Arizona Appraisal Blog For Lenders!

SB1028 Loan Originator Licensing Passed!
August 6th, 2008 12:34 PM

2008 Legislature Summary Arizona Realtor
SB 1028; LOAN ORIGINATOR LICENSING - SUPPORT

Establishes a loan originator licensing program within the Arizona DEpartment of Financial Institutions and requires as of January 1, 2010, all loan originators be licensedunless they are exempt by statue.  The legislation requires applicants for licensure to complete a loan originator course during the year preceeding the time of application or have atleast three years of laon origination experience immediately proceeding the time of application.  Applicants must pass an exam, submit information as prescribed by the department, and pay a nonrefundable fee as determined by the Superintendent.

SB 1028 passed legislature and will become effective on the general effective date of September 26, 2008

Exert from Arizona realtor; August 2008 Vol 30/Issue Number 8

 


Posted by Mark LaPore, Certified on August 6th, 2008 12:34 PMPost a Comment (0)

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Win $1,000.00
March 29th, 2008 12:13 AM

You could be this month's $1,000 winner!

Just fill out the form below to be registered for our monthly $1,000 sweepstakes. Thanks for registering and I'll be in touch with you soon. Good luck!

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TELL YOUR CLIENTS: the ABCs of Credit Reports
March 29th, 2008 12:11 AM
ABCs of credit reports

Once you get your credit report, you'll notice that the information contained in it is organized in sections: your personal information, credit summary, account information, inquiries, collections and public records, along with summaries of your rights under state law and the Fair Credit Reporting Act, plus instructions on how to dispute information found in your report.

Sections of a credit report, explained
Payment history on account (35 percent)
Paying your bills on time is the most important thing you can do for your FICO score. Mind the due date, and make sure your payments have made it to the lender by then. Allow for seven to 10 business days for your payments to arrive, or if you're paying online, adequate processing time.

FICO score pie chart used with permission from Fair Isaac Corp.

When to buy your credit score
Check your credit score six months in advance of applying for a large loan, says Craig Watts, the public affairs manager for Fair Isaac Corp. That way, you have time to make changes that could improve your score, such as paying down large account balances.

"For general maintenance purposes, it's a good idea to check your score at least once a year because if your score changes significantly, it's an indication that something is not right," he adds.

Checking your FICO score a few days in advance before applying will give you a number that should be close to what the lender will get, but if the lender gets a slightly different number, don't be overly alarmed. Ulzheimer says the lender could be using a score based on a different credit report. They could be using a different version of the FICO score or even an industry-specific FICO score, called an industry option score. "It's still going to be close," he says.

Scores improve gradually 
"It's important to be patient with the process when it comes to increasing your credit score," says Bridgforth. "Once you've fixed all errors, are paying your bills on time, reducing balances by paying more than the minimum payments and lowering interest rates as much as possible, be patient and let time work to your benefit. I know it can feel like you're watching grass grow, but if you're consistent with following these healthy habits, your credit score will definitely increase and you'll be well on your way to getting your credit straight."


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LET YOUR CLIENTS KNOW; 6 Home Renovations With Major Payoffs
March 29th, 2008 12:07 AM

Saturday, March 29, 2008, 3:05AM ET - U.S. Markets Closed.

6 Home Renovations With Major Payoffs

by Sonya Stinson
Friday, March 28, 2008
provided by

Unless Ty Pennington and the crew from "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition" take on your renovation project, you're likely to get weak-kneed looking at the estimate for the work or learning the terms of your home improvement loan.

If high prices, tough credit or falling home values have suddenly brought your fantasy makeover plans back to reality, the good news is that it's often the more modest upgrades -- not the grand additions -- that offer the best return on your investment.

More from Bankrate.com:

Who Owns Mineral Rights?

Looking at the Typical Homebuyer

Is Buyer Locked Into Builder Deal?

Another plus is that the sluggish remodeling market might make it easier to find available contractors and get their assistance with financing your project, even if they offer little wiggle room on the bill. Carol Friedhoff, a Certified Financial Planner in Dublin, Ohio, notes: "A lot of the builders are having to make extra concessions, trying to come up with creative financing."

The February 2008 Leading Indicator for Remodeling Activity report from the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University projects that homeowner spending for home improvements will continue to decline, slipping at an annual rate of 2.6 percent through the third quarter of 2008.

"Contractors are much hungrier for the business now, much more responsive and more willing to negotiate on scheduling and things like that," says Kermit Baker, director of the Remodeling Futures Program at the Joint Center for Housing Studies.

"I'm guessing there will be some negotiating on pricing, too, but their labor costs have probably not gone down and their material costs have by and large gone up."

In other words, don't expect a big break on the price, but do look for more accommodation in other areas such as financing.

Homeowners are taking their time deciding whether to remodel, says Michael S. Hydeck, president of Hydeck & MacKay Builders Inc. in Pennsylvania and treasurer for the National Association of the Remodeling Industry. "The backup for projects and jobs is a lot smaller than it was a year or two years ago," Hydeck says. "Most people are thinking and waiting."

Waiting might not be such a bad thing, according to Friedhoff, if it means you can save enough money to pay cash for your project instead of having to borrow. "There's a lot less risk, and you don't have the possibility of owing more than the house is worth," she says.

If you're still mulling over your renovation options, here are six projects that can bring you a good value for your money.

1. Replace Your Siding

Exterior siding topped the list in Remodeling magazine's 2007 Cost vs. Value report, which compared the construction costs of various projects to estimates of their resale value by members of the National Association of Realtors. Fiber-cement siding replacement came in at No. 1, with an estimated 88.1 percent of the cost recouped, while vinyl siding replacement had the third highest recoupment value at 83.2 percent.

Introduced nearly 100 years ago, fiber-cement siding is back in vogue, with cellulose replacing the asbestos of long-ago versions. The new and improved product is weather-resistant and extremely durable, says Tim Carter, a syndicated columnist who dispenses home improvement advice on his Web site askthebuilder.com.

And here's an advantage over both wood and vinyl siding: "If you do it right, it really holds paint well," Carter says. "The paint job can last 20 years."

2. Build a Deck

Realtors in the Cost vs. Value survey estimated the average homeowner would recover 85.4 percent of the cost of a new wood deck from resale, giving this project the second highest value in the report. A composite deck addition -- a costlier initial investment -- was estimated to bring a 77.6 percent return.

Adding a deck is a relatively inexpensive way to gain more living space. "You can probably build a deck for $20 a square foot, labor and material," Carter says. "If you were going to put a room on your house, you're probably looking at $150 a square foot."

3. Spice Up the Kitchen

A minor kitchen renovation ranked fourth in the survey, but in the eyes of Grand Rapids, Mich., Realtor, and immediate past president of the National Association of Realtors, Pat V. Combs, this is the project that "brings the best value for the buck."

Rolling on a new paint color, installing new countertops and putting on new cabinet and drawer handles are three ideas that only take a little out of your pocket but make a big impact, she says.

But if you have your heart set on a total kitchen overhaul at some point, remodeler Hydeck warns it's probably not wise to sink too much money into piecemeal fix-ups in the meantime.

4. Install Energy-Efficient Windows

Combs is not surprised that wood and vinyl window replacements were each given about an 80 percent recoupment value in the Remodeling survey.

"People are very energy-conscious right now," she says. "The cost of heating and cooling a home is important. It's not just the purchase price (that homebuyers consider), it's the cost per month to live in the home."

To make sure your new windows are of the best quality, Carter says you should look for the certification label of the American Architectural Manufacturers Association. For energy efficiency, the Energy Star label of the National Fenestration Rating Council is the gold standard.

Don't expect a quick return on your investment if you buy replacement windows, which can run upward of $10,000 for the whole house. If lowering your utility bills is your goal, it's important to understand that it can take years for the savings to cover the cost of the windows.

5. Give the Bathroom a Facelift

Fixing up the bathroom, whether it's an upgrade or simply for maintenance, is another reliable investment. "People like to pamper themselves, and they just don't want to be in a grungy bathroom," Carter says.

A midrange bathroom remodel has an estimated 78 percent resale value, according to the Cost vs. Value report.

6. Crown Your Walls

Crown molding is near the top of Carter's personal list of easy, inexpensive upgrades with big impacts.

"It just really dresses up a room," says Carter, who estimates that a do-it-yourselfer could outfit a room for less than $100.

"The best analogy I can give is that it's like putting a tie on. When you wear a tie, it's just a simple linear thing that dangles from your neck, but it's very distinctive. Crown molding does the same thing to a room."

Location, Location, Location

The value of any renovation project you choose depends a great deal on where you live and whether your home is in an entry-level or upscale market.

"Just like all real estate is local, all of these various upgrade projects are localized," Combs says.


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Federal Reserve Cuts Rates .75% Today
March 29th, 2008 12:02 AM

Federal Reserve Cuts Rates .75% Today

The Federal Reserve announced today at 2:18 PM that they would cut the key funds rate by .75% to 2.25% which was less than expected.The announcement from their website is as follows.

The Federal Open Market Committee decided today to lower its target for the federal funds rate 75 basis points to 2-1/4 percent.

Recent information indicates that the outlook for economic activity has weakened further. Growth in consumer spending has slowed and labor markets have softened.  Financial markets remain under considerable stress, and the tightening of credit conditions and the deepening of the housing contraction are likely to weigh on economic growth over the next few quarters.

Inflation has been elevated, and some indicators of inflation expectations have risen.  The Committee expects inflation to moderate in coming quarters, reflecting a projected leveling-out of energy and other commodity prices and an easing of pressures on resource utilization.  Still, uncertainty about the inflation outlook has increased.  It will be necessary to continue to monitor inflation developments carefully.

Today’s policy action, combined with those taken earlier, including measures to foster market liquidity, should help to promote moderate growth over time and to mitigate the risks to economic activity.  However, downside risks to growth remain.  The Committee will act in a timely manner as needed to promote sustainable economic growth and price stability.

Voting for the FOMC monetary policy action were: Ben S. Bernanke, Chairman; Timothy F. Geithner, Vice Chairman; Donald L. Kohn; Randall S. Kroszner; Frederic S. Mishkin; Sandra Pianalto; Gary H. Stern; and Kevin M. Warsh.  Voting against were Richard W. Fisher and Charles I. Plosser, who preferred less aggressive action at this meeting.

In a related action, the Board of Governors unanimously approved a 75-basis-point decrease in the discount rate to 2-1/2 percent.  In taking this action, the Board approved the requests submitted by the Boards of Directors of the Federal Reserve Banks of Boston, New York, and San Francisco.

To read more about todays rate cut head on over to the Federal Reserve’s website.


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Home Prices To Drop 30% Before 2010
March 28th, 2008 11:58 PM

According to Moody’s Economy.com housing prices across the US are expected to fall more than thirty percent before it recovers.

Mark Zandi, chief economist, and Celia Chen, director of housing economics, also stated in the report that nationally the housing market recession will continue through early 2009. While it will stabilize in 2009 it will not be until 2010 before any large improvement in sales, construction, and pricing. Punta Gorda, Florida and Stockton, California will be among the hardest hit markets in the US suffer an estimated 35.3 and 31.6 percent decline. Other major markets affected the worst will be Arizona, California, Florida and Nevada.

The report also stated that the fundamental problem with the market is the large amount of unsold inventory. Home sales should hit a bottom in early 2008 which will mark a 40 percent drop.  The US Census Bureau said as of the third quarter of 2007 there were approximately 2.1 million vacant unsold homes for sale which is equal to 2.6 percent of the stock for owner occupied homes.

To read more about housing prices drop 30% before slump ends head on over to CNBC.


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Wary Banks Revert To Strict Lending Standards
March 28th, 2008 11:52 PM

Wary banks revert to strict lending standards

Mortgage industry makes it harder to borrow — even for good credit risks

Timothy Jacobsen / AP
Chris Sipe, a loan officer with America East Mortgage, talks with a client from his office in Frederick, Md. "We're in the midst of an epic, broad sweeping change in the mortgage industry," said Sipe.
Video
  New set of mortgage rules?
Mar 20: Cong. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), head of the House Financial Services Committee, is proposing new regulations to curb risky mortgage lending.

CNBC

Slide show
Mortgage meltdown
MSNBC.com's editorial cartoonists weigh in on the subprime mortgage meltdown.

more photos

updated 3:17 p.m. MT, Thurs., March. 20, 2008

WASHINGTON - Just when consumers and the U.S. economy need banks to lend more freely, the mortgage industry is making it harder to borrow — even for those with good credit.

Mortgage insurers, whose backing is required for borrowers who can’t afford the traditional 20 percent down payment on a home, have already flagged nearly a quarter of the nation’s ZIP codes where they refuse to insure some home loans.

That encompasses a wide variety of neighborhoods: McMansions in Scottsdale, Ariz.; luxury Miami condos; 1960 ranch houses in Flint, Mich.; and early 20th century kit homes in Metuchen, N.J.

Story continues below ?
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The entire states of California, Florida, Arizona, Michigan, Ohio and Nevada — which have seen the highest foreclosure rates and the worst price declines — are blackballed on some mortgage insurers’ lists.

Banks that have lost billions because of bad bets during the housing boom are now reverting to strict lending standards not seen in nearly 20 years, according to industry data and interviews with lenders.

For new home buyers and those seeking to refinance, it can mean higher down payments and a higher bar for credit scores, among other requirements. The toughest restrictions are in markets where home prices are falling, though regions where property values are rising are not immune.

“We’re in the midst of an epic, broad, sweeping change in the mortgage industry,” said Chris Sipe, a loan officer with America East Mortgage in Frederick, Md.

The reluctance to extend credit comes despite a flurry of government initiatives, including steady interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve, intended to make it easier for would-be borrowers and those facing interest-rate resets on their mortgages.

Lenders’ growing leeriness threatens to dampen sellers’ already soggy prospects for the spring home-buying season — and that means more pain for the already battered housing sector and the broader economy.

In recent weeks, mortgage insurers have flagged more than 9,600 ZIP codes in at least 34 states where they won’t insure certain types of home loans — those for investment properties or second homes, those with riskier adjustable-rate or interest-only mortgages, or for buyers making down payments of less than 3 percent.

With banks and mortgage insurers pulling back, state and federal programs for first-time buyers and people with poor credit are attempting to fill the void.

Don Brekke, an equipment operator from Colorado Springs, Colo., tried to buy a bank-owned 1950s ranch home for $113,000. At first he couldn’t get a loan because the house was in a potentially declining market, and lenders required a 10 percent down payment, more than he could afford.

Ultimately, he was able to qualify for a 100 percent loan from Colorado’s state financing authority, and he plans to close in the coming days.

“It was a bunch of headaches — going around and around to get this done,” Brekke said.

The combination of sinking home prices and tighter lending standards has been a major aggravation for Ron Broussard, a 38-year-old sales representative for a home builder.

Broussard took advantage of soaring Southern California property prices three years ago to refinance a loan on a house he had owned since the late 1990s. Today he’s still stuck with a $720,000 mortgage and has been renting it out since moving with his family to Texas a year ago. Once appraised for $1.1 million, Broussard’s lender now says it’s worth about $300,000 less.

He does not yet owe more than the property is worth, but Broussard worries that is a possibility.

“The way the market’s going, you know, who knows?” he said.


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Boom, Bust in Area Beset by Foreclosures
October 8th, 2007 10:56 PM
Boom, Bust in Area Beset by Foreclosures
Sunday October 7, 5:11 am ET
By Adam Geller, AP National Writer
Real Estate Bust and Foreclosure Boom Comes Home to a Neighborhood Built on Easy Credit

QUEEN CREEK, Ariz. (AP) -- Out on Phoenix's suburban fringes, where cement mixers are fast colonizing what's left of the hay and cotton fields, the day is winding to a close. The home hour has arrived. But sundown gives away a troubling secret: Behind dark windows and many unanswered doors, it's clear nobody is coming home.

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The ranch home on Via del Palo where the newspaper in the driveway has been sitting unclaimed since April. The house at the corner of 223rd Court with faded fliers stuck in the door. The two-story on Via del Rancho with the phone book on the step.

They're all empty, left behind by a rising tide of foreclosures.

This neighborhood has a still-unfolding story to tell, and it is not always a comfortable one to hear.

Not long ago, builders were raising home prices here thousands of dollars week after week. Families pitched tents in front of sales offices and waited for Saturday morning lotteries to win the right to buy. Buyers -- including more than a few speculators -- gambled with loans whose risks were obscured by euphoria.

This is the tale of how America's real estate boom came to a seemingly ordinary subdivision called the Villages at Queen Creek, where the whipsaw of easy credit has led to some extraordinary times.

They were the best of times, for a while. The empty homes, though, raise serious doubts about what comes next.

As the nation confronts skyrocketing foreclosures, and policymakers try to contain a symptomatic credit crunch, what is happening here and in scores of similar neighborhoods is worth considering.

Because while the pressures at work in Queen Creek were extreme, the choices people made -- and the consequences of those decisions -- are not so different from those faced by thousands of other homeowners and their neighbors.

"Honestly," says Joy Kessler, a mother of three boys standing on the doorstep of the house she and her husband are surrendering to foreclosure, "if you were in this situation, what would you do?"

In June of 2004, Dave Gustafson took time off from his job as a supermarket produce manager, and the family headed to Arizona to visit relatives. The buzz of construction -- and word of low home prices -- convinced them to have a look around.

Dave and his wife Maryann liked what they saw.

Back in California, they had contented themselves with less than 1,100 square feet. But salesmen here showed them floor plans that would give them 2 1/2 times the space for half the price.

The place they liked the best was a subdivision called the Villages, a crescent-shaped warren of streets cradling a golf course, quickly filling with sand-colored stucco homes. The local schools had a good reputation. It was affordable. There was an extra-big lot on a cul-de-sac, with enough room in back for a pool.

"The sales person was saying that they (homes) were going up $1,000 a week," Dave Gustafson recalls. "So when we came to look, we signed right away."

Builders made it easy. A downpayment of $2,000 to $5,000 was all it took to get started. Buyers could borrow at low teaser rates, requiring payments of nothing more than interest.

As promised, home prices were going up faster than the houses themselves.

By the time the family's new home -- a two-story model called The Starling with a cathedral ceiling in the living room -- was completed the next spring, the $179,000 base price had climbed to $220,000.

"We were making money while we were waiting," Dave says.

The Gustafsons picked out Corian counters and maple licorice-finished cabinets at the builder's design center, and opted for a pool and a whirlpool bath, adding more than $50,000 to their loan. The interest rate was fixed for only two years, but they didn't worry. With prices rising so fast, they could always refinance. And in five or six years, the Gustafsons figured, they'd sell for $500,000 and downsize.

They hung a plaque over the dining table: "Home is Where Your Story Begins."

They were hardly the only ones feeling optimistic.

Kris Rowberry was ecstatic when the value of his home in nearby Gilbert started to take off. So he bought a second one in the Villages as an investment.

"I was thinking, man, if I could have 10 properties, I could just kind of retire ... and kick back and live off the income," says Rowberry, a nuclear safety inspector.

But the speculative mind-set confounded buyers like retiree David Pickering. When Pickering and his wife left Pennsylvania in August of 2004 for a new home in the Villages, they'd never heard of interest-only loans and the idea of buying a home as an investment hadn't occurred to them.

They were simply buying a place to live, hopefully for a good, long time.

Around them, though, such notions began to look very old-fashioned.

The American Dream is a myth overdue for revision.

"There's been a huge shift in the way people view their houses," says John Karevoll, who tracks real estate for DataQuick Information Systems. "Your house now can basically be used as an ATM."

Twenty years ago, families celebrated when they got a mortgage and again when they retired the loan. A home meant security. The financial commitment promoted both pride and neighborhood roots.

But Americans have become much more mobile, and looser lending has made it easier to buy a home and to borrow against its value.

Now a home is more -- or less -- than a place to live. It is an investment -- a way to make money and finance a lifestyle, says Robert Manning, an expert in consumer credit and debt at the Rochester Institute of Technology.

The housing and lending industries encouraged that transformation, promoting not just subprime loans but mortgages requiring little or no documentation of income, no money down, and interest-only payments.

When easy borrowing combined with a run-up in prices, speculators joined the fray. In Arizona and other Sun Belt states where foreclosures are rising fast, homes not occupied by their owners account for an outsized portion of foreclosures, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

But the rise in interest rates and drop in home prices has put the most pressure on people who live in the homes they own, and who hadn't counted on the market shift.

It used to be that when things got tough, Americans did everything possible to protect their homes. But now, faced with foreclosure, many have reordered priorities -- making payments on things like credit cards while neglecting mortgages, according to the credit scorekeeper Experian.

That is at least partly a matter of psychology. When people who bought almost entirely with borrowed money see that worth disappear, there's little incentive to hold on, says Stuart A. Feldstein of SMR Research Corp., a Hackettstown, N.J., research firm.

Few players, though, seemed to appreciate the chance they might get caught.

"Lenders never said no," says Jay Butler, director of realty studies at Arizona State University. "Nobody expected this to continue, but they hoped it would just long enough to get out of it -- and they were caught up in the whirlpool."

By late 2004, the Phoenix real estate market was roaring.

The euphoria reached Queen Creek, so far out the freeway hadn't arrived yet. If you couldn't afford something closer in, real estate agents told buyers, "drive until you qualify."

The town's population almost quadrupled to 17,000 in just five years.

Buyers lined up for the chance to make a downpayment in the new subdivisions. Rowberry joined 200 people one Saturday morning for a chance at 15 lots. He snapped up builders' price lists. Every week, the homes cost $1,000 to $5,000 more.

Meanwhile, skyrocketing prices in California and Nevada sent investors to greater Phoenix in search of the next great deal.

"I'm just one guy and it wasn't unusual to get three (calls) a day" from speculators, says John Wake, a real estate agent. "A lot of them weren't sophisticated. They'd never invested before."

In the Villages, already half completed, remaining lots looked too good to pass up. One Southern California investor, Alan Jullien, bought three homes. A flight attendant, Angela Nazario, bought a two-story house even though she lived by herself and was frequently on the road. A local real estate agent, Sean Bacon, bought two.

Homeowners who bought earlier were feeling good. The market spike turned the Gustafsons' $235,000 home into one worth $380,000.

Across the Valley, homeowners watching their home values shoot up, borrowed against those gains.

"Talking to a lot of co-workers, everyone was doing the same thing -- taking out lines of credit, milking it for all it's worth," says Matthew Berends, a homeowner in Surprise, another Phoenix suburb where prices soared. His home is now in foreclosure. "In one year for a house to go up $80,000, it's like too easy."

But some relatively modest purchases would prove to be risky gambles.

Greg Giniel and his wife moved into a home on East Sanoque Drive bought by a friend, with Giniel as a silent partner. What Giniel hadn't counted on was that the friend had also bought three other homes around the Valley, all financed with adjustable rate loans that were bound to rise.

One street over, the Kesslers paid $279,000 for a house in the fall of 2005.

With $25,000 down and an interest-only loan, it seemed like a wiser deal than their old rental.

There was a problem, though, obvious only in hindsight. A market that had skyrocketed was about to take a plunge.

It takes time for a homeowner to get into trouble, but sometimes not all that long.

In the summer of 2006, the Gustafsons fell behind on their mortgage payments. Their interest rate was set to jump. In August, their lender started foreclosure.

Meanwhile, problems began to snowball. High gas prices prompted people to rethink the idea of owning a home on the outskirts. Investors rushed to sell.

In 2005 -- a record-best year for Phoenix real estate -- just five homes in the ZIP code containing the Villages were lost to foreclosure, according to Information Market, a Phoenix real estate research firm.

Last year, lenders claimed 15, nearly all in the final two months of the year.

So far this year, 75 homes have been claimed by banks. But with the market so soft and more adjustable rate mortgages about to reset, that could be just the beginning.

In the Villages, many of the homes where foreclosure is pending are already empty, a sign owners have given up.

In a big subdivision -- about 1,400 homes -- the problems aren't always obvious. The golf course remains carefully watered, the playgrounds neatly swept. Many streets, particularly in areas built before prices spiked, are filled with families who take walks with strollers in the evening or grill burgers in backyards overlooking the greens.

But on other streets, the presence of homes without curtains in the windows, with dirt and cobwebs collecting in doorways, is almost eerie.

Even when the market was good, some Villagers were troubled by the large number of investor-owned homes, empty or filled with renters.

Then late last year, moving vans began to pull up to some homes at odd hours. Auction notices were posted on front doors. The oleander and mesquite trees that do so well here in the desert sun turned brown in yards left without water.

In May, the house to the left of the Pickerings' on Calle de Flores went to foreclosure. Two weeks later, the house on the right followed. Both had been empty for months. It made David Pickering vaguely uneasy. He couldn't help wondering whether empty houses might attract vandals.

"The weeds in the back are getting so tall now that they are growing over the separating wall into my yard," he e-mailed, alerting the homeowners association to one of the vacancies. "Something must be done about this. ... The property must be under financial responsibility of someone."

For a couple of months, landscaper Nick Bourque -- who lives next door to three foreclosed homes in a row on Via del Palo -- made a point of keeping the abandoned yard bordering his free of nutsage and old newspapers.

"I just figured after a while, the heck with it," he says. A real estate agent scheduled an auction of the home, but found no takers.

On Via del Rancho, Christelle Palmire watched as the home next door was abandoned to foreclosure. It stayed empty, too.

This Halloween, Palmire plans to take her son trick or treating in a friend's subdivision where she knows most doors will be answered.

"You drive around this subdivision and there are 'For Sale' signs everywhere," she says.

The problems become self-perpetuating. Researchers say that each foreclosure chips away at neighbors' property values. But foreclosures here compound a larger problem.

Builders continue adding homes to the market at reduced prices. Investors are trying to sell. Lenders are seeking buyers for foreclosures. Homeowners whose financial troubles might be solved by selling can't compete, real estate agents say.

"Sometimes the neighbors don't like you so much because you're one of the reasons the values are declining," says Kim Gordon, a real estate agent specializing in foreclosures who is listing two homes in the neighborhood. "But everyone has got their part in it. The homeowners overextended themselves."

In many ways, the Villages is lucky because so much was built before the market soared, says Amanda Shaw, president of Associated Asset Management, which administers it and 300 other Arizona subdivisions. The company, which once saw two foreclosure notices a month in its communities, now fields three to five each day, and some of its subdivisions have been hit much worse.

But it can be difficult to know when homeowners are in trouble.

"There are people who think they don't have an alternative ... other than to turn the lights off at 1 in the morning, hop in the U-Haul and just leave," Shaw says.

Now, says Ed Stutz, who lives in the subdivision and pastors the nearby Family of Faith Fellowship church, at least three Queen Creek homeowners call each week asking for help paying their bills. That never used to happen. In September, the church decided to offer budgeting advice.

"They saw a lot of home for a pretty decent price and I don't think they saw the handwriting on the wall," Stutz says of his neighbors. "People took a gamble and now it's hurting."

It's worth much less than it used to be, but it's home, Dave and Maryann Gustafson decided.

In May, their lender agreed.

The company modified their loan, temporarily trimming the $1,000 a month increase in their payment to $400. It's a stretch, but will keep the Gustafsons in their home at least until the modified terms expire in two years.

Greg Giniel is not so sure. His home, owned by his investment partner, is scheduled for a foreclosure auction in November.

"I've got to figure out how to buy my own home back," Giniel says. "If God doesn't pull me out of this one, I don't know where else I'm going to go."

Things looked just as uncertain to Joy and Paul Kessler, until they did the math.

They could fight to save their house. But what was the point? It's worth at least $40,000 less than they paid. They can rent in this depressed market for a fraction of their monthly payment.

"It's sad to say but honestly, we don't feel like there's anything worth saving in this house," Joy says. "Financially, we've got nothing to show for it."

So the couple decided to let the place go. Everyone said it was the right thing to do.

Still, it doesn't sit right with her husband, a painter and construction worker. When times were good they made a commitment, Paul tells Joy. Somehow, it doesn't feel right to just walk away.


Posted by Mark LaPore, Certified on October 8th, 2007 10:56 PMPost a Comment (0)

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FHA In The News!
October 8th, 2007 1:02 PM
Written by:
Stacey Sprain,
NAMP Volunteer Writer

Unless you've been hiding under a rock in recent weeks with no access to media of any sort, it's likely you've noticed a lot of news briefs, bulletins, newsletters, email alerts, articles and automatic updates headlining FHA-related issues. Let's take a look at what all the fuss is about.

FHASecure Initiative
First came the press release from President Bush on August 31st. A copy copy can be found at http://www.fha.gov/press/2007-08-31release.cfm. The FHASecure plan is a temporary program designed to help homeowners caught in upward adjusting ARM payments that they cannot afford. With an estimated 1.5 million foreclosures out there, FHASecure has obviously generate a LOT of media buzz.

However, the program doesn't come without questions as to exactly how many borrowers the program will actually assist. It's very important that homeowners and originators are clear on the exact requirements of the program. Such requirements are laid out in HUD's Mortgagee Letter 2007-11 which can be viewed in full text at http://www.fha.gov/reference/ml2007/07-11ml.doc. Due to a LOT of incoming questions from both homeowners and mortgage originators, HUD has hosted a recent national conference call and has posted commonly asked questions at http://www.fha.gov/about/fhasindqa.cfm. I highly suggest anyone that is interested in participating in the FHASecure Initiative read through the questions at the website so eligibility and guideline requirements are as clear as possible. HUD has also created a nicely summarized FHASecure Fact Sheet that can be accessed at http://www.fha.gov/about/fhasfact.cfm.

The biggest challenge with FHASecure seems to be finding a lender that offers the program. As of 9/24 am, the only major lender I have found seems to be GMAC. I am told that Flagstar is working on the rollout, but that other major players such as Countrywide and Wells Fargo are still weighing their options. Not even many brokers are offering the program yet.

H.R. 1852- Expanding Homeownership Act of 2007
HUD's second burst of media attention has been in relation to the swift movement of H.R. 1852 through the House of Representatives and on to the Senate. This proposal has been around is some form since early 2006 but is receiving more attention and support in its current form than it did last year.

You can read the major contents of the bill proposal at http://www.govtrack.us/congress/billtext.xpd?bill=h110-1852 or
http://thomas.loc.gov. A passage of this bill would completely overhaul the FHA home loan program as its been known to date. The bill proposes risk based premiums based on borrower credit profile, source of downpayment, amount of required downpayment, and sets forth simplified maximum mortgage calculations in addition to numerous other changes.

This bill is one worth watching as it has the potential to have a HUGE impact on the mortgage industry and potential homeowners across the country!
H.R. 2139-To Modernize The Manufactured Housing Loan Insurance Program Under Title I of The National Housing Act
The purposes of this act are:
To provide adequate funding for FHA-insured manufactured housing loans for low and moderate income homebuyers during all economic cycles in the manufactured housing industry;
To modernize the FHA Title I insurance program for manufactured housing loans to enhance participation in Ginnie Mae and the private lending markets; and
To adjust the low loan limits for Title I manufactured home loan insurance to reflect the increase in costs since loan limits were last increased in 1992 and to index the limits to inflation.
The text of the current H.R. 2139 proposal can be viewed at http://thomas.loc.gov.

I realize all of this can be a little overwhelming; especially for those without current FHA-related knowledge and experience. I have found the following resource helpful in explaining the standard process of how a bill becomes a law in our U.S. government: http://www.vote-smart.org/resource_govt101_02.php. A basic understanding of the process is very helpful in understanding expectations and time frames in regards to tracking H.R. 1852 and H.R. 2139.

One thing is for certain, FHA lending has the potential to make a huge impact in the near future to those of us involved in the mortgage industry!

**For live, instructor-led online FHA training classes visit: http://www.FHAtraining.org.

About the Writer. As one of NAMP's volunteer writers, Stacey Sprain is currently a NAMP member in good standing and is a NAMP Certified Ambassador Loan Processor (CALP). Feel free to email Stacey at: stacey@mortgageprocessor.org. Or, if you would like to become a volunteer writer for NAMP, please email us at: blog@mortgageprocessor.org.

Posted by Mark LaPore, Certified on October 8th, 2007 1:02 PMPost a Comment (0)

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Leading Discount Broker Calls it Quits
October 8th, 2007 12:57 PM

WEST LONG BRANCH, NJ - Discount brokerage firm Foxtons announced on October 2nd that it will liquidate its business and file for bankruptcy. After 7 years in the real estate business serving the tri-state New York City area, vice president of sales, Mark Horvat, stated that “this action is a direct result of the down turn in residential real estate.”

While many full service brokers welcome the news, it does illustrate the continued difficulty for the industry. The National Association of Realtors’ (NAR) September 2007 outlook predicts continued softness into the 3rd quarter of this year with a 10% decline in year over year sales of existing homes. NAR’s outlook for the 4th quarter of 2007 is only marginally better with a 6% decline in year over year sales.

Foxtons was considered one of the leading discount brokerage firms in the United States. The company started in New Jersey with 40 employees and 2000 square feet of office space and grew to 500 employees and 50,000 square feet in just over 7 years. Until the shut down, the company had planned to expand to major markets around the US but fell well short of that lofty goal.

Industry experts say that discount brokerages are the most vulnerable during a downturn since they operate on smaller margins.

A press release on their website stated that Foxtons is going to ask the bankruptcy court to allow them to authorize the assumption and assignment of their current inventory of listings. This means if the request is granted current customers of Foxtons would be bound by the terms in their listing agreements, regardless of the broker that assumes the listings.

While their listings are still under contract, many clients are asking themselves - What now? For those in the real estate business the real question is who’s next?


Posted by Mark LaPore, Certified on October 8th, 2007 12:57 PMPost a Comment (0)

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