Johnson County KS Real Estate | Johnson County, KS Homes for Sale | Selling a Home in Johnson County, KS

Inside Real Estate
Let Us Help You!
(913) 908-4944
Follow My Blog
RSS
dyerandcompany
Dyer & Company
Real Estate Consultants
    Years of Experience: 20

    CDPE-Certified Distressed Property Expert
    ASD-Accredited Short Sale Designation
    LDPD-Luxury Distressed Property Designation
    Creating Options and Delivering Solutions

Direct: (913) 908-4944

Office: (913)402-2513



Company Info

Reece and Nichols
11901 W 119th Street
Overland Park, Kansas
(913)402-2513


Real Estate Tools

Schoolsschools

Communitiescommunities

Calculatorscalculators

Posts Tagged ‘Deficiency Forgiveness in a Short Sale’

Renter Nation Means Investor Opportunity

Saturday, January 14th, 2012

Despite record low interest rates and increasing affordability in most markets, the new reality for many is renting. For some, it is the stress of having already gone through some type of pain related to the housing market and for others it’s the reality of being unable to qualify for a loan to purchase a home. In either case, the rental market continues to be on a rampage with many opportunities for ready investors. The vacancy rate for rentals has dropped to the lowest level since 2001.

This surge in occupancy has also pushed up rental rates only slightly due to other negative factors such as high unemployment. Higher quality properties in the most desirable locations had higher rental increases as compared to properties that cater to lower income tenants where landlords found it more difficult to raise rents.

The shift to a “renter nation” has lots of support to last for several years to come creating very good long term prospects for investors seeking to maximize the opportunities that exist with today’s high inventory and low price levels.

If you’ve been impacted by the decline in the real estate market and are considering a short sale, make a call to a team that has hundreds of closed transaction behind us. If you’re an investor ready to take advantage of the historically unprecedented buying opportunities that exist today, call us and we’ll help you find a great investment or project for you.

Short Sales and Foreclosures Present Investor Opportunities in 2012

Friday, January 13th, 2012

Realty Trac previously had projected close to 1.2 million homes would be foreclosed in 2011. However, through November, 2011 the pace was on track for the actual number to be closer to 800,000. The additional 400,000 units will be pushed into 2012 evidenced by a surge in pre foreclosure notices. Sheriff’s sales and other foreclosure auctions reached a 9 month high in November indicating the wave is beginning to make its way through the foreclosure process.

On top of the 400,000 deferred foreclosure filings will be an estimated 600,000 units on which the foreclosure process began in 2011. The double whammy of high unemployment coupled with the large number of homeowners that are under water continues to create excessive pressure on delinquent mortgages. The foreclosures are expected to come more in small waves rather so the downward pressure on pricing may not be as significant as in the past. However, due to the ongoing foreclosure processes, the pressure will continue to hold the market down without any recognizable price increases nationwide.

The plus side of this process is that many, many lenders are now totally encouraging homeowners to aggressively pursue short sales. Lenders are contacting defaulting sellers and are working with them to try to make sure the owner is aware of options other than a foreclosure. Opportunities exist for sellers to get a short sale done now and this creates tremendous opportunities for investors that are looking for value in today’s market.

Home Prices in Kansas Get Help From Increased Short Sales

Wednesday, October 26th, 2011

According to Ron Peltier, chairman andchief executive officer of Home Services of America, Inc the second largest U.S. residential brokerage, there has been a ”dramatic shift” in banks willingness to complete short sales vs a foreclosure. Distressed sales brokered by Home Services used to be made up of 60% bank owned properties and 40% short sales, but that ratio has now flipped according to Peltier in an interview with Bloomberg. Reece & Nichols is a wholly owned subsidiary of Home Services of America, Inc.

Typically, short sales are completed at an average discounted price of around 20% vs a non-distressed sale vs a bank owned property with an average discount of about 40%, according to Realty Trac, Inc.  Short sales increased 19% in the 2nd quarter vs the previous quarter while foreclosure sales were flat. That’s better for banks who lose less money and better for sellers as the stress level from completing a short sale vs having a foreclosure action completed against them is generally less. 

This is also good for the overall economy and health of the real estate market as the downward pressure on home prices is somewhat abated by the higher prices realized from home sales completed in a short sale. It’s further good news as there remains over 6 million homes delinquent or in default, many of which will need to be sold.

According to the National Association of Realtors, almost a third of all transactions in August were either bank owned properties or short sales.

Home values have declined 31 percent in the last five years, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller index of values in 20 U.S. cities, as competition from foreclosures pressures sellers to lower their asking prices. The resulting crash was worse than the 27 percent plunge in values during the Depression, according to Stan Humphries, chief economist of Zillow Inc., a Seattle-based real estate information company.

The drop in home values has pushed almost a quarter of U.S. mortgage borrowers underwater, meaning their debt is more than their homes are worth, according to a report by CoreLogic Inc. (CLGX), a real estate data company in Santa Ana, California. That so- called negative equity prevents owners from conducting traditional deals because they would have to pay the difference between their loan balance and the sale price.

The drop in home values has pushed almost a quarter of U.S. mortgage borrowers underwater, meaning their debt is more than their homes are worth, according to a report by CoreLogic Inc. (CLGX), a real estate data company in Santa Ana, California. That so- called negative equity prevents owners from conducting traditional deals because they would have to pay the difference between their loan balance and the sale price.

If you believe you may benefit from a short sale, call an experienced and knowledgeable agent to help you review your options. We’ve closed hundreds of short sale transactions with every major lender and many small to mid sized lenders across the country. Give us a call today and set up a no-cost, no-obligation meeting.

Bank of America Offering Up To $20,000 For Short Sales

Monday, October 10th, 2011

Bank of America is offering Florida homeowners up to $20,000 to complete a short sale rather than go through the time consuming process of a foreclosure. Many of the homeowners to be offered the option have already entered the foreclosure process, a miserable abyss in Florida as the current timeline to foreclose is Florida is 676 days, nearly two years. The limited time offer has been sent to select Florida real estate agents but has received very little attention and promotion by Bank of America.

The plan, which has a minimm payout of $5,000, is being well received by some agents that claim it is an incentive for struggling homeowners. Sometimes, homeowners that feel they have been wronged or cheated by the bank leave a home in poor condition, tearing out appliances, electricaland plumbing fixtures, even entire kitchens, as a way of recouping some of their lost dollars as well as “getting back” at the bank. This is an attempt to convince homeowners to complete a short sale vs a foreclosure and to save the bank thousands of dollars in repairs necessary in order to market a house after they’ve foreclosed. If the repairs arent’ made, the foreclosing bank must suffer the further loss of selling the property in substandard as-is condition. By working with the homeowners in this way, the bank hopes to reduce overall losses in the process.

A spokesman for Bank of America says the program is being tested in Florida, and if successful, it may be expanded to other states. Wells Fargo has a similar program also offering up to $20,000 for eligible short sales that are left in broom clean condition and for properties which it owns the first lien, which is about 20% of it’s portfolio. JP Morgan Chase also has a program of their own. These programs are similar to HAFA which offers homeowners $3,000 in relocation assistance. While the HAFA program requires the bank to waive any deficieny, the BOA program “may” waive the deficiency.  The deficiency is, basically, the difference between what the house sells for and what was owed on the loan. HAFA, which began in April 2010, has seen some success but has been derided as mostly a failed program having completed just 15,531 short sales through August nationwide.

If you believe that a short sale is something you need to consider as an option to your own situation, give us a call today. We’re have an experienced and knowledgable team having completed hundreds of short sales. We can help you determine if a short sale is right for your situation and help you bring about a sale that will put the worry and stress behind you.

HAMP Modifications Lower for 3rd Month

Thursday, October 6th, 2011

Once again, one of the Obama administrations signature plans to help the ailing housing industry has posted the lowest numbers of preliminarty mortgage modifications since the program began in the spring of 2009. This is the 3rd month in a row of such dismal numbers with just 13,000 homeowners receiving initial modifications from HAMP (Home Affordable Modification Program) down from 15,000 in June which was already the lowest month since April 2009.

The foreclosure crisis continues to wreak havoc on the real estate market in general but on millions of American homeowners in particular. Former bailout watchdog Neil Barofsky called the programs administrative failures “breathtaking”. He noted that numerous studies and reports confirm the widespread abuse suffered by homeowners at the hands of the mortage services charged with implementing HAMP.

So far, fewer than 700,000 homeowners have received lasting help from the program vs the 3-4 million touted by President Obaam in February 2009. One of the biggest complaints by homeowners that enter “trial” periods of 3-4 months is that the banks repeatedly lose paperwork. Nearly 1 million trial and permanant modifications have been cancelled.

Barofsky also commented that while there have been fewer foreclosure filings in 2011 vs 2010, the slowdown is likely to be temporary since banks had intentionally delayed the processing of many cases due to the paperwork fraud scandal that exploded late last year.

If you’ve been unsuccessful in being accepted for or in completing a modification and you would like to consider the option of a short sale, give us a call. We are ready to help you understand and move through the process in order to put the stress behind you.

Whew…What A Month for Short Sales in Johnson County Kansas

Saturday, April 2nd, 2011

What a month March, 2011 was for short sales in the Kansas City metro area . We’ve closed many short sale transactions recently from various lenders including Bank of America, Citi, Carrington, Wells Fargo, Suntrust, AmTrust/New York Community Bank, US Bank, SLS and others. We’ve closed sales in Shawnee, Overland Park, Olathe, Mission Hills, Bonner Springs, Kansas City, MO and other cities/communities in the Kansas City metro area. Fortunately, while it remains a possibility for all borrowers to have a deficiency that they need to address as part of the approval, we had only two such instances in March. Of those two, the amount required by the lenders were far less than the total deficiency.  And in these sales, the sellers had the ability to address the deficiency requirement from the lender. Even in  these two cases, hundreds of thousands of dollars were written off by the seller’s lenders.

In addition to closed transactions, we have a large number of other transactions that have been approved by the sellers lender that are merely awaiting the buyers closing. These are in most of the Johnson County communities including Leawood, Overland Park, Shawnee, Lenexa, Merriam, Olathe and Gardner as well as Kansas City, KS and Kansas City, MO. In this day of  still increasing delinquencies and foreclosures, lenders are very willing to consider a short sale. There isn’t a lender out that that wants to increase their inventory of foreclosed homes and will gladly review a properly formatted and presented short sale. The key is “properly formatted” and an experienced and knowledgable real estate agent to guide you through the process.

If you’re behind on your payments or see that as a real possibility in the near future, considering a short sale may be your best option. We’re here to help you understand the process, get the job done and help you put the stress behind. Call us today!

Kansas Short Sale FAQ#7-what is HAFA?

Tuesday, February 8th, 2011

HAFA (Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternative) is a program initiated by the U.S. Treasury Department to establish short sale and deed in lieu (DIL) of foreclosure policies and procedures as alternatives to foreclosure for borrowers. The program was created for borrowers who don’t qualify for HAMP (Home Affordable Modification Program), can’t complete a HAMP modification or turned down a HAMP loan modification.

Whether or not a lender participates in the HAFA program is optional so an inquiry must be made if you’re considering a short sale and want to find out if you qualify. If your lender participates, there will be information and documentation that your lender will require to make the review to determine your eligibility. What is important for the borrower/homeowner is that HAFA provides relocation funds to the borrower and requires any deficiency (the  amount of the unpaid balance of a loan after a short salesale is completed) be forgiven.

While most lenders do participate in HAFA, most lenders also have the option of a traditional short sale if you don’t qualify for a HAFA short sale. Also, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac also have their own HAFA guidelines, established in August, 2010 following the HAFA guidelines that became effective in April, 2010. In addition, some lenders such as Bank of America, have begun their own program different from HAFA or from a traditional short sale that have some of the same components of a HAFA short sale including relocation funds and deficiency forgiveness. Check with your lender to determine what options are available.

If you’re considering a short sale or if you are looking for someone to help you be more informed about the process, call or email us today. We have closed hundreds of short sales with many different lenders and have likely closed them with your lender. We have the experience and knowledge to help you get past the struggles and frustrations of owning a home where you owe more than it’s worth. We have a lot of experience in working with homeowners that have had their lenders file foreclosure action so don’t assume there’s no hope if that’s happened. There’s still time but the clock is ticking so get started soon.

- Copyright © 2010 Inside Real Estate, LLC

Inside Real Estate does not endorse the agents on this site, and does not guarantee the content submitted by the site's members. Blog and page entries, content, and other information contributed by agents that are members of the site are accountable to the particular agent. Inside Real Estate and Omnia Alliance LLC take no accountability for the content contributed by members to the site.