3rd Qtr 2011 - MN Real Estate Foreclosure Update

December 9th, 2011

RealtyTrac.com, the leading authority on tracking and analyzing foreclosures, reports for October 2011, that Minnesota is experiencing its share of foreclosures with 18,827 foreclosed homes across the State.

When breaking down Minnesota foreclosures by County, the 1,097 new foreclosures in Hennepin County, are two thirds that of Ramsey County experiencing 325 new foreclosures. From September ‘11 report to October ‘11, the new foreclosures in Ramsey County nearly doubled; whereas, Hennepin County foreclosures have risen only 12%. The Twin Cities account for for nearly 12% of all new foreclosures in the state.

Within Ramsey County, the ranking of the top communities experiencing double digit foreclosure activity includes: Phalen & Daytons Bluff, Central St. Paul, Battle Creek, Maplewood, Mounds View, White Bear Lake, New Brighton, Roseville and West 7th.

Within Hennepin County, the top 10 ranking communities experiencing double digit foreclosure activity includes: Folwell, Jordon, Powderhorn, Richfield, Columbia Heights, Brooklyn Park, Brooklyn Center, New Hope, Crystal and North Minneapolis.

In comparing percentage rate of foreclosure units in St. Paul, Ramsey County and Minnesota to that of the Nation, each falls below the National rate of 18%. However, due to the near doubling of foreclosures in Ramsey County, St. Paul’s 15% of foreclosed units is 2% above Minnesota percentage of 13%.
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In comparing percentage rate of foreclosure units in Minneapolis, Hennepin County and Minnesota to that of the Nation; Minneapolis and Hennepin County fall well above the National rate of 18%, with 23% and 22% respectively. As a result, both are 1-2% above the Minnesota 13%.
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For October 2011 reporting, the average sales price of a foreclosure is $26,869 less then that of the average sales price of traditional home, not in foreclosure within Minnesota.
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House Bill Seeks 1-Year Cap On Pursuing Foreclosure Deficiencies

December 8th, 2011

As published on Thursday, December 08, 2011, the Daily Real Estate News reports that a bill seeking a one (1) year cap on pursuing Foreclosure deficiencies has been proposed by Congressman Ed Towns, introducing the “Fairness In Foreclosure Act”, H.R. 3566.

The Bill introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives on Tuesday, aims to limit and standardize the time frame that a mortgage company can go after a home owner following a foreclosure for a deficiency judgment. The bill seeks a one-year cap on any deficiency judgment, except in states that already have shorter time limits already in place. The bill also proposes that mortgage lenders not be allowed to go after “low-income” borrowers for a deficiency judgment.

“A deficiency judgment after foreclosure seems to be one of the greatest injustices that occur to home owners after they have gone through the arduous foreclosure process,” Rep. Edolphus “Ed” Towns, D-N.Y., said in a release. “Not only are they behind by thousands of dollars on their mortgage payments and facing public auction of their houses, the ordeal may continue indefinitely.”

Source: “House Bill Proposes 1-Year Limit on Foreclosure Deficiencies,” HousingWire (Dec. 7, 2011) and Daily Real Estate News “Bill Seeks 1-Year Cap on Foreclosure Deficiencies” (Dec, 7, 2011).

Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac Suspend Eviction Lock-Outs During The Holidays

December 1st, 2011

This actions applies only to foreclosed occupied single-family 1-4 unit residences with Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac owned mortgages. The temporary suspension will be effective December 19, 2011 through January 2, 2012. During this period however, other pre- or post-foreclosure processes, legal and other administrative proceedings for evictions may continue, but families living in foreclosed properties will be permitted to remain in the home.

Terry Edwards, Executive VP of Credit Portfolio Management, Fannie Mae stated:
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“The holidays are meant for families to spend time together, especially if they’ve gone through the stress of financial challenges and foreclosure”. “No family should have to give up their home during this holiday season. Fannie Mae is committed to helping borrowers avoid foreclosure whenever possible and we encourage any homeowner who is having difficulty making their payment to reach out for help.”

Homeowners with Fannie Mae backed loans can call 1-800-7FANNIE or visit www.knowyouroptions.com for information and resources on foreclosure prevention options, including contact information for the Fannie Mae Mortgage Help Center. Homeowners with Freddie Mac backed loans can call the U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development (HUD) at (800) 569-4287 or visit its web site www.hud.gov/ for a list of approved foreclosure-prevention counseling services in your area that you can visit in-person or talk to over the phone. Or, call the Homeowners HOPETM hotline at (888) 995-HOPE to reach trained housing counselors – available 24 hours a day, seven days a week – who can provide advice and help you develop a plan.

help1If you are 30, 60, 90-days late on you mortgage payments; received mortgage default notice from your lender; received notification of scheduled foreclosure date or sheriff sale; help we can help consult with you at no expense to you, the many options you have in trying to retain your home, or selling your home below the existing market value, known as a “Short Sale”. short-sale-help1 MetroHomesMarket.com has helped many homeowners to resolve the pain and anxiety experience in dealing with the many uncertainties the come along with a personal crisis through no fault of their own.

Make ‘em perform or get rid of ‘em!

November 27th, 2011

you are firedHaving problems with your Realtor?  Have you thought about firing the inept, lazy… shows you too many homes that don’t fit your parameters, only cares about his/her commission, hard to reach person?  Why not?

See, here’s the problem with too many people on a home search, they think they’re stuck with the Realtor they started with, when in fact, they may be not.  If you hired someone to fix your roof and they didn’t perform to your standards, you’d can them, right?  Take heart, in most cases, you can do this with an under performing Realtor as well, but you have to fight for your rights!

Think about it this way…the Realtor will likely get about 3% for getting your deal closed.  Here’s what the Realtor should do: help you find the home you want, drive you around to the homes, conduct computer searches, write the deal, set up a title company and attend the close with you.  All together, on the average, the agent will put in about 20-25 man hours, including all the above.

Let’s look at a typical deal, a home purchase for $350k.  The commission at 3% = $10,500.  That’s $10,500 divided by 20 man hours = $525 per hour! But, did the Realtor perform to your standards?  Did the agent send you hundreds of homes to search through, many of which did not even come close to what you wanted? If so, the agent was wasting your time!  Did you have to cater to the agent’s time schedule…or did the agent accommodate you?  Were you pressed to buy a home you looked at, but really didn’t know if it was what you wanted? Were your calls to the agent answered in a timely manner?  Did the agent offer you Lender resources, so you could shop the mtge rate, for a best deal? Did the agent run a comparable study, regarding the price you were going to pay, to protect your interest…you certainly didn’t want to pay too much?  Of course, the more you pay, the more the gent makes…right?

I’m working with two buyer’s right now.  We’ve seen some homes each may have purchased, had I not encouraged them to, “make sure you get this right, you don’t want to spend a quarter of a million dollars unless it’s the house you really want!”

If the agent you started with isn’t getting it done for you, or, expects you to run around to “open house’s,” and do your own searching, and have you call them to get you in to a house you found, so the agent can get the $525 per hour he/she is not entitled to…CAN THEM!

First, tell the Realtor you don’t care to work with them any more.  If you didn’t sign an “exclusive buyer’s agreement,” that’s all you have to do…tell them to take a hike.  If you did sign an agreement…and…the agent won’t release you, contact the Broker the agent works for and insist that your agreement be canceled.  The Broker may want you to come in and “work it out,” but tell them you have no desire to spend anymore of your precious time on this, you just want to end the arrangement.  Get it in writing!

In most states, the Broker can hold you to the contract, making you stay with them to the end of the agreement.  In that case, if it were me, I’d let them know, I’ll tell everyone I know about the mistreatment I experienced with the agent and the Broker.  That might influence them to release you.  The language in the agreement is critical…do you have any way to get out of the agreement.  If not, call an attorney to see what they would charge to write a letter on your behalf.  It may be worth a couple hundred bucks to get out of the deal?  Raise all the hell you can, don’t lay down for being mistreated!

Warning: if you do buy a home the agent showed you, you will probably be required to pay that agent the commission due them. If you do get released and start working with another agent, if you go back to a home the first agent showed you, and you do decide to buy it, the first agent will have a cause to claim “procurement,” and rightly so.  In that case, the agent you are presently working with would not get paid.  So be careful about this kind of issue.  If the first agent showed you a house you are still considering, tell the new agent you need something in writing that excludes that house from your arrangement with them.

An agent is working for you, not the other way around. Don’t sign an “Exclusive Agreement.”  If the agent is worth his/her salt, they should be confident you’ll stay with them, because they will perform to your standards.  Neither my partner nor myself, require our buyer’s to sign any agreement, we work on a handshake basis and tell our buyer’s; if at any point in the search and purchase process, they aren’t happy with us, they can fire us at will.  That’s only fair, don’t you agree? This applies to our home seller’s as well.

The deals out there today are the best you’ll ever see.  If you can buy, do it soon.  There are so many homes still in the bank’s hands, but waiting to see what comes on the market, could be a huge mistake.  If you find what you like, buy now…rates are great and you’ll have a very manageable mortgage payment.

Ed



Gulp, Gulp, I’m Going Under…

November 8th, 2011

Help me…I’m one of 4.5 million that got a letter saying ‘I may be qualified for a mortgage adjustment, for my underwater home.  They say; the bank may have taken advantage of me?

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So what’s the deal?  The govt. has told the banks they need to send a letter to 4.5 million owners who may have been financially harmed in the “Robo” signing process.  They may be entitled to compensation as well.  Nice, ‘eh? The banks have begun sending the letters out.  NOW we’ll see some action!  (Not!)

The WSJ/11/2/2011, reported that the reviews cover 14 of the nation’s largest banks and are being overseen by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Reserve.  Lenders have hired hundreds of employees to conduct the labor-intensive reviews, so says the journal. Sounds good so far…or does it?

This will, no doubt, be much like the original approach the banks had to take, as they didn’t have enough help to handle the enormity of the problem…hire hundreds to thousands of new employees, employees not trained to do what they had to do = big time slow down in the process + lots of errors and corrections = more lost time, etc.!

To qualify, the home owner has to have suffered “financial harm.”
And…who’s to prove harm; the home owner, of course.  And…how many documents will have to cross hands?  And…how long will this take?  Another very expensive attempt by the Govt. to solve the problem, and hey…they’re trying, but the plan is not carefully thought out and organized.  Where will they get the new employees who will understand all this and who’ll be qualified to decide who suffered “financial harm?”

What it will do and do well, is slow down the entry of more foreclosure homes, harming the traditional sellers, as prices will continue to drop.  Oh boy?!

(Check out Martin Hutchinson’s, take on this one.  Google him up and read what he has to say.)

By  the way, this only covers people who bought before 3/’09.

Last month, new home bldg was down for the 4th straight month. And, 16 Trillion of home equity has been lost since ‘06.  With the unemployment problem, and many people living in fear that they’ll be the next to get their walking papers, where are the buyers?

If you can buy Real Estate now, you’d better get busy…find what you’re looking for and buy it.  Do you know, some sources are predicting the high side chance of a housing shortage, in the next 10 years?  If you buy now, and that does happen, you will have made a smart choice…your equity will really climb!

Another reason to buy; % rates have to go up. Even if they go down, say a half point, from 3.99% to 3.49%, that will only reduce a mtge payment by about 30 cents per thousand of mtge.  So, a 200k mtge could be $60 per month less, if you did wait and that did happen.  But…what if the rates go back to the 6% level by the time you buy?  You’d pay $1.23 more per thousand = $ 246 more per month, than at the 3.99% rate.  BUY NOW!

The other side of the coin, selling a home…if I wanted to sell, I’d get it on the market pronto, before a rate change is the next thing that slows sales down. If you don’t sell asap, you may have to wait it out for another five to ten years to get anywhere near the price you want.

An article I read said, Citi bank sent out 346 million credit card offers in the 3rd Q, this year.  Can you believe it?  The banks have all the answers?  Very weird, when over 55 banks were shut down by regulators this year…so far!

What’s your opinion on all this, how’s the economy working for you or your business these days…and…do you have any Real Estate stories you care to share with us?  Good or bad, we’d love to hear what you have to say.  Hit the “comments” below and let’s hear from you!

Ed