Sunday, December 7, 2008

Here comes another dangerous tidal wave of mortgage lending aptly explained by I Love Lucy!



With mortgage interest rates at 2004 levels, people are scrambling to refinance their mortgages even with severly tightened underwriting guidelines. Since 90% of mortgage companies are either out of business or severly understaffed because of the mortgage meltdown, we are going to dramtically understaffed underwriters being pressured to approve a tidal wave of mortgage applications.
Everyone scrambling to get refinanced can get an idea of the inner workings of a mortgage company by watching this I Love Lucy video. It's a wonderfully apt metaphor for what's about to happen in mortgage underwriting offices all around the country.

While you're watching the video, think of:

-Lucy and Ethel as mortgage underwriters.
-Chocolates as mortgage applications of excited mortgage candidates looking to capitalize on truly historical rates.

As the pace of chocolates picks up, the girls in the Wrapping Department get overwhelmed quickly. Two people can only do so much and the chocolate is going to keep on coming.

Relating to mortgages, as long as rates stay low the chocolate will continue to spit out. Understaffed lenders will be pressured to keep up and that may a bad thing for quality control. Even with draconian underwriting policies.

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Rehab loans- Buy a fixer, get 100% financing for the property and the rehab costs!!


This is a great program for the current state of the market. It is an FHA loan, called the 203k. Bascially it breaks down like this:

You find a 1-4 unit property that needs work and is undervalued. You get a licensed contractor to give a work estimate, you get a loan for either ALL of the costs of buying the property AND ALL of the costs of rehabilitating it OR you get 110% of the as-completed value of the property when you are done with the work. (Lesser of the two) For fix and flippers, a quote comes to mind from a old Cars song "I guess you're just what I needed!". Let's examine a Minor-fied oversimplified example of this loan in action using the details of a real transaction for a four plex property in Los Angeles.

$250000 purchase price
$85000 rehabilitation costs
$335000 total cost for purchase and renovation.

As-completed Value $450000

In this case, we are getting a loan for $335000 which will cover our purchase price and all rehabilitation costs. The loan will automatically convert to a 30 year fixed when the construction is completed. If you are interested in the lurid details of this transaction, this savvy buyer will be putting four section 8 tenants in the building when it is renovated and getting $6400 monthly rent. (The mortgage payment, taxes, insurance and water costs will be $3155 monthly). This is what is called a "Good deal" in Real Estate. The less simplified step by step instruction of this FHA 203k loan are below, taken directly from the HUD website.

This describes a typical step-by-step application/mortgage origination process for a transaction involving the purchase and rehabilitation of a property. It explains the role of HUD, the mortgage lender, the contractor, the borrower, consultant, the plan reviewer, appraiser and the inspector.

A. Homebuyer Locates the Property.

B. Preliminary Feasibility Analysis. After the property is located, the homebuyer and their real estate professional should make a marketability analysis prior to signing the sales contract. The following should be determined:

1) The extent of the rehabilitation work required;

2) Rough cost estimate of the work; and

3) The expected market value of the property after completion of the work. Note: The borrower does not want to spend money for appraisals and repair specifications (plans), then discover that the value of the property will be less than the purchase price (or existing indebtedness), plus the cost of improvements.

C. Sales Contract is Executed. A provision should be included in the sales contract that the buyer has applied for Section 203(k) financing, and that the contract is contingent upon loan approval and buyer's acceptance of additional required improvements as determined by HUD or the lender.

D. Homebuyer Selects Mortgage Lender. Call HUD Field Office for a list of lenders.

E. Homebuyer Prepares Work Write-up and Cost Estimate. A consultant can help the buyer prepare the exhibits to speed up the loan process. If a plan reviewer is the consultant, item G can be skipped and the exhibits can go directly to the appraisal stage.

F. Lender Requests HUD Case Number. Upon acceptance of the architectural exhibits, the lender requests the assignment of a HUD case number, the plan reviewer, appraiser, and the inspector.

G. Plan Reviewer Visits Property. The homebuyer and contractor (where applicable) meet with the plan reviewer to ensure that the architectural exhibits are acceptable and that all program requirements have been properly shown on the exhibits.

H. Appraiser Performs the Appraisal.

I. Lender Reviews the Application The appraisal is reviewed to determine the maximum insurable mortgage amount for the property

J. Issuance of Conditional Commitment/Statement of Appraised Value. This is issued by the lender and establishes the maximum insurable mortgage amount for the property.

K. Lender Prepares Firm Commitment Application. The borrower provides information for the lender to request a credit report, verifications of employment and deposits, and any other source documents needed to establish the ability of the borrower to repay the mortgage.

L. Lender Issues Firm Commitment. If the application is found acceptable, the firm commitment is issued to the borrower. It states the maximum mortgage amount that HUD will insure for the borrower and the property.

M. Mortgage Loan Closing. After issuance of the firm commitment, the lender prepares for the closing of the mortgage. This includes the preparation of the Rehabilitation Loan Agreement. The Agreement is executed by the borrower and the lender in order to establish the conditions under which the lender will release funds from the Rehabilitation Escrow Account. Following closing, the borrower is required to begin making mortgage payments on the entire principal amount for the mortgage, including the amount in the Rehabilitation Escrow Account that has not yet been disbursed.

N. Mortgage Insurance Endorsement. Following loan closing, the lender submits copies of the mortgage documents to the HUD office for mortgage insurance endorsement. HUD reviews the submission and, if found acceptable, issues a Mortgage Insurance Certificate to the lender.

O. Rehabilitation Construction Begins. At loan closing, the mortgage proceeds will be disbursed to pay off the seller of the existing property and the Rehabilitation Escrow Account will be established. Construction may begin. The homeowner has up to six (6) months to complete the work depending on the extent of work to be completed. (Lenders may require less than six months.)

P. Releases from Rehabilitation Escrow Account. As construction progresses, funds are released after the work is inspected by a HUD-approved inspector. A maximum of four draw inspections plus a final inspection are allowed. The inspector reviews the Draw Request (form HUD-9746-A) that is prepared by the borrower and contractor. If the cost of rehabilitation exceeds $10,000, additional draw inspections are authorized provided the lender and borrower agree in writing and the number of draw inspections is shown on form HUD-92700, 203(k) Maximum Mortgage Worksheet.

Q. Completion of Work/Final Inspection. When all work is complete according to the approved architectural exhibits and change orders, the borrower provides a letter indicating that all work is satisfactorily complete and ready for final inspection. If the HUD-approved inspector agrees, the final draw may be released, minus the required 10 percent holdback. If there is unused contingency funds or mortgage payment reserves in the Account, the lender must apply the funds to prepay the mortgage principal.

Friday, October 17, 2008

Avoiding foreclosure with a loan modification-Communication is Key!



It's no secret. The U.S. Real Estate market is in the biggest slump since the great depression. When the real estate bubble burst, it sent property values plummeting downward across the nation. The tidal wave of short-term adjustable mortgage loans increasing in payments is upon us and it is causing foreclosures to spread like a dark plague. People cannot refinance because they have no equity in their homes and in many cases owe more than the property is worth, and simultaneously mortgage lenders have tightened up their lending guidelines making a refinance loan all but impossible. Everyone knows someone who is affected by foreclosure. Entire neighborhoods are being compromised by this wretched and hostile process. If just one home goes into foreclosure on an otherwise desirable street, the other properties could see up to a 55% price reductions in their own homes, just from one low-priced sales comp. Foreclosure is devastating to everyone involved, and also negatively affects others peripherally. The saddest part of this is that the large majority of foreclosures are UNNECESSARY.

The LAST thing the lender wants is to own (another) foreclosed home. The lender only wants the income off of their investment and when that income stream stops, in most cases the mortgage lender and servicer will do everything in their power to restart the flow of income even at a reduced rate. This is one of the tragedies of the whole foreclosure epidemic. People are just giving up and walking away from their home without even attempting to do something. There is a dearth of misinformation floating around now and many half-truths about loss mitigation, foreclosure avoidance and loan modifications in general. The bottom line is this - IF A HOMEOWNER BECOMES LATE ON THEIR MORTGAGE PAYMENTS AND THEY CAN SHOW A STEADY SOURCE OF INCOME, THEY STAND AN EXCELLENT CHANCE OF WORKING OUT A SOLUTION WITH THEIR LENDER(S).

There are several solutions to "loss mitigating" (that's bank-speak for avoiding foreclosure). They are-

Loan Modification, whereby the lender agrees to modify the terms of the original loan and in most cases reduce the monthly payments to what the homeowner can afford. Usually this will involve taking the amount of delinquent payments owed and combining them into the existing principal of the mortgage then lowering the interest rate or making the loan otherwise within reach of the homeowners budget. Alot of urban myths are out there about lenders reducing principle balance on mortgages by hundreds of thousands of dollars. This is very rare, most often the balance stays the same or increases by the amount of late payments but the rate will be reduced and will usually become fixed if it is adjustable. Loan Modification is the best option that a financially solvent homeowner who wants to keep their property can hope for.

Repayment Plan, whereby no change is made to the terms, rate or payment of the loan but the amount of late payments is paid back with some kind of agreed-upon plan and when that plan is completed, the loan resumes where it initially was before the delinquency occurred. This can be beneficial for the homeowner if the reason for the delinquency was short-lived and the original loan is on good terms (fixed rate, less than 7%).

Forbearance agreement, whereby the lender agrees to reduce or suspend payments for a certain period of time and then resume the normal billing cycle of the loan. This is most appropriate for short term reductions in income, i.e. loss of a job with the ability to get another job with some certainty.

Deed-in-Lieu of Foreclosure, whereby the borrower had made good faith efforts to sell the property on their own (and in many cases, short sale) but have not gotten any acceptable offers and agrees to deed the property back to the lender and leave. This saves the foreclosure black mark on the homeowners credit report and saves the lender the time and financial expense of going through the full foreclosure process.

Short Sale, whereby the homeowner lists the property for sale at an amount lower than the balance owed on the mortgage(s) on the property. Again, this saves the credit from receiving a foreclosure blemish and saves the lender's time and money in going through with the entire foreclosure process. Many myths are heard about short sales and "great deals" to be had from buyers picking them up for a fraction of their value. The truth is that lenders are very unwilling to short sale without getting something from the homeowner. We have seen lenders demanding that borrowers use other properties as collateral, sign a note guaranteeing the payment of the amount the lender lost, sending six-figure 1099's to the borrower at the end of the tax year and several other dirty tricks to try and recoup their short sale losses. Also worthy of mentioning, short sales usually don't go through in time because the lender has already started the ball rolling on the foreclosure process and their loss mitigator finds an unrealistically priced comparable sale to gauge the properties value and will hold out until they receive that dollar amount, regardless of the realities of the real estate market.

With foreclosure, time is of the essence. The longer the homeowner waits to speak with the lender, the less options are available to them. If you are even one payment behind on your mortgage, you must take action to prevent foreclosure.

Many people ask if they can negotiate a modification/repayment plan/short sale with their lender themselves. The answer is yes, of course someone could do it for themselves. It is not advisable however, unless the person has extensive experience in Real Estate, Mortgage Banking and Servicing and Law. It is much like representing yourself in court without an attorney- totally possible but not a good idea by any one's account. Retaining us to obtain a foreclosure solution is the best choice for anyone in default. Please call us toll free at Operation HOPE 888-388-4673.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

All about Loan Modifications.


It's no secret. The U.S. Real Estate market is in the biggest slump since the great depression. When the real estate bubble burst, it sent property values plummeting downward across the nation. The tidal wave of short-term adjustable mortgage loans increasing in payments is upon us and it is causing foreclosures to spread like a dark plague. People cannot refinance because they have no equity in their homes and in many cases owe more than the property is worth, and simultaneously mortgage lenders have tightened up their lending guidelines making a refinance loan all but impossible. Everyone knows someone who is affected by foreclosure. Entire neighborhoods are being compromised by this wretched and hostile process. If just one home goes into foreclosure on an otherwise desirable street, the other properties could see up to a 55% price reductions in their own homes, just from one low-priced sales comp. Foreclosure is devastating to everyone involved, and also negatively affects others peripherally. The saddest part of this is that the large majority of foreclosures are UNNECESSARY.

The LAST thing the lender wants is to own (another) foreclosed home. The lender only wants the income off of their investment and when that income stream stops, in most cases the mortgage lender and servicer will do everything in their power to restart the flow of income even at a reduced rate. This is one of the tragedies of the whole foreclosure epidemic. People are just giving up and walking away from their home without even attempting to do something. There is a dearth of misinformation floating around now and many half-truths about loss mitigation, foreclosure avoidance and loan modifications in general. The bottom line is this - IF A HOMEOWNER BECOMES LATE ON THEIR MORTGAGE PAYMENTS AND THEY CAN SHOW A STEADY SOURCE OF INCOME, THEY STAND AN EXCELLENT CHANCE OF WORKING OUT A SOLUTION WITH THEIR LENDER(S).

There are several solutions to "loss mitigating" (that's bank-speak for avoiding foreclosure). They are-

Loan Modification, whereby the lender agrees to modify the terms of the original loan and in most cases reduce the monthly payments to what the homeowner can afford. Usually this will involve taking the amount of delinquent payments owed and combining them into the existing principal of the mortgage then lowering the interest rate or making the loan otherwise within reach of the homeowners budget. Alot of urban myths are out there about lenders reducing principle balance on mortgages by hundreds of thousands of dollars. This is very rare, most often the balance stays the same or increases by the amount of late payments but the rate will be reduced and will usually become fixed if it is adjustable. Loan Modification is the best option that a financially solvent homeowner who wants to keep their property can hope for.

Repayment Plan, whereby no change is made to the terms, rate or payment of the loan but the amount of late payments is paid back with some kind of agreed-upon plan and when that plan is completed, the loan resumes where it initially was before the delinquency occurred. This can be beneficial for the homeowner if the reason for the delinquency was short-lived and the original loan is on good terms (fixed rate, less than 7%).

Forbearance agreement, whereby the lender agrees to reduce or suspend payments for a certain period of time and then resume the normal billing cycle of the loan. This is most appropriate for short term reductions in income, i.e. loss of a job with the ability to get another job with some certainty.

Deed-in-Lieu of Foreclosure, whereby the borrower had made good faith efforts to sell the property on their own (and in many cases, short sale) but have not gotten any acceptable offers and agrees to deed the property back to the lender and leave. This saves the foreclosure black mark on the homeowners credit report and saves the lender the time and financial expense of going through the full foreclosure process.

Short Sale, whereby the homeowner lists the property for sale at an amount lower than the balance owed on the mortgage(s) on the property. Again, this saves the credit from receiving a foreclosure blemish and saves the lender's time and money in going through with the entire foreclosure process. Many myths are heard about short sales and "great deals" to be had from buyers picking them up for a fraction of their value. The truth is that lenders are very unwilling to short sale without getting something from the homeowner. We have seen lenders demanding that borrowers use other properties as collateral, sign a note guaranteeing the payment of the amount the lender lost, sending six-figure 1099's to the borrower at the end of the tax year and several other dirty tricks to try and recoup their short sale losses. Also worthy of mentioning, short sales usually don't go through in time because the lender has already started the ball rolling on the foreclosure process and their loss mitigator finds an unrealistically priced comparable sale to gauge the properties value and will hold out until they receive that dollar amount, regardless of the realities of the real estate market.

With foreclosure, time is of the essence. The longer the homeowner waits to speak with the lender, the less options are available to them. If you are even one payment behind on your mortgage, you must take action to prevent foreclosure.

Many people ask if they can negotiate a modification/repayment plan/short sale with their lender themselves. The answer is yes, of course someone could do it for themselves. It is not advisable however, unless the person has extensive experience in Real Estate, Mortgage Banking and Servicing and Law. It is much like representing yourself in court without an attorney- totally possible but not a good idea by any one's account. Retaining us to obtain a foreclosure solution is the best choice for anyone in default.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Trust Deed investing-anyone looking for a conservative 13% interest?


Lending on Real Estate has always been a steady source of income for the wealthy since medieval England when the gold peddlers began lending to their lords to finance war expenses and collateralized their investment with liens on royal land. The practice of lending money that is secured by property has been in practice for thousands of years, nothing nonfunctional lasts that long. With the current mortgage/real estate market crash many are fearful of lending against Real Estate because of concerns about plummeting value and the dreaded "F" word coming up in everyday conversation. This widespread fearful mindset presents a dearth of opportunities for the sharp and contrarian-minded investor. Hard money trust deeds (a.k.a. mortgage for you non-Californians) are typically lent at 60% or less of a properties' fair market value- That's usually less than Zillow, people. Often times hard money lending will also factor in the income of the property and therefore the ability to make loan payments. If both of these factors are carefully assessed before making an investment in a trust deed, the investor will almost always make a giant yield and have a low risk return on monies invested. Consider the first investment listing below on a commercial property in Orange County. The property appraises at $2,600,000. The 1st trust deed is for $975,000 making it 39% loan-to-value.

J.P. Getty said when asked about evaluating business decisions "I always ask myself what is the worst thing that could happen in this situation. When I've determined what the worst possible outcome could be and consider that outcome acceptable I will commit to the venture and make darn sure that outcome doesn't happen."

Let us consider this properties' worst case scenario. If the borrower defaults on this loan, the lender would foreclose on the property and have plenty of padding between the sales price and the amount of money invested. Let's say the lender decides to sell the building for 70% of it's appraised value. That is a sales price of $1,820,000. Paying $20000 in seller's closing costs will net the lender $1,800,000. Now in California law, the lender is not allowed to keep all the proceeds of the sale in a foreclosure. The lender is entitled to the full repayment of their investment plus all expenses, carrying costs until the sale and pre-agreed interest, if applicable. The remainder is refunded to the borrower. Typically the lender will collect expenses from 5% to 11% of the loan amount on a commercial loan. With such a large cushion of equity, trust deed investments can be very secure and conservative investments. (Considering the state of the banking industry, some might argue that they are more secure than money in the bank!!.)

In keeping with the spirit of Getty, let us make certain that the worst case scenario doesn't happen. We will ensure that by looking at the income of the property and the ability of the property to pay the note. The note will be $10875 per month. Property taxes are another $2705 per month and insurance will be at most $500 per month. With the existing income of $16000, and total monthly payments of $14080 the income from the property alone can easily service the monthly obligations on the proposed trust deed and thus old J.P. is satisfied.

To invest in trust deeds in California, contact us at 310-709-8283 or my mortgage website. The listings below are a smattering of what comes across our desks weekly.




Available Trust Deed Investments
October 13, 2008

Trust Deed Investors,

Below is a list of all Trust Deed Investments currently available. Some TD's are completed and available for immediate investment purchase and others are still in process and have not yet been funded.

*Loans that are not yet completed may be negotiable (ie: loan amount, interest rate and other terms).

To connect with these investments contact me at 310-709-8283.


____________________________________________________________
1st T.D. -$975,000 (Santa Ana, CA)
santa ana ca Term: 5 years
Rate: 12%
LTV: 39%
Appraised Value: $2,500,000
Address: 1535 East 17th Street
Santa Ana, CA 92705
Comments:
Low LTV loan. Property generates approximately $16,000 monthly gross income. Purpose of loan is to pay off existing 1st mortgage that is due. Loan amount may be lowered to $775k and a $200k 2nd may also be arranged to go behind this loan.

1st T.D. - $55,000 (Oakland, CA)
davis oakland Term: 36 months
Rate: 13.99%
LTV: 39%
Prepayment Penalty: 1 year
Formal Opinion of Value: $140,000
Address: 426 Gramercy
Oakland, CA 94603

Description:
SFR Rental property that generates $950 monthly. Borrower has great credit and has owned the home for 8 years. LTV is very low at 39%. Purpose of loan was to do improvements to property. Loan was funded and ready for immediate purchase.

1st T.D. - $50,000 (Lakewood, WA)
lakewood WA Term: 36 months
Rate: 11.99%
Formal BPO Value: 160,000
LTV: 31%
Prepay: 2 years * Investor to receive 1 year perpaid interest in advance!
Address: 14503 Washington Ave., Lakewood, WA
Description:
Rental property that generates approximatley $600 monthly. Purpose of loan is for improvements and pay a few consumer debts.
1st T.D. - $67,000 (Roswell, NM)
clark NM Term: 36 months
Rate: 13.5%
Formal BPO Value: $175,000
Prepay: 2 years. 6 months prepaid interest to investor.
Address: 413 Tierra Berrenda, Roswell, New Mexico
Comments:
Purpose of loan was to pay off consumer debts.

1st T.D. - $175,000 (Roswell, GA)
kidd GA Term: 36 mos
Rate: 12.50%
Prepay: 1 year
BPO Value: 360,000
LTV: 49%
Address: 4147 Edinbergh Trail NE, Roswell, GA
Comments:
Rental property. Borrower as excellent credit. Rental property. Purpose of funds to purchase other investment properties.

1st T.D. - $50,000 (Honolulu, HI)

Comments:

Information will soon be available!

Thank you.
1st T.D. - $240,000 (Alta Dena, CA)
tilman BPO Estimated Appraised Value: $480,000
Term: 24 months (negotiable)
Rate: 12% (negotiable)
LTV: 50%

Address: 2261 Lincoln Ave.
Alta Dena, CA 90278

Comments:
Two structures, one home and a small market in rear on a large lot. Lot is C-3 zoned. Purpose of loan is to repair both structures so they can be rented out. New loan will also pay off existing $165k 1st TD. Projected rents: $2000-front home, $800 rear structure. *Value should be confirmed. A new appraisal can be ordered.

2nd T.D. - $175,000 (Bell Gardens, CA)
bell gardens industrial Term: 24 months
Rate: 12-14% (negotiable)
Existing 1st TD: $1.1MM Lehman Bros - good terms.
Recent Appraisal: $2,040,000
9 units Industrial Suites
CLTV: 61%

Address: 6750 Foster Bridge Blvd.
Bell Garden, CA 90201
Comments:
Owner had high 600 (good) credit. Purpose of loan is for another business endeavor. He generates over $12k in monthly gross income. Looking to net $150k. He has about $150k in the bank.

1st T.D. - $50,000 (Milwaukee, WI)
WI Term: 36 months
Rate: 12.99%
BPO Value: $125,000
LTV: 40%
Prepay: 2 years

Address: 6630 N. 84th St.
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Comments:
Over 700 credit score. Rental property.

2nd T.D. - $350,000 (Rancho Palos Verdes, CA)
fernwood palos verdesRate: Negotiable (14%)
Existing 1st TD: $1.3MM Citimortgage - favorable terms
Terms of Loan: Negotiable
Completed Opinion of Value: $3.4MM-$3.5MM
CLTV: 49%
Address: 6061 Woodfern Drive, Rancho Palos Verdes, CA
Comments:
Property is a non-owner occupied SFR with panorama ocean views. Purpose of loan is to finish major remodel. Borrower has $500k of hi own money tied up in deal, needs appro. $300k to finish job, some interest carry and staging while property is listed for sale. Borrower says he has an offer on the table for $2.8mm, but wants to make as much as possible. He spent 9 months trying to purchase this proeprty that was previously in foreclosure.

1st T.D. - $435,000 (Los Angeles, CA)
Free and Clear Industrial Property(ies)!!!

Rate: 12% (negotiable)
Term: 24 months (negotiable)
Prepayment Penalty: (negotiable)


Property Description: Approximately 5800 square foot building built in 1971. Property is located adjacent to 4 or 5 other buildings that are nearly the same size. Borrower owns all buildings and lots.

Appraised Value: $675,000 of only single building, see below address. (Recently completeed Oct. 2008)

LTV: 65% - May be less if loan amount is lowered or loan is cross-colateralized by other adjacent buildings. This would significantly lower the LTV!

Address: 322 W. 131st Street, Los Angeles, CA 90061-1104

Comments:
Borrower has mid 600 credit scores. He has owned all of the buildings since 1959. He operates a plating company out of all buildings. Purpose of loan is to purchase a unique piece of equipoment that will allow him increase his business production and revenues.


1st T.D. - $90,000 (San Bernardino, CA)
Purchase Price: $71,000
Terms: Borrower would like 3-4 years
Rate: 12% (negotiable)
Value is $160,000 ( close comp at $180k)
LTV: 56%

Address: 773 Spruce Street, San Bernardino, CA

Description: 3 units



Comments:
Borrower is experienced buyer and investor. He has 700+FICO scores. Borrower has near $200k in bank. Property needs $20k to repair property. Ideally borrower would like to obtain $90k-$95 to cover purchase price and improvements. He can put money down and pay improvements, but the more he can finance the better. Borrower's opinion of value is at $160k, there is a close comp at $180k. Plans are to purchase, rehab, rent out hold. Anticipated rents $700-$800 per unit.

1st T.D. - $60,000 (Red Wing, MN)
mn Rate: 13.50%
Terms: 36 months
Recent BPO Value: $150,000
LTV: 40%

Address: 1230 Foursome St.
Red Wing, Minnesota 55066

Commments:
Rental property. More details available.

1st T.D - $85,000 (Palmyra, NJ)
nj deal Rate: 12.99%
Term: 36 months
BPO Value: $205,000
LTV: 41%
Prepayment Penalty: 2 year


Address: 514 Morgan Ave.
Palmyra, New Jewelry 08065

Comments:
Rental property. More details available.

_______________________

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Ode to the fun and free things.


With the deluge of financial bad news permeating all of the orifices of the nation, I thought I would make an attempt to steer the conversation to the positive side and recite a few things that I love about life right here, right now.

I love sleeping in.

I love jogging instead of driving, even miles away. So what if you're glistening and smelly when you get to TJ's and then you have to shlep your wine bottles in a backpack clinking all the way up back up the hill? Urban jogging is the new black.

I love making unecessary abrviatns.

I love sunsets in California.

I love the beach.

I love eating fruit off trees in the street.

I love meeting new people in most cases.

I love yoga.

I love freshly ironed shirts.

I love the blogosphere and having unlimited information at my fingertips.

I love street musicians.

That's it for now. In keeping with the economic climate of our current times, you will note that all of these are free. Let us not think that we can not have fun and love without spending money! Onward mine broke comrades!

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

More price cooling in the sunbelt


LOOK OUT BELOW: Two years from now, house prices are almost certain to be lower in Florida, California, Phoenix and Las Vegas. Tell me something I didn't know!

Not exactly the most surprising news, but now we have numbers to support this forecast. The PMI Mortgage Insurance Co. has released its quarterly U.S. Market Risk Index, which gives the odds of price declines in the nation's 50 biggest metro areas. And the news is sobering if you plan to sell a house in Florida or California in the next two years.

According to PMI's risk index, there's a 99.5 percent chance that houses will lose value over the next two years in the Fort Lauderdale metro area in Florida and in the Riverside-San Bernardino metro in California. Other metro areas where the odds are 99 percent or greater: Orlando, Miami and Tampa-St. Pete, Fla.

Florida is the leader in sunshine and in burst bubbles. I can hear someone composing a blues tune about it now. I affectionatly refer to Florida as "God's Waiting Room".

Here in Southern California we have a 95.9 percent chance, or greater, of seeing price declines. In Vegas, the odds are 98.5 percent; in Phoenix, 96.3 percent. Sacramento and the Bay Area and Silicon Valley all are in the riskiest rank.

The metro areas with the least risk of a price decline over the next two years? My place of birth Dallas, TX. That is followed by Houston; San Antonio; Pittsburgh; Memphis, Tenn.; Indianapolis; Kansas City, Mo./Kan.; Austin, Texas; Columbus, Ohio; Denver; Cincinnati; Charlotte, N.C. -- they all have a less than 1 percent chance of house prices being lower two years from now, according to PMI's risk index.

RATES: Today is Wednesday, when Bankrate conducts its weekly rate survey. Last week, the 30-year fixed averaged 6.32 percent. It's hard to predict what the average will be today, because rates have been volatile lately. Safe to say that the average rate will be higher this week than last week.

Predicting the size of the increase is difficult, because bond yields have been swinging wildly -- rising a quarter of a percentage point one day and plunging nearly the same amount the next day. This is happening because of political turmoil. The mortgage industry is like a 6-year-old at Christmastime, the Senate is like a mom who promises lots of presents, and the House is like a dad who's threatening to give the kid a lump of coal. The poor kid is jubilant one day, despondent the next. Your mortgage industry in microcosm.

Monday, September 22, 2008

You just loaned the federal government $2165 for the bailout package.

G.W. Bush and his administration have in 8 years taken us from a budget surplus at the conclusion of Bill Clintons' term to a multi-TRILLION dollar budget deficit. How exactly did this occur? Well, everyone knows about the Iraq costs- $400 million PER DAY for six years now. Added to this fracas is the recently publicized $700 billion bailout package. The crux of the matter with the mortgage meltdown, which started this entire crises, is that it was entirely engineered by the Bush administration. While they probably didn't set out to destroy this country's economy their repealing of bank legislation and regulation set the stage for everyone to jump on the subprime bandwagon and write the most ludacrious loans imaginable then package them and sell them to Bear Stearns, Goldman Sachs, Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae etc. Many of these loan packages had bond insurance underwritten by AIG-another $85 billion bailout. In a capitalistic system, greed left unchecked will inevitably eat itself and that is exactly what was allowed to happen under Bush's horrid regime, just like it was allowed to happen under Reagan with the SnL crashes. That recovery will look like a drop in the bucket compared to the nightmare of this $700 BILLION disaster. That is $2165 in debt from every man, woman and child in this country. Even Sarah Palin's newest illegitimate family addition will be on the hook for this. Maybe she can pay in Moose hides.

In all seriousness, the U.S. is perfectly enginering it's own demise, and quickly. I for one am disgusted by it all.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Withdraw $$$ from 401(k) VS. Going into foreclosure

This article is from Robert Ashby, an all around good guy. During my work in foreclosure prevention this question has been asked to me several times and my standard answer is no-it is not advisable to use your retirement money to keep a sinking house afloat. This answer depends on the individual's situation of course, but I generally regard it as throwing good money after bad. Mr. Ashby goes into detail here. As always, if you are in some level of foreclosure you can reach me at Operation HOPE for no-cost foreclosure counseling




Many Americans are finding themselves facing potential foreclosure and lack any reasonable means to tap into money besides their 401k funds. That presents a major dilemma, not just for current finances, but for the long-term financial picture as well. Rather than debate whether or not these homeowners should have even been in the house in the first place, let’s just look at the choices they have remaining, neither of which are good.

On the one hand, they can just stop making those mortgage payments and set whatever money aside in preparation for the inevitable foreclosure. Believe it or not, this may make more sense than their other option. While foreclosure is not a good outcome, their finances may not be totally destroyed in the process. They may even keep enough liquidity in their control so they can survive in the longer term.

In many states, such as Florida, foreclosures take a long time and if the homeowner is able to live mortgage free during that time, they can accrue a reasonable savings instead of robbing their retirement and facing the other issues associated with doing that. In the long-term, they may actually be better off financially.

They other option presented here is that they can withdraw money from their 401k plan to pay for the mortgage. This is a bad decision on numerous counts.

For starters, there are penalties for taking the money out prior to age 59 1/2. Then you still have to pay taxes on the withdrawals and that withdrawal could even send you into a higher tax bracket as well. So, while you may be taking out some money, you could be left with considerably less, maybe even less than half, of that amount for paying off your mortgage. If you do use it all for your mortgage, Uncle Sam may be knocking at your door in the near future and that will not be a good meeting.

Another problem with withdrawing from your 401k is that you are robbing from your retirement funds, robbing yourself to pay the bank. The time value of money shows that you will have to work much harder in the future, even just 5 years down the road, in order to undo what you have done.

Yet another problem with the 401k solution is whether or not you are simply delaying the inevitable. If you are not in a position to sell the property or refinance quickly, you may be throwing good money after bad and simply “wasting” it away.

Don’t get me wrong, I am not condoning walking away from your obligations, but rather showing you of these two choices, you need to really think about their consequences and look at the long term picture, not just current reality.

There also may be other options you have not thought of yet. Make sure you are thinking clearly and not during a “panicky” state or you will likely make the wrong choices. Clear minds and a thorough thought process are required to make the best decision(s) for you and your family.

I am sure that many of you have something to say about this topic, so please chime in.

Friday, September 12, 2008

Fannie/Freddie Bailout lowers rates

Hello all, as some of you may or may not know Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have been taken over by the government as of last weekend. This is the latest in a series of unconcionable actions by the feds bailing out massively flawed financial institutions and devaluing our currency and our country. Essentially what the government is doing is telling these institutions that they do not need to be accountable for their titanic screw-ups and torpid decision making, they can just fall back on tax payer money to cover the tough parts. At the forefront of the public fleecing is Daniel "my name is" Mudd-the ousted CEO of Fannie Mae who is receiving $24 million in severance pay on his way out. http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080909/pl_nm/fannie_freddie_pay_congress_dc. "Here you go, you completely failed in your duties as CEO-we'll use tax payer money to reward you for doing a manure-laden job!" ARRRGGGHHHH!!! WTF with this cronyism?

There is an upside to all of this. Mortgage rates have plummeted this week to about 5.5 on a 30 year fixed down from about a 6.25%. I recommend everyone that has a rate above 5.75% to evaluate refinancing so some good can come of all this hoopla.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Indymac moves toward a uniformed loan modification proceedure.

This is from Indymac, a widely publicized financial institution that has collapsed. Indymac has made literally hundreds of thousands of Alt-A loans to people with low or no down payment, no income verification but excellent credit scores. Like nearly every other Alt-A lender, their outlook is disasterous as these loans begin to reset. This news release is a positive note and I hope that uniform regulations can be adopted to facilitate this happening.

FDIC Chairman Sheila C. Bair today announced that IndyMac Federal Bank, FSB will implement a new program to systematically modify troubled mortgages. The program is designed to achieve affordable and sustainable mortgage payments for borrowers and increase the value of distressed mortgages by rehabilitating them into performing loans. This in turn will maximize value for the FDIC as well as improve returns to the creditors of the former IndyMac Bank and to investors in those mortgages. The new program will help IndyMac Federal improve its mortgage portfolio and servicing by modifying troubled mortgages, where appropriate, into performing mortgages.

"I have long supported a systematic and streamlined approach to loan modifications to put borrowers into long-term, sustainable mortgages—achieving an improved return for bankers and investors compared to foreclosure," said Chairman Bair. "The program we are announcing today will provide affordable mortgages for eligible borrowers primarily in the so-called 'Alt-A' market. It provides a systematic approach for modifying troubled loans with payment resets due to negative amortization and other resets -- a market where we are seeing growing defaults and foreclosures. The modified loans will be underwritten to an affordable debt-to-income (DTI) ratio. By providing long-term sustainable payments, this program will reduce future defaults, improve the value of the mortgages, and cut servicing costs. Our goal is to get the greatest recovery possible on loans in default or in danger of default, while helping troubled borrowers remain in their homes. I believe we achieve that with this framework."

Chairman Bair continued, "Foreclosure is often a lengthy, costly and destructive process. Avoiding foreclosure not only strengthens local neighborhoods where foreclosures are already driving down property values, it makes good business sense. This is a 'win-win' program all around."

The former IndyMac Bank, F.S.B. Pasadena, California, was closed on July 11th by the Office of Thrift Supervision and the FDIC was appointed as receiver. On the same day, the FDIC was named as conservator for a new institution, IndyMac Federal Bank, FSB.


IndyMac Federal is focusing first on helping those borrowers with mortgages that are seriously delinquent or in default, but will seek to work with others who are unable to pay their mortgages due to payment resets or changes in the borrowers' repayment capacities. Based on this analysis, IndyMac Federal will extend proposed modification offers to borrowers for modifications or other loss mitigation designed to achieve affordable, long-term payments. IndyMac Federal will send an estimated 4,000 modification proposals to borrowers this week and thousands of additional proposals in the coming weeks. Once a borrower receives a modification proposal, he or she should begin making the modified payments and provide information to verify his or her income. Finalization of the modification agreement is contingent on the borrower providing information to allow verification of income to confirm that he or she qualifies for the proposed modification.

Under the IndyMac Federal program, eligible mortgages would be modified into sustainable mortgages permanently capped at the current Freddie Mac survey rate for conforming mortgages. Modifications would be designed to achieve sustainable payments at a 38 percent DTI ratio of principal, interest, taxes and insurance. To reach this metric for affordable payments, modifications could adopt a combination of interest rate reductions, extended amortization, and principal forbearance. Interest rate reductions below the current Freddie Mac survey rate may be made for a period of five years where such reductions are necessary to achieve a 38 percent DTI, and the reduced rate is consistent with maximizing net present value. For these loans, after five years, the interest rate would increase by no more than one percent per year until it is capped at the Freddie Mac survey rate where it would remain for the balance of the loan term. Other modification features could be combined with an interest rate reduction, as necessary and consistent with maximizing the value of the mortgage, to achieve sustainable payments.

IndyMac Federal will only make modification offers to borrowers where doing so will achieve an improved value for IndyMac Federal or for investors in securitized or whole loans. Modification offers will be provided consistent with agreements governing servicing for loans serviced by IndyMac Federal for others. The modification program does not guarantee a modification offer for IndyMac Federal borrowers.

About Property Auctions in Los Angeles

This is borrowed from Brock Harris, esteemed Silverlake broker.

Big-time Los Angeles real estate auction coming up this Saturday. I’m registered and ready to bid on 5 properties after looking at about 200 hundred.

Spending all this week researching, figuring resale value then taking 65% of that – that’s the highest bid price I’m willing to pay. Lots of paperwork. Bo-ring. I’m ready for the bidding. They say prices are now at 2004 levels. Good. I didn’t buy enough back then. Time to stock up.

First, the nittygritty:
-All sales are final.
-You need $5000 cashier’s check, and you have to write a personal check for the remainder of the 3% deposit. If you can’t close the house, you don’t get it back.
-the auctioneer tacks on 5% of the price for their commission. You pay it.
-You have 30 days to close after winning the property and can get normal loans (mostly – skip the “all cash” deals, they are effed).
-Most sales still have to go through “lender approval.” So when you win the auction, you still don’t know if you got it for two weeks. I know, stupid, right?

And here are some other things I’ve learned about auctions:
-a bunch of dudes in tuxes, hopped up on Red Bull, try to pump up the bidding. Ignore them.
-nice houses get bid up to full retail. Only takes 2-3 couples and the price shoots up.
-most properties at auction have been on the MLS and didn’t sell. There is no point going to auctions but not shopping the MLS. I’ve said it once, I will say it again – every successful real estate investor I know buys 95% of their houses off the MLS. Most buyers are better off bargain-hunting the MLS than attending auctions.
-they are still largely underattended. I attribute this to the hassle and expense of going to an auction, when there are thousands of bank-owned properties already for sale on the MLS.

When’s the bottom everyone keeps asking me. Answer: the “bottom” is not a day, or week. No one rings a bell. Bottoms last about 18 months…and I believe we just got started. In Silver Lake alone, 118 properties have sold in the last 90 days. Buying windows are historically very short, so don’t let it pass you by.

keywords: sky minor real estate, sky minor broker, los angeles foreclosure, sky realtor, sky minor mortgage, sky minor mortgage broker., Sky minor foreclosure, Indymac, Sky MInor Real Estate, sky minor, Sky mortgage, sky loan officer, sky minor loan modification

Monday, July 14, 2008

Sky Minor Mortgage

Hello All, I'm having a good summer for business in mortgage land. Despite all assertations about stated income loans being dead and gone I got a non-owner occupied purchase to 80% LTV done in Palm Springs (thanks for the referral, Kathy). I love the mortgage business. When I'm making money it's a career and when I'm not, it's entertainment. I'm closing the largest purchase loan of my career for a 1.79m stunning contemporary house in the Hollywood Hills and I'm happy about that. This is also another in my line of quasi-celebrity clients who must, regrettably, remain nameless. There is alot of stability now with smaller lending institutions who don't have to sell their loans again. With Indymac collapsing (the 2nd largest financial institution to implode in history) and speculation fanning the damaging rumors of Fannie and Freddie going down presents alot of opportunity for smaller lenders to gobble up market share. The system with huge national lenders was inherently flawed to begin with. Real estate lending is a local thing and no matter what kind of professional services a bank will use to verify and know what they can about a property and an area, nothing beats local knowledge when lending money with real estate as collateral. I hope this era marks the dawn of a new era of localized lending like it used to be before the Wall Street crew had their way with the business model.

Sky Minor, the lender.

Friday, June 13, 2008

Foreclosure filings increase 48% in 2008

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: June 13, 2008
Filed at 7:36 a.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The number of U.S. homeowners swept up in the housing crisis rose further last month, with foreclosure filings up nearly 50 percent compared with a year earlier, a foreclosure listing company said Friday.

Nationwide, 261,255 homes received at least one foreclosure-related filing in May, up 48 percent from 176,137 in the same month last year and up 7 percent from April, RealtyTrac Inc. said.

One in every 483 U.S. households received a foreclosure filing in May, the highest number since RealtyTrac started the report in 2005 and the second-straight monthly record.

Foreclosure filings increased from a year earlier in all but 10 states. Nevada, California, Arizona, Florida and Michigan had the highest statewide foreclosure rates.

Metropolitan areas in California and Florida accounted for nine of the top 10 areas with the highest rate of foreclosure. That list was led by Stockton, Calif. and the Cape Coral-Fort Myers area in Florida.

Irvine, Calif.-based RealtyTrac monitors default notices, auction sale notices and bank repossessions. Nearly 74,000 properties were repossessed by lenders nationwide in May, while more than 58,000 received default notices, the company said.

In Nevada, one in every 118 households received a foreclosure-related notice last month, more than four times the national rate. In California, one in every 183 households faced foreclosure.

The combination of weak housing sales, falling home values, tighter mortgage lending criteria and a slowing U.S. economy has left financially strapped homeowners with few options to avoid foreclosure. Many can't find buyers or owe more than their home is worth and can't get refinanced into an affordable loan.

Making matters worse, mortgage rates have been rising, reflecting increased concerns about what the Federal Reserve might do to battle inflation. Freddie Mac, the mortgage company, reported Thursday that 30-year fixed-rate mortgages averaged 6.32 percent this week, the highest level in nearly eight months and up sharply from 6.09 percent last week.

Efforts by government and the mortgage industry to stem the tide of foreclosures aren't keeping up with the rising number of troubled homeowners, and critics say a Bush administration-backed mortgage industry coalition, dubbed Hope Now, is falling far short.
Rick Sharga, RealtyTrac's vice president of marketing, said foreclosures are unlikely to peak until sometime this fall, as more loans made to borrowers with poor credit records reset at higher levels. ''I don't think we've seen the high point,'' he said.

About 50 to 60 percent of borrowers who receive foreclosure filings are likely to lose their homes, Sharga said. The rest are likely to be able to sell or refinance.

A new government report released Wednesday found that among mortgages held by Bank of America, Citigroup Inc. and seven other large banks, foreclosures climbed to 1.23 percent of all loans in March from 0.9 percent in October.

As foreclosed properties pile up, they add to the inventory of homes on the market and drag down home prices. The trend is most dramatic in many parts of California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona, where prices skyrocketed during the housing boom and are now falling precipitously.

Sales of foreclosures, vacant new homes and other distressed properties now dominate some markets, causing grief for individual homeowners who need to sell for other reasons, like a job in a new city.

Nationwide, one out of every four sales between January and March was a distressed sale, and that figure jumps to more than 50 percent in the hardest-hit areas like Las Vegas, Detroit and distant suburbs of Los Angeles, according to Moody's Economy.com.

In some neighborhoods, lenders are slashing prices dramatically to rid themselves of an unprecedented number of foreclosed properties, sparking bidding wars and multiple offers.

While that's a positive for the real estate market, buyers in other parts of the country are still holding back.

''I think a lot of people are waiting to see if we really have hit the bottom,'' Sharga said.

Lehman Brothers economist Michelle Meyer said in a report Thursday that U.S. home sales are likely to hit bottom at the end of this summer, but said a recovery in sales is likely to be ''feeble.'' Home prices, she wrote, are still expected to fall another 10 percent by the end of 2009.

Friday, March 28, 2008

Alarming Statistics about under-comprehension in mortgage lending!!

I Found this out in cyberspace and I found it alarming to say the least. People, if you don't understand something about your mortgage ASK!!!! This is the biggest investment in your life and you need to know what you are getting into! If you are pondering a property purchase or refinance then call me. 310 709 8283. Even if you already have a deal on the table in front of you and just want a second opinion, I will be happy to assist and give my two cents. I have done over 150 loans personally in the last five years so I know what's good and what's not-so-good. The trick here (and in all walks of life, I am learning) is to COMMUNICATE!!!


The Federal Trade Commission , in a recent study called “Improving Client Disclosures” said:

87% of borrowers could not identify their “up-front” costs.

68% were unaware of prepayment penalties.

21% could not identify their required monthly payment

And 20% could not identify their loans APR.

Thousands of adjustable loans are resetting in the next few months. For some there will be huge “sticker shock”.

I would be happy to look at your note, at no cost, and advise you as to how it’s performing.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Movie #1

This is my first web movie. Exciting!!!


Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Los Angeles Tumbling, But Still Unaffordable Real Estate

Los Angeles Real Estate prices are in a decline. Not as steeply as the rest of California but the trend is about a 5% annual drop in value. Many first time buyers that I know and am prequalifying are excited about this, but then they run the numbers on a $450000 mortgage instead of a $600000 mortgage and see it is still not makeable. Los Angeles Real Estate has always, is always, and will always continue to be very very expensive even in recessionary market conditions. A buyer emailed me today complaining about $300000 shacks in the middle of the ghetto and how they'll never be worth as much as they were last year. I disagreed with him. The reason being, inevitably all the ghetto areas become gentrified. Even if it's 40 years away literally everything in between the 10, 5 and ocean will made nice and just the land be worth millions. Look at Manhattan, London, Hong Kong price trends and density since 1960. Dr. Schumacher says in his book-"if you think real estate is expensive now, just wait until 10 years from now." And that is true when you look at real estate over the long haul. Especially in Southern California. Brian Tracy says in his book that real estate increases in value at twice the pace of population growth and three times the value of inflation and also decreases at the same amount. L.A. certainly has population growth and inflation isin't going anywhere. The net result that I've seen is about a 40-50% reduction in buyers because they were doing 95-100% financing and willing to pay $4000 a month in mortgage bills. Now I am seeing smart people with good credit and down payments getting good prices because they're the only ones able to buy. The mortgage liquidity crisis has not improved at all, but less attention is being paid to it in the media for some reason. I find this perplexing but inevitable with people's short attention spans and bury-their-head-in-the-sand mentalities. I would argue that those were the only people who should be buying houses anyway. Since when can you buy a house anytime through history with no down payment? Even with a substantial down payment-a $400000 mortgage costs a ton of money when you factor in taxes, insurance, maintence, city assessments etc. Rich Dad said "A house is an asset-it's just not your asset" and he's absolutely right.
We can whine and complain all we want but the truth is, there will always be people willing and able to pay top dollar to live in California. I am choosing to see the opportunities in the current downturn instead of the brutal reality of the cost of this market.

Thursday, March 6, 2008

SEO Minor Mortgage Matters

"Please help me out - are blogs effective in SEO? I made a blog http://ddwebguru.blogspot.com/ a way long back but it has not been indexed by Google. Whats the exact reason behind that? Is there any use of blogs in SEO? Is there another blog site which provides the free blogs?"

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

FHA Raises loan limits in CA!!

The Federal Housing Administration raised the mortgage limits to a maximum of $729,750 for 14 high-cost counties in California, as the government began providing aid to homeowners required by the recently enacted economic-stimulus package. This is huge if you have a loan balance up to 729750 or are about to buy a house with that loan amount. FHA loans do not care about credit scores and they will lend up to 97% of the value of the home with a below-market interest rate. The only catch is that you have to verify your income.

The upper mortgage limits also will apply to loans purchased or guaranteed by government-sponsored mortgage companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, FHA officials said.

Details for the rest of the country are due to be announced this week. California counties such as Los Angeles and Orange will be eligible for the maximum limit, which was raised from $362,790. Lower- priced regions, such as Trinity and Lassen counties, will qualify for a loan cap of $271,050, up from $200,160.

FHA officials predicted the increases in California would aid about 33,000 individuals. The new loan limits will be in effect through the end of this year. The goal is to invigorate the market for larger mortgages, which should help push down interest rates.

The FHA said there would be an appeal process through which the new loan limits could be raised higher for counties that aren't now eligible for the $729,750 maximum, but none of the limits will be lowered, said Bill Glavin, special assistant for public affairs in the FHA's Commissioner's Office. That appeals process could be announced, along with new loan limits for the rest of the country, as early as Thursday.

"From what we understand there are not going to be a lot of areas in the country except for California that are going to be at the maximum," Mr. Glavin said.

Those who have applied for an FHA loan but haven't yet closed on it will be able to take advantage of the new limits. The new ceilings also will apply to people seeking to refinance into an FHA loan.


FHA Mortgage Limits in California by County

County Name Median Home Price FHA Limit
Alameda County $995,000 $729,750
Alpine County 438,000 547,500
Amador County 355,000 443,750
Butte County 320,000 400,000
Calaveras County 370,000 462,500
Colusa County 318,000 397,500
Contra Costa County 995,000 729,750
Del Norte County 249,000 311,250
El Dorado County 464,000 580,000
Fresno County 305,000 381,250
Glenn County 230,000 287,500
Humboldt County 315,000 393,750
Imperial County 260,000 325,000
Inyo County 350,000 437,500
Kern County 295,000 368,750
Kings County 260,000 325,000
Lake County 321,000 401,250
Lassen County 200,000 271,050
Los Angeles County 710,000 729,750
Madera County 340,000 425,000
Marin County 995,000 729,750
Mariposa County 330,000 412,500
Mendocino County 410,000 512,500
Merced County 378,000 472,500
Modoc County 125,000 271,050
Mono County 370,000 462,500
Monterey County 599,000 729,750
Napa County 615,000 729,750
Nevada County 450,000 562,500
Orange County 710,000 729,750
Placer County 464,000 580,000
Plumas County 328,000 410,000
Riverside County 400,000 500,000
Sacramento County 464,000 580,000
San Benito County 790,000 729,750
San Bernardino County 400,000 500,000
San Diego County 558,000 697,500
San Francisco County 995,000 729,750
San Joaquin County 391,000 488,750
San Luis Obispo County 550,000 687,500
San Mateo County 995,000 729,750
Santa Barbara County 615,000 729,750
Santa Clara County 790,000 72,9750
Santa Cruz County 719,000 729,750
Shasta County 339,000 423,750
Sierra County 228,000 285,000
Siskiyou County 235,000 293,750
Solano County 446,000 557,500
Sonoma County 530,000 662,500
Stanislaus County 339,000 423,750
Sutter County 340,000 425,000
Tehama County 250,000 312,500
Trinity County 200,000 271,050
Tulare County 260,000 325,000
Tuolumne County 350,000 437,500
Ventura County 599,000 729,750
Yolo County 464,000 580,000
Yuba County 340,000 425,000

Sunday, March 2, 2008

Foreclosure bloodbath scorecard March 08. :P

Privyet Comrades!! With how tough the U.S. ecomony is going into Spring 2008, we may find ourselves succumbing to communism because we're so broke and hungry. The real estate marktet continues to soften in every sector. I read an article in WSJ today that talked about commercial property devaluing with defaults climbing, due to increased vacancies symptomic of a sagging economy. With our sagging dollar AND real estate values, Now is the most prime buying opportunity for discounted U.S. Real Estate since the 1930's. And it's going to get worse before it gets any better. Contact me for an L.A. discounted properties list.


Detroit/Livonia/Dearborn, Mich. (4.9 percent).
Stockton, Calif. (4.8 percent).
Las Vegas/Paradise, Nev. (4.2 percent).
Riverside/San Bernardino, Calif. (3.8 percent).
Sacramento, Calif. (3.2 percent).
Cleveland/Lorain/Elyria/Mentor, Ohio (3 percent).

But at the bottom of the list were six smaller areas where less than 0.2 percent of the households experienced foreclosure-related activity in 2007.

6 areas with low foreclosure activity

Richmond, Va. (0.18 percent).
Allentown/Bethlehem/Easton, Pa. (0.17 percent).
Honolulu (0.16 percent).
McAllen/Edinburg/Pharr, Texas (0.13 percent).
Syracuse, N.Y. (0.13 percent).
Greenville, S.C. (0.08 percent).

Thursday, February 21, 2008

L.A. take on the economic stimulus package and loan limit increase.

Last week, lawmakers passed two new initiatives that will impact our personal and professional lives in Los Angeles.

On the National level, President Bush signed into law the highly promoted Economic Stimulus Package prepared by Congress that includes a provision to "increase the conforming loan limits" for a temporary period.

On the local level, the LA City Council passed a new law that requires sterilization of cats and dogs 4 months of age or older. This law is to prevent the animal shelters from overcrowding of pets.

The National law is to prevent overcrowding of foreclosures and short pay transactions that negatively impacts our industry by driving home prices down.

Although we don't know when the local law goes into affect, it's safe to say details of the Economic Stimulus Package will NOT be available until next month because:

  • First, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and FHA (the Agencies) must establish guidelines they will require mortgage lenders to follow that comply with Congress initiatives.
  • Second, the Agencies must negotiate their guidelines with Wall Street to assess risk, relative to the risk for existing conforming and non-conforming loans.
  • Third, Wall Street must quantify risk-based pricing adjustments, the method of pooling these mortgages, the delivery channel and the servicing - basically establish a third-tier market for investors.
  • Fourth, lenders will need to update software and disseminate guidelines as quickly thereafter in order to take new loan applications.

As of today, limited information is available because the Agencies have yet to finalize the guidelines. However, what we do know is that:

  • Implementation is more complex than the traditional loan limit change that we manage at the end of each year.
  • The increased limit is a temporary solution for "some" high-cost areas based on yet to be identified Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) data.
  • The Los Angeles MSA includes statistical data from the greater Long Beach and Glendale markets.
  • The maximum loan limit for a SFR may be as high as $729,750; However, this amount is NOT NATIONWIDE for all high-cost MSAs. The increases available in Los Angeles County might be based on the area median sales price similar to the HUD process where census tract numbers are used to limit loan amount.
  • The calculation might include taking 125% of the area median sales price in the specific census tract number the property is located, not to exceed $729,750.
  • The temporary loan limits will apply to transactions already closed dating back as July 1, 2007 so lenders can sell product in their portfolio to generate new capital for future loans.
  • The Agencies need to determine if they want lenders to use 2006 or 2007 area median sales prices or both since the temporary law goes back to mid-2007.
  • The deadline is December 31, 2008

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Credit 101 for the small business owner!

Getting a loan while you are self-employed
Getting and keeping credit is enough of a problem all by itself, but being self-employed and trying to obtain loans is a whole new ballgame. It is a good bit harder for a person who is self-employed to obtain credit for anything than it is for a person who has taxes taken out of their check every week.
As you are probably aware, all places require you to prove that you actually have income before they will lend you money, but some places require different kinds of proof than others do. Depending on whether you are dealing with a large company that runs applications through a computer or a company where you can actually speak to the person who reviews your application, you may have to have anything from tax returns to paycheck stubs or even down to just a letter from your employer.
When dealing with small companies, you may be able to get away with just a record of your income that you have kept personally for the past year or more, but when dealing with large companies that approve and reject applications by computer, you will likely need the past two years’ tax returns. If you do not have these, you are likely to have problems getting the loan you are after.
Either way, a secured personal loan is much easier to obtain than an unsecured personal loan. As a self-employed person, it is very hard to obtain an unsecured loan from a large company if you are within the first year of your business. It is often easier to go with a smaller company where you can talk to a loan officer one on one and explain your situation. If you can make the person you are dealing with care about you, they will often do the best they can to get the money you need. The most you will typically get when dealing with large companies such as Capital One or HSBC is a somewhat nameless person that likely lives in a foreign country reciting company rules and regulations with next to no room to maneuver to help you out, no matter what your situation is. Trying to make these people care about you is usually fruitless, so if you are newly self-employed and need a loan of any kind, try to deal locally with an actual person. This is the easiest way to get the funds you need, whether it is for a vehicle, equipment, or anything else you might want a loan for.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Fed Rate Cut x 2=darn good time to refi!

Source: BaltimoreSun.com
If you can refinance and you can find a flat fee mortgage then you may want to strongly consider the refinance option.
Refinancing needsWith mortgage rates falling, many consumers are considering refinancing their loans. But the requirements are different in this post-credit crunch. Some things you’ll need:
• Good credit, with a minimum score in the mid-600s• No late payments on credit cards, mortgages or installment plans in the past two to three years• Home equity• Proof of income
“Rates for 30-year fixed mortgages hovered around 5.5 percent yesterday, with some dipping into the 5.25 percent range early in the day, according to area brokers. That’s just a hair above the record lows recorded in June 2003, when the housing market was flourishing.
When the Fed cut a key interest rate by three-quarters of a percentage point Tuesday, it had no direct effect on fixed mortgages. But it got consumers’ attention. That, coupled with the lower mortgage rates, which have been driven down by their connection to 10-year Treasury bonds, sent homeowners on the hunt for deals.”

Thursday, January 3, 2008

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