear to be among the first cities in the nation to reach the early stages of recovery, as investors and first-time buyers compete for bargain-priced foreclosures.

  •  By some indications, the market could be close to a bottom.  Pending home sales – homes that are under contract, but have not yet closed – and construction spending rose in March.
  • When a market reaches bottom, foreclosures usually stop piling up and banks become more willing to issue loans, confident that the collateral backing them will not continue to decrease in value.
  • The first-time home buyer tax credits from the federal and state governments, coupled with favorable home prices and near record-low interest rates, led to an increase in home sales in March.  Sales of existing, single-family homes rose 63.8 percent in March compared with the prior year.   Monterey County reported a sales increase of 248.7 percent and the High Desert region saw sales increase 172.7 percent compared with last year, according to the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.).
  • The median price for the state also increased in March, rising 2.2 percent in month-to-month comparisons.  March marked the first monthly increase since August 2007, while the statewide median price has remained in the $250,000 range for the past three months.

To read the full story, please click here

 

The Home Team Girls Realtors® Real Estate Team helping you with Investment properties, Homes For Sale, Relocations, Seller Strategies, Certified Buyer’s Agent, Serving the Military and Veterans, Bank Foreclosure Specialist, Short Sale Specialist. We use the service of a certified  Home Stager on all of our listings. For Roseville and Sacramento Realtor Services call on the Home Team Girls.

Categories: Market Reports
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A short sale may be a way out- but beware

May 8, 2009 · Comments Off

Some homeowners who sell their homes through short sales are finding their CB013829mortgage companies still try to collect some or all of the difference between the bank-approved short-sale price and the outstanding mortgage balance.  Some mortgage companies also are taking legal action to recover unpaid amounts after a foreclosure is completed.

  •   A lender tactic gaining popularity is for the holders of mortgages or home-equity loans to require borrowers in short sales to sign a promissory note — a written promise to pay back a loan or debt.
  • HSBC Finance has implemented a one-year moratorium on the collection of deficiency balances for short sales and foreclosures that occur after April 1, due to the “current economic environment,” according to an official with the company.
  • Not all borrowers who sell their homes through a short sale or lose their homes to foreclosure will receive a deficiency claim.  Often, mortgage companies don’t try to collect unpaid amounts either because state laws prohibit or limit such actions or the cost outweighs the potential return.  California has anti-deficiency rules that prohibit lenders from pursuing borrowers after foreclosure, but California does not have anti-deficiency rules for a short sale.
  • The borrower’s situation often is the determining factor in whether the lender tries to collect the unpaid debt or not.  The borrower’s employment status, assets, whether the home was purchased as an investment, and the amount of debt owed are taken into consideration.
  • It is important that sellers are informed of the lenders requirements, read the fine print, and ask questions when selling their home via a short sale.  According to one real estate attorney who represents financially troubled homeowners, every short sale she has worked with has had a promissory note or terms giving the lender the right to collect a deficiency.  Often, the terms are buried in the sale contract, according to the attorney.

It is important that you work with a Realtor that has knowledge about short sales before you decide to work with them. Also it is important to talk to a Real Estate Attorney before you decide to sell so you get advice for your situation.

To read the full story, please click here

 The Home Team Girls Realtors® Real Estate Team helping you with Investment properties, Homes For Sale, Relocations, Seller Strategies, Certified Buyer’s Agent, Serving the Military and Veterans, Bank Foreclosure Specialist, Short Sale Specialist. We use the service of a certified  Home Stager on all of our listings. For Roseville and Sacramento Realtor Services call on the Home Team Girls.

Categories: Sellers · Short Sales
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House hunting? It’s not a buyer’s market everywhere

May 8, 2009 · Comments Off

CB104916Some potential home buyers, especially first-time buyers, may be misinformed about today’s market, believing that all sellers are desperate and will accept any offer. However, in many desirable, middle-class neighborhoods, bidding wars are prominent and buyers often have to make offers slightly above the asking price.

• Although California’s median home price – the price point where half of the homes sold for higher and half for lower — was 39 percent lower in March than a year ago, many of the sales taking place are in areas, such as the Central Valley and the Inland Empire (Riverside and San Bernardino counties), which have higher foreclosure rates. These regions offer home buyers better opportunities to purchase homes at extremely low prices.

• The California housing market is often characterized as having three pricing segments: under $500,000, $500,000 to $1 million, and more than $1 million. Homes in the under-$500,000 segment have accounted for the majority of the state’s price declines thus far.

• As real estate is local, a home in one neighborhood with the same square footage and amenities may not sell for the same price as a comparable home in a neighborhood one mile away. By working with a REALTOR® familiar with a specific area, home buyers should be able to submit reasonable offers that are more likely to receive seller approval.

Read this Story

 

The Home Team Girls Realtors® Real Estate Team helping you with Investment properties, Homes For Sale, Relocations, Seller Strategies, Certified Buyer’s Agent, Serving the Military and Veterans, Bank Foreclosure Specialist, Short Sale Specialist. We use the service of a certified  Home Stager on all of our listings. For Roseville and Sacramento Realtor Services call on the Home Team Girls.

Categories: Buyers · Buying a Home
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Avoiding Mortgage Scams

May 6, 2009 · Comments Off

Fraudulent foreclosure “rescue” professionals use half truths and outright lies to sell services that promise relief, but fail to deliver. In reality, they make a quick profit by charging high fees or collecting mortgage payments, and keeping the money, rather than passing it on to the lender. Usually they use advertising messages like “Stop Foreclosure Now!” They are also known to use a variety of tactics to take your money, and sometimes your home as well. Knowing what types of scams are most common is the best way to avoid being conned.

 Types of Mortgage Scams:

Phony Counseling:   Some scam artists tell their victims that they can negotiate a deal with their lender if they pay a fee first. They tell them not to contact their lender and to let the “negotiator” handle the details. Once the fee is paid, the crook takes off with their money without contacting the lender.

 Bait and Switch: Other con artists trick their victims into signing documents for a new loan to make the existing mortgage current. Unfortunately the distressed homeowner could be surrendering the title of the house to a scam artist in exchange for a worthless or expensive “rescue” loan.

 Rent-to-Buy Scheme:  Some victims are told to surrender the title of their home as part of a deal that allows them to stay in the home as a renter, and buy it back during the next few years. But deals like this usually are so expensive that buying back the home becomes impossible. In the end, they lose their home and the scam artist takes off with the equity that they had built up.

 Bankruptcy Foreclosure: A few of the fraudsters may promise to negotiate with the victim’s lender or get refinancing on their behalf if they pay a fee in advance. Instead, they pocket the fee and file for bankruptcy in the homeowner’s name — sometimes without their knowledge.

 How to Find Legitimate Help

Homeowners who are having trouble paying their mortgage should contact their lender immediately. They may be able to negotiate a new repayment schedule. For more information, read “Mortgage Payments Sending You Reeling? Here’s What to Do,” at http://ftc.gov/bcp/edu/pubs/consumer/homes/rea04.shtm

To learn more about shopping for mortgages, visit http://www.ftc.gov/credit and click on “Mortgages/ Real Estate.”

 Who to Contact if You’ve Been the Victim of a Mortgage Scam

The U.S. Federal Trade Commission works for the consumer to prevent fraudulent, deceptive and unfair business practices in the marketplace and to provide information to help consumers spot, stop and avoid them. To file a complaint or to get free information on consumer issues, contact: http://www.ftc.gov/ or 877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261.

  In general, be suspicious of:

• Anyone who wants the deed to your house for any reason, whether it’s to clean up your credit or obtain special” financing from an investor.

• Anyone who offers to rent your house back to you until you can get back on your feet.

• Lenders who encourage you to borrow more than you need or more than the value of your home.

• Terms that change at the last minute or offer next-day approval based on prepayments or up-front fees.

• Forms you do not understand or that contain blank spaces “to be filled in later.”

• Beware of phony credit counseling agencies charging high fees for financial counseling services you can get for little or no charge through non-profit agencies.

Red Flags for Mortgage Scams

The Home Team Girls Realtors® Real Estate Team helping you with Investment properties, Homes For Sale, Relocations, Seller Strategies, Certified Buyer’s Agent, Serving the Military and Veterans, Bank Foreclosure Specialist, Short Sale Specialist. We use the service of a certified  Home Stager on all of our listings. For Roseville and Sacramento Realtor Services call on the Home Team Girls.

Categories: Bank Foreclosure · Loan Modification Info
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