May 14

Mortgage Rates At New All-Time Low

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Mortgage Rates At New All-Time Low
by sharonshawflores

Both 30- and 15-year mortgages reached record lows
Long-term mortgages were introduced to the U.S. market in the 1950s — and the 3.83 percent average for a 30-year loan reported by Freddie Mac last week is the lowest rate recorded since then.
The average for a 15-year mortgage dropped to a record low of 3.05 percent.
First quarter home sales highest in five years
According to NAR, home sales in the first three months of 2012 were the highest of any first quarter since 2007.  Home sales increased 4.7 percent from the fourth quarter of 2011 and were up 5.3 percent year over year from the same period in 2011.
Loan fees and delinquencies dropping too
Last week, the average fee for 30-year loans dropped from 0.8 to 0.7, although the fee for 15-year loans remained steady at 0.7.
At the same time, homeowners behind on their mortgage payments reached the lowest level in three years — only 5.78 percent of borrowers were late on payments for the first quarter of 2012. This is down from 6.19 percent year over year from 2011, and from 6.01 percent the quarter prior (the last quarter of 2011).
Via The Washington Post Blogs and Mortgage News Daily.

sharonshawflores | May 14, 2012 at 2:32 pm | Categories: Uncategorized | URL:http://wp.me/p1TiJo-1a

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May 8

Bank of America Offers Principal Reductions to 200,000 Homeowners

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A select group of struggling mortgage borrowers are about to get an offer that sounds too good to be true. Executives at Bank of America say they will begin mailing 200,000 letters offering certain customers mortgage principal reduction.
“If people get these things and toss them, they won’t be eligible,” says Ron Sturzenegger, the Bank of America executive charged with providing solutions to borrowers in need of mortgage assistance.
But the offer is real, and eligible borrowers could get as much as $150,000 knocked off the balance of their mortgages. It is all part of the $25 billion settlement reached this year between federal and state agencies and the nation’s five largest mortgage servicers over fraudulent foreclosure document processing (so-called “robo-signing”).
[Click here to check home loan rates in your area.]
Bank of America (BAC), in a deal with state attorneys general and the U.S. Department of Justice, committed $11 billion to mortgage principal reduction, but executives say they will go beyond that if enough borrowers respond to their offer. Five thousand borrowers have already received a collective $700 million in principal reduction through a pilot program for those already in a modification negotiation. The 200,000 borrowers being targeted now may have already exhausted modification options or may have yet to contact the lender.
Executives say borrowers receiving the letters are eligible, but they still have to prove they qualify. In order to be eligible, a borrower must be 60 days late on the mortgage payment as of Jan. 31, 2012. The borrower has to owe more on the mortgage than the home is currently worth, commonly known as being “underwater” on the mortgage, and the borrower’s loan must either be owned by Bank of America or serviced by Bank of America for an investor who is allowing the modifications.
In order to qualify for the modification, the borrower must answer the letter with full documentation of income, showing that under the terms of the modification they can still make the monthly payment. A borrower with no income would therefore not qualify. A borrower’s current monthly payment must be  more than 25 percent of gross income, and the borrower must show they are unable to afford that.
“If you can afford to make your monthly payment and are choosing not to, you will not get this principal modification,” says Sturzenegger.
If the borrower qualifies, Bank of America will bring the monthly mortgage payment down to 25 percent of the borrower’s gross income. That could mean principal forgiveness well over $100,000, as there is no limit to the amount of the mortgage. If enough borrowers respond, it could cost Bank of America far more than it committed to in the settlement.
“Yes, we have the capability to go well beyond the $11 billion,” adds Sturzenegger.
[Related: America's Tax Havens]
Bank executives say that before choosing which borrowers will get the offer, they performed a net present value test on each loan, making sure that the principal reduction modification would net Bank of America or the investor who owns the loan more than foreclosing on the home. “It has to be fair to the investor as well,” says Sturzenegger.
Not all of the 200,000 borrowers who receive the letters are expected to respond. Executives say there is a level of fatigue among delinquent borrowers who have already received several notices or who may have gone through a failed modification process already. Some borrowers simply don’t want to stay in their homes, while others may think the offer is a scam.
“They have been contacted by a lot of other people, and this offer may appear too good to be true,” says Sturzenegger.
That’s why Bank of America is sending the letters by certified mail and trying to make the language as simple as possible. A sample letter obtained by CNBC shows a bring red box in the top corner labeled, “IMPORTANT” and simple language stating, “Qualifying customers may reduce their monthly payment by an average of 35 percent.”
Some 6,500 letters should be arriving in mailboxes across the country this week, with a wave of new letters going out every week until the end of the summer, when all 200,000 should have been mailed. Bank of America is staggering the mailings in order to handle the expected response. The bank has staffed up to handle the task, with 50,000 employees manning servicing desks, but the process will clearly take a lot of time. That’s why Bank of America has suspended any foreclosure actions against these 200,000 borrowers until the process is complete.
There are currently 5.59 million U.S. loans that are either delinquent or in the foreclosure process, according to Lender Processing Services. Bank of America services one million of those loans, but many of them are owned by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Their regulator, Edward DeMarco of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, has yet to agree to principal reduction in loan modifications, despite harsh criticism from some lawmakers on Capitol Hill and increasing pressure from the White House.

May 7

About That Foreclosure Flood….

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About That Foreclosure Flood…
by sharonshawflores

New foreclosures down more than 30% year over year
For months, economists and industry experts have been predicting a flood of foreclosures to upset the housing market once bank settlements and other distressed mortgage initiatives were ironed out. As it turns out, however, the March Mortgage Monitor report issued by LPS shows that although new foreclosures for March are up 8.1 percent over February, they are down 31.1 percent from the same time a year ago. (via Lender Processing Services)
Completed foreclosures down nearly 20% from last year
CoreLogic’s monthly foreclosure report shows that there were 69,000 completed foreclosures in March, compared with 85,000 last March — a decrease of 18.8 percent. According to CoreLogic’s CEO, the reduction in completed foreclosures, given that the foreclosure inventory is also shrinking, “suggests that loan modifications, short sales, deeds-in-lieu are increasingly being used as an alternative to foreclosures to clear distressed assets in our communities. This is what was envisioned with the recent National Foreclosure Settlement, and can often be a better outcome for both borrowers and investors.” (via CoreLogic National Foreclosure Report – March 2012)
Short sales outpace foreclosure sales
For the first time, it appears that lenders are finally catching on to the idea that “short sales should be the dominant way of disposing of assets [in distress],” as Jonathon Weiner of Lender Processing Services puts it. In January 2012, short sales were 23.9 percent of home purchases, while foreclosed homes accounted only for 19.7 percent. A year ago, foreclosures were 24.9 percent while only 16.3 percent of home sales were short sales. Weiner also observed that the growing preponderance of short sales is a positive sign that the country is finally making real progress working through its overwhelming inventory of distressed properties — and could be a sign that home prices will bottom out this year. (via Bloomberg Businessweek)

sharonshawflores | May 7, 2012 at 3:40 pm | Categories: Uncategorized | URL:http://wp.me/p1TiJo-18

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May 5

Home prices to hit bottom in 19 markets this year

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Home prices to hit bottom in 19 markets this year

By Amy Hoak, MarketWatch
May 4, 2012

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Home prices in a majority of the markets covered in Zillow’s Home Value Forecast are set to bottom this year — if they haven’t already, according to a new Zillow report.
“From an economic perspective, the latter part of the first quarter is full of positive news as the spring selling season gets underway,” said Stan Humphries, Zillow’s chief economist, in a news release. “While it is unlikely that national home values continue to rise at this rate through the rest of the spring and summer, it is undeniable that we are seeing sparks of life in the housing market.”
Nineteen out of 30 markets in Zillow’s monthly report are expected to hit a bottom, in terms of home prices, at some point in 2012, according to the real-estate website.

Cottages make nice starter homes.
Photo: Flickr | byrdiegyrl

The Phoenix, Miami-Ft. Lauderdale and Tampa areas are expected to see significant home-value increases over the next year, with prices in Phoenix expected to rise 6.5%, prices in Miami-Ft. Lauderdale expected to rise by 5.6% and prices in Tampa expected to rise 2.5%, the release said.
Markets where prices are expected to keep dropping include Atlanta, where prices are expected to fall 4.1% over the year and Chicago, where values are forecast to decline 3.8%.
Overall, U.S. home values rose 0.5% in March, compared with February, according to the report. That’s the largest monthly increase since May 2006, according to Zillow.
The report was released a day after the latest Case-Shiller report, which found that average home prices were at their lowest level in February since late 2002. Read more: U.S. home prices fall to nearly decade low.
Below are the 19 metropolitan areas where Zillow expects prices will hit bottom in 2012:

New York
Los Angeles
Dallas-Ft. Worth
Philadelphia
Washington, DC
Miami-Fort Lauderdale
Boston
Riverside, Calif.
Phoenix
San Diego
Tampa
St. Louis
Baltimore
Denver
Pittsburgh
Orlando
Las Vegas
San Jose
Virginia Beach, Va.

Apr 30

Home Prices Rise for First Time in Almost a Year

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Home Prices Rise for First Time in Almost a Year
by sharonshawflores

Latest Adjusted Prices Show Slight Increase

S&P/Case-Shiller Report Reports 0.2% Rise
According to the S&P/Case-Shiller report released last week, the composite index for 20 metropolitan areas gained 0.2 percent this February when seasonally adjusted — meeting forecasts made by economists. The rise is the first increase since April of last year. S&P’s index committee chairman noted that the news was a mix of good and bad news — prices in some areas continue to decline, and without the seasonal adjustment, the 20-city index was down 0.8 percent to reach 134.20, the lowest it’s been since 2002. (via Reuters)

Barclays Capital sees first signs of price increases
Analysts from Barclays Capital consider the 22 pecent order growth seen by homebuilders in the first quarter of 2012 as an early sign of the market beginning to see price increases return. The managing director of Barclays’ homebuilding division said that Phoenix, Denver, Orange County, CA, among others are seeing pricing comebacks. Three builders concurred with that perspective — Lennar, Meritage Homes and Ryland Group have reported the strongest order growth across both location and buyer type. Other homebuilders, D.R. Horton, PulteGroup, and M/I Homes also showed order growth, but without the same strong feeling for the trend to continue.
It’s possible that the last 12 to 24 months of increased investor activity buying existing homes has raised consumer demand for new homes. If so, that could mean good news for the homebuilding sector and the housing market. (via Housing Wire)

sharonshawflores | April 30, 2012 at 6:46 pm | Categories: Uncategorized | URL:http://wp.me/p1TiJo-16

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