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Having trouble paying that mortgage each month? You are not alone. Mark Zandi, Chief Economist at Moody’s economy.com estimates that 15 million Americans owe the bank more than the home is worth. (Zillow Real Estate Market Reports says that the percentage of single-family homes with negative-equity mortgages fell to 21.5% last year, but that was due to higher foreclosures!)

According to dailyfinance.com, “…many homes are worth only half of their mortgages. There are 4.1 million homeowners with more than 50% negative equity and another 5 million homeowners with 20% to 50% negative equity.” ( http://srph.it/b2zIRM)

So what to do? Many have tried to re-fi, but are stymied by their bank or mortgage holder because the conditions that make paying difficult also have lowered their credit scores. Home owners are finding to their dismay that even a late or missed utility bill has lowered their FICO scores more than in the past.

President Obama received accolades for putting forth the Home Affordable Refinance Program (HAMP), and two years later we find that the banks and the bureaucrats have, for whatever reason, been dragging their feet to say the least.

According to a report in the Boston Globe January 26, 2011, of the millions of homeowners now facing foreclosure, only a small fraction even stand a chance of receiving ANY help from Obama’s much balyhooed HAMP program. In his testimony before Congress, Neil Barofsky (the Inspector General appointed by President Obama to oversee the $341 billion bank bailout) reported that after two years, “….only 549,620 mortgage modifications have been started”- far short of the 4 million already facing foreclosure. And add the 15 million homeowners who upside-down (or “under water” as the banks say) and you have the formula for disaster all over again.

Abysmally, the Globe reported that of the few who did manage to get their loans modified, there is a “…disturbing number redefaulting” all over again. Congress responded immediately: three members of the House have submitted a bill to yank the $30 billion in bailout money and scrap the entire HAMP program.

Sorry to disappoint you kiddies, but it was Clinton and the Dems who declared that EVERYONE deserves to live in a house. (This debacle goes back to the early 90′s.) Bush and Company tried to put the breaks on in 2002 by trying to reign in Freddie and Fannie, but was blocked by the Democratic Congress. Hey, we all bought into it in the rush for low-money down mortgage money. Conventional wisdom holds that a mortgage on the house you live in is a special kind of debt, one that, mostly because of favorable tax treatment, is so cheap that you should be in no particular hurry to pay it off. 

But there is a popular heresy that opposes this firmly established orthodoxy. It holds that all debt is a bad idea, and paying 3X to the bank so you can save X on your taxes is loopy. Free Money Finance made this case recently. And Dave Ramsey is probably the high priest of this particular sect.  But you should really READ the contract you signed. The contract says that you get to live in the house as long as you pay the bank. If you stop paying the bank, the bank gets the house. Simple. It’s not like the bank didn’t agree to that, or agree to the value of the house at time of purchase. The question to ask is why was the bank so irresponsible in its end of the agreement?

It has to do with “Fractional Reserve Banking”, an esoteric term most have never heard of that allows banks to monetize (read: make gobs of money out of nothing!) all sorts of paper and documents. Banks are regulated and controlled by the Federal Reserve (which, by the way, is a private bank, and no more a part of our government than Federal Express), and the Fed says there must be a “reserve” at all times, a small percentage of what is reported on the balance sheets. (And there is a way they get around that also, by a percentage of the percentage….but that’s another article.) That is the actual Federal Reserve Notes (FRN, or what you have in your wallet…its called fiat banking) that are kept in drawers and vaults. The rest are numbers on ledgers, bits in computers, etc. that are created when you sign a note. Any note. Like a mortgage.

Lets say you walk out with a $100,000 mortgage; you have your signed copies and are feeling pretty good at the rates you got and your payment. The bank now has an instrument. They hold the “note”, and as a matter of rote do several things with it. One of the first seems absurd on the surface: they list it as an asset. Now you or I would not, to us it is a debt, but the bank has your signature, and they can be monetized. That means they are tangible assets, like currency. They report to the Fed that deposits just went up by $100,000 that day by declaring this asset. According to the reserve rule, they must have $10,000 on hand in FRN’s (which we know as ‘money’), but in reality they have only a fraction of that, usually $1,000 (through a complicated play on words and loopholes, but they all do it), but for this example we say the whole $10,000. That means because of the rules of fractional reserve, they have an asset of $100,000, but only have to retain $10,000, so Mr. Vice President tells his loan officers to go make more loans because we just got another $90,000 to lend out! And this happens over and over, every day in every bank. It is how banks “monetize” your signature without you ever being aware of it or authorizing it.

This is now being touted as justification for “strategic defaulting” of one’s mortgage, and articles abound on that as a way out. I am not going to delve in that already deep chasm, but will say one should be aware of their own state laws, for some are a recourse State (like Florida) that allows the lender to go after you and sue for recovery from your assets (which you really cannot hide if you have not already made yourself levy and lien proof, but that also is another post…).  

But before we even get to the walk-away stage, check to see who really holds the current mortgage. There’s a really good chance that the mortgage was already cut up and sold, meaning that the bank already got “paid” the value of the mortgage and you have no contract with the new holder of the mortgage. (Same with credit card debt. Once sold, you have no contract with the collections agency hounding you.) Sure they can sue you, but they wouldn’t win the suit. It rarely happens though because of the fear factor involved in going to court. They usually win by default when you fail so show up in court.

Now let’s get to the really interesting part… the contract! One of the five requisites to a legally binding contract is something called consideration. It basically means that both parties must bring something to the bargain, usually money. And, in the case of mortgage, it is about the money. Here’s the catch. Due to fractional reserve lending, the bank is not actually lending any money to the potential homebuyer, remember? The bank only has a fraction of the reserves it claims to have, and therefore is really lending NOTHING! It’s all accounting columns and electronic digits that are involved in the mortgage. Your signature is what creates the money (i.e., monetized), so the bank has no consideration in the contract. This therefore renders the contract null and void! But believe me, no judge would rule in your favor. (It’s just important to know from a moral standpoint. The entire banking system is immoral!)

So you see why the banks don’t “want their money back in full….” because, truthfully, they never lent any money to begin with. Fractional reserve banking insures that no actual “money” is lent! What the banks want are the houses and properties! They have some value and worth, unlike what is happening to the dollar. When the dollar crashes, the banks want to be holding tangible assets, not worthless paper. The properties go into foreclosure at the owed price so no one bids on them. The bank (or a subsidiary, or even another bank) buys it back, usually for $100 and claims the loss. The bank can buy it for a hundred bucks, but the public can not.

They can now sell the properties at many times over what they bought it for… and sell them they do to bulk buyers or brokers, who even then get lower prices than you or I. Or they auction it off. Or list it with MLS agents. It does not matter, as the profit is built in the moment they take it back for $100!  Along the way through this process the public pays at the appraised price, or more. This happens quite often at auctions. Sometimes hagglers are sent in to get prices up, and sometimes buyers just over bid to get a property.

In any scenario, the banks win. And Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio leads the charge to “pull the plug” on mortgage modifications. So the questions remains about “ever getting ahead” and “…putting missed payments on the end…”, (I know a church and pastor that have done that for years with late fees, but that also is another post), and logic tells us that no, we cannot keep “missing” this one or that and expect to. The salient crux of the matter is not “…can we get ahead?”, but can we survive building and residing in these “houses of cards” we create, and expect to weather the economic winds?  

I say its time to pray, America.

Winds are blowing from the general direction of Capital hill of a different kind of global warming, and the economic climate change it brings about may make many more start “treading water” as they watch their homes “sinking under water” in this new round of storms.

Image c/o TheTruthAbout

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Short Sales

Short sales are the hottest thing going in the distressed-property market we currently have, and the trend is expected to get even hotter in coming weeks, when the government starts handing out cash to encourage lenders to close these deals.

“Banks have ramped up short sale approvals,” said Duane Legate of House Buyer Network, which connects short sellers with buyers. “They’re hiring a lot of the people who once worked in the mortgage-lending industry and moved them over to short sales.”

Foreclosure

The foreclosure process is not very difficult to understand. There are several stages during which the homeowner has an opportunity to bring the loan current and avoid foreclosure.

After about three to six months of missed payments, the lender orders a trustee to record a Notice of Default (NOD). At the County Recorder’s Office. This puts the borrower on notice that he or she is facing foreclosure and starts a reinstatement period that typically runs until five days before the home is auctioned off.
Which is best for you?

Now that you are able to understand both a little better, you have a choice to make.  Which one of these will be better for your personal situation?  A foreclosure is painful, but a short sale can be this way as well.  Foreclosures hurt because you not only lose your home, you are faced with having to deal with a huge credit hit.  Short sales hurt because you may avoid foreclosure but you lose your home and end up still owing money.

References

1. Wikipedia.org

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The following video has bountiful advice on how one may avert foreclosure.

References

1. Youtube

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With more than 1.5 Million Foreclosures in 2009 already, and prices more than 30% below market, now may be the time to purchase a foreclosure.

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794px-two-story_single-family_homeThe market nationwide is starting to turn again. The headline this morning indicated that home sales in my town are up 42% over last June! And other places across the country are experiencing the same recovery.

That means the foreclosures that have been sitting on the market will start to move. As part of a new community-driven alliance, we are working to help people who are in foreclosure “trouble” and also those who are looking for great deals on real estate.

Many properties have dropped in value 50% or more and represent tremendous opportunity for investors and potential home owners.

If you are in foreclosure, or facing foreclosure, and would like help, please click here.

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After years of steadily rising, home prices are starting to come down nationwide, while the foreclosure rate is rising dramatically. Meanwhile, over a million foreclosures are expected to be recorded this year.

That means a would-be homeowner could potentially save even more money by buying a home that’s been taken over by a bank or lender seeking to recover money still owed on the property.

According torealtytrac.com , a real estate website that tracks trends including foreclosures, as recently as last year the national average when buying a foreclosure home was about 25 percent below the full market value of a home.

But that average may not be quite as eye-popping this year since many of the new foreclosures stem from problems in the subprime mortgage market. Many people are losing their homes after being hit with a huge jump in monthly payments once initial low interest rates adjusted up, sometimes to double digits.

Many of these foreclosures are new homeowners who had built little or no equity in their property; therefore, the amount the lender is trying to recover may be close to the full market value of the house or at most only a 10 percent discount.

Zalman Velvel, of Fort Myers, Florida, a Certified Commercial Investment member (CCIM), trainer, auctioneer and author who has been buying and selling foreclosure properties for over 20 years cautions novices to the foreclosure market to be aware of all the “land mines” involved.

If you’re a homeowner in trouble, this article isn’t for you. A few weeks ago, we wrote about what you can do to avoid foreclosure. We have nothing but sympathy for homeowners in trouble and nothing we say is intended to victimize them or worsen their situation.

However, let’s be realistic. In any kind of market, there are buyers and sellers. If you’ve been priced out of homeownership the last several years, this may be your chance to get a home of your own. You shouldn’t feel guilty about buying a home that’s been foreclosed — you didn’t make it happen and if you don’t buy the home, someone else will.

Having said that, let’s get back to the nuts and bolts of buying a foreclosed home.

Land Mines

“You have to know how to do a title search,” says Velvel, “or you could end up thinking you’ve just bought a home by paying off a $100,000 mortgage only to find out that was just the second mortgage and you have to pay another $200,000 to take ownership.

“Suddenly that great buy isn’t such a good deal. You also have to be aware of [any] liens on the property because you’re going to be responsible for those as well.”

On top of that foreclosure homes are sold “as is” which means that the 25 percent you just saved on the purchase price can easily be eaten up by unforeseen expenses such as repairs not immediately apparent in an exterior inspection. That’s because when you buy a home in foreclosure, you may not be able to look inside let alone have an inspector detect structural problems that you’ll need to fix before moving in.

Something else to think about –people who lost their home in foreclosure very likelycouldn’t afford to maintain their property.

So be prepared to pay for any problems such as electrical or plumbing repairs, leaky roofs, or even vandalism by angry homeowners who break things or punch holes in walls and doors, an unacceptable but not that uncommon way that some homeowners deal with the angst of losing their home to foreclosure.

Just remember that they’re losing a home and you’re benefiting from their loss so they may want to take out some of that rage on the new buyer the only way they can, by trashing the home that they’ve lost.

Three Ways to Buy

There are three ways you can buy foreclosures and each one has its own distinct discipline.

They are:

Pre-foreclosures, where you buy directly from a homeowner before the bank forecloses;
At auction, where you place a bid, possibly in competition with others;
From a real estate company. This is called an REO.

Pre-foreclosures “Pre-foreclosures are appealing because they require the least amount of capital, and almost all the information you need is available,” explains Velvel.

“You can inspect the house and conduct a title search so you won’t have any surprises. With a pre-foreclosure, the owner signs a deed and gives you the property.

In return, you acquire the mortgage that comes with it. Plus you have to make the mortgage current by giving the bank any back payments.

The key with pre-foreclosures is to make the sale ‘subject to mortgage.’ On average you might make ten to 20 percent.”

At Auction The exact mechanism varies from one state to another.Auctions can be held on courthouse steps, in the county clerk’s office, or in front of the foreclosed house.

“Auctions also carry the most risk,” notes Velvel. “At the same time, they can also offer the greatest reward. Sometimes you can make as much as 40% on an auction foreclosure. But you have to know what you’re doing.”

In an auction, buyers can’t inspect the home in advance of the auction, they have to pay in cash, usually with a cashier’s check, and sometimes the current homeowner simply refuses to move out. It then becomes the buyer’s responsibility to evict the old owner.

Auctions also tend to attract real estate investors seeking a great bargain that they intend to flip (resell) for a quick profit.

If you’re looking for a home to live in, an auction is probably not the way to go, in Velvel’s view.

REO Real Estate Owned properties or (REOs) represent the third way to buy foreclosures.

“Reo is least risky in terms of what you’re buying,” says Velvel. “You get to fully inspect the property, demand a clear title, and the sale can be subject to getting a mortgage.

Most banks sell foreclosure properties through a broker. They are considered the safest and also the least financially rewarding of all foreclosure buying options. But properties sold this way also tend to be in better shape.

The downside is that you probably won’t get as good a deal as you would with an auction or dealing directly with homeowners who are in a pre-foreclosure category.

Financial Considerations

When considering buying a home that’s gone into foreclosure there are a number of financial considerations that have nothing to do with the property but which could put you between a rock and a hard place.

For example, when you go to an auction, you may need a letter from either a bank or lender that you have the money to buy the property.

On the other hand, many banks and lenders will refuse to even give you a mortgage on a property being sold “as is” because that means their appraiser can’t inspect it first.

Meanwhile, some states have redemption periods whereby the original homeowner can buy back the property by paying whatever money he or she still owed. In Tennessee, that period is two years.

If the amount owed is less than what the buyer paid, and if the buyer bought the property by bidding on it at auction, and he probably did, then the buyer loses that money. He also loses any money spent on repairs or upgrades.

But you may be able to have this redemption right waived, so make sure you check into the situation in the state where you are purchasing the foreclosure.

Another possible complicationis something mentioned earlier, a “lien.” A lien is a legal claim against a home.

There’s a fairly good possibility that someone who can’t make mortgage payments may owe money elsewhere. Therefore, you have to conduct what’s called a “title search” that should uncover any liens.

Common liens stem from unpaid taxes — either property taxes or income taxes — in which case the federal, state or local government could have a claim against the foreclosed property.

Other liens include unpaid contractors or loans borrowed against the property.

These liens remain intact until the money is paid which means that you will have to pay off the liens on the foreclosed property you are buying, even though it wasn’t your water heater the plumber repaired, and even though you’re not the one who didn’t pay the property taxes the last few years.

Be forewarned — you won’t be able to get title insurance that provides protection against anyone challenging you for ownership of the property.

Still interested?

If so, here are some tips to help you to safeguard against foreclosure headaches that may come with the territory.

If possible only consider houses owned by people who have lived there for a minimum of two years.The longer someone has lived in a home, the more equity will be built in, even if they made interest only payments because property values have risen steadily over the last two years.

Stay away from owners who bought their home with “no money down.” This cuts into the equity that’s been built up.

To obtain lists of foreclosures in your area, Velvel recommends contacting the local office of the Real Estate Investment Association.

“You can get everything you need there from lists of foreclosures, to other services such as the best Title company or the best bank for mortgages,” says Velvel.

Foreclosure laws vary by state so check yours by going to www.realtytrac.com or contact the county clerk’s office.

Default Letter

The foreclosure process starts when the lender sends the homeowner a letter regarding the default, usually after the first missed mortgage payment. Thirty days must be given for a person to pay the past-due amount, and lenders must give the homeowner a date by which the money is due.

Only one letter has to be sent.

If the homeowner doesn’t respond or “cure” the default, the lender can post a notice of sale at the courthouse. The notice must be issued at least 21 days in advance of the auction, which in many states is held on the first Tuesday of the month at the county courthouse.

The auction happens outside, rain or shine. “If you’re an investor, the three best places to go for foreclosures,” says Velvel, “are Ohio, Indiana, and Michigan.”

Reason? “They’re all losing jobs and studies have shown a direct correlation between rising unemployment and lower real estate values.”

One county in Ohio had 10,000 foreclosures leaving 30 percent of all the houses in that county vacant.

What’s Required

If you are thinking about becoming a professional real estate investor, Velvel says you need five abilities to succeed.

“You need to be able to do your own title searches,” he says. “You need to be able to price or appraise property to determine any equity. You need to know how to fix up a property and then how to market it. And finally, if you’re buying at auction, you need to have enough cash.”

To put it simply, buying a foreclosure is not just risky business, it’s one gamble where the house doesn’t always win. So we’ll leave you with one last piece of foreclosure advice from real estate expert Velvel.

“If you’re looking to live in a house, it’s more important to find an area that you like than to find a good foreclosure deal. But then, if there are foreclosures in an area you like, buy the foreclosure.”

Reprinted from ConsumerAffairs.com

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It is estimated that as many as 9 million Americans face foreclosure. Many more are struggling to make ends meet.

The U.S. Housing Department indicated that there was a slight drop in foreclosures in May 2009 (down about 6%), however 300,000 new homes received foreclosure notice.

If you are facing foreclosure, and need help, click here.

If you are interested in purchasing a foreclosure, click here.

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