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Irl Dixon
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    Years of Experience: 22

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Direct: 704-616-0307



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Coldwell Banker-Black and Whisnant
365 N. New Hope Rd Suite #6
Gastonia NC


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Belmont Foreclosures

How To Fight Foreclosures In Your Belmont Neighborhood

Wednesday, April 27th, 2011

Foreclosures are a big problem in many cities.  In some first time Buyer neighborhoods of Charlotte it has led to major crime issues.  In Belmont and Mount Holly, we haven’t seen the crime increase but it has affected property values. Before the recession, appraisers did not normally use foreclosures as comparable sales in determining a home’s value.  Due to the large number, many are using them today.  The result has been a “Catch 22.”  Property values drop to the point that even solvent sellers can no longer sell their properties and pay off their mortgages.  The result in many cases is that Sellers sometimes are forced to “short sell” their home or simply walk away creating even more foreclosures and even worse comparable sales and thus even lower values for the remaining homeowners.  I have seen homes that Belmont Sellers have lost as much as 15% of their value in a little over a year.  The good news is you might be able to make up that loss on your next purchase provided you have the equity to get out of the old home.

The following is a great article courtesy of the NAR and HouseLogic.com showing how property owners can try to fight back to save some value if the foreclosure cycle hits their Belmont community.  Irl Dixon

4 Ways Vacant Foreclosed Homes Hurt You and 7 Ways to Fight Back

By: Jeannette Bernay 

Published: July 23, 2010 

Vacant foreclosed homes steal value from your home and your neighborhood. Here’s how to limit the damage. 

4 ways vacant foreclosed homes can hurt you 

1. You may have trouble refinancing or selling your home to a buyer who needs a mortgage if you live too close to too many vacant foreclosed homes. Appraisers have to report to lenders any vacant or boarded-up homes near yours and to analyze how those vacant homes influence the value of your home. 

You’ll begin to have financing trouble if banks don’t pay HOA fees during the foreclosure process. When HOA delinquencies rise to 15%, you could be unable to refinance with a loan guaranteed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, or the Federal Housing Administration. 

There are some exceptions to this rule for some condos in markets where the overall foreclosure rate is high.

2. Vacant foreclosed homes are targets for arson and other crimes. If crime and fires occur in the boarded-up, vacant foreclosed homes on your block, you could be charged more for your homeowners insurance or your insurance company may not renew your policy. 

3. Your health can be put at risk if nearby vacant homes become dumping grounds for debris that attracts vermin, mosquitoes, and other pests.

4. You’ll either pay higher taxes or lose services when your town has to pay legal fees, police, and fire costs for vacant foreclosed homes. Money spent on vacant foreclosed homes is money that isn’t being spent on schools, parks, and other community services.  

7 ways to fight back

1. When you find out a home on your block has been abandoned or foreclosed, make sure local officials know, including the building code enforcement office and the law enforcement officials who patrol your neighborhood. 

2. If a bank isn’t maintaining a vacant home that’s being foreclosed upon, call and ask the bank to fix whatever is wrong—to mow the grass, repair broken windows, etc. 

3. Can’t figure out who owns a vacant foreclosed home? Push your town to enact a vacant property registration. In towns with VPRs, owners of vacant homes have to provide contact information to local officials and the public. You’ll find sample VPR legislation and forms from other communities at the Safeguard Properties website. Share that information with local officials.

4. Suggest to local officials that they could be earning money by fining banks that don’t maintain properties. Los Angeles just passed an ordinance that will charge banks up to $100,000 for failing to keep up vacant foreclosed homes.

5. Publicize the issue by writing a letter to the editor or starting a petition about the condition of the vacant foreclosed home in your neighborhood. If a bank owns the home, it’s not going to want negative publicity.

6. Start a neighborhood crime watch program to keep an eye on vacant foreclosed homes. Even if you don’t have a formal group, ask your neighbors to report to the police any suspicious activity they see at the vacant foreclosed property.

7. You may have to do the maintenance yourself (think of it as playing defense on the property value team) if your neighbors walk away from their house and mortgage.

You and the others who still live on the block can take turns mowing the lawn, shoveling the snow, and parking a car in front of the house, so would-be buyers aren’t turned off by the lack of yard care and criminals can’t identify the house as an obvious vacant foreclosed home. You can alert the post office to the vacancy and ask the newspaper to stop delivery, or just pick up the paper and fliers after they’re delivered.

Before you take on any of those tasks, check local trespass laws so you know whether doing the extra chores that will protect your property value could potentially land you in trouble. If you know the neighbors are going to leave the house vacant, ask them to sign a statement giving your group permission to take care of the home in their absence.



Jeannette Bernay has been in the real estate industry for over two decades. She lives in western Washington State in a rambler on 8 acres with her two horses, two dogs, and three cats.

“Visit Houselogic.com for more articles like this. Reprinted from HouseLogic.com with permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®.”

Foreclosure And Your Credit

Monday, March 14th, 2011

Own a home in Belmont, NC?  Worried about foreclosure?  Here is a great article on how a foreclosure or short sale can influence your credit score.  Foreclosures have greatly affected the values of homes even in Belmont.  Appraisers are now considering them in determining property values and that can hurt on the sale or refinancing of your home.  Unfortunately, the end does not appear to be in sight.  Irl Dixon

How Foreclosure Affects Your Credit Score

By: Jerry DeMuth 

Published: June 11, 2010 

Foreclosures–and how you handle them–may have long-term credit score implications. 

Payment history makes up the largest portion–35%–of your FICO score. And the higher your credit score, the harder you will be hit by a foreclosure, or by whatever alternate route you take because becoming delinquent on your debts had not been a regular occurrence. That is, if you’ve been good until now, one late payment has a disproportionate effect.

The biggest negative hit comes with your first late payment. If you have a credit score of 780, your first late payment could reduce your score by 90 to 110 points. And if your score is 680, it could fall by 60 to 80 points, according to Barry Paperno, consumer operations manager for myFICO. With a second late payment, your score could be hit by another 50 or so points. 

If the loan goes to foreclosure, still another 50 points could be knocked off your score. If your lender doesn’t immediately report your late payment to the credit bureaus, the delay could make an even greater hit when it finally is reported. 

Proper management of delinquency

However, with the first late payment on your mortgage, you can consider alternatives that may prevent you from going all the way to foreclosure, an event that probably will prevent you from buying another home with a mortgage for at least three to five years because of how lenders view a foreclosure and because your score will be so low.

A loan modification commonly is reported to the credit bureaus as “partial payments being accepted,” which in terms of credit damage, is scarcely different from a 30-day late home. But you have a better chance of keeping your home and limiting damage to your credit score if you can get a trial modification under the federal government’s Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP). 

You should know that lenders use codes from the Consumer Data Industry Association (CDIA) when reporting loans to credit bureaus, where they ultimately influence FICO scores. At first, the loan ends up generating an AC code, which indicates that partial payments are being made–not much help.

However, when that three-month trial period is successfully completed and the trial modification is converted to a permanent modification, the loan gets the CN code, which indicates the loan was modified under a federal government plan. This new CN code, which lenders are free to use or not use, does not currently affect the score because FICO has yet to assess its strength as a risk predictor, according to myFICO’s Paperno.

Other loan modifications, such as those done under a lender’s own program, may be or may not be reported as partial payments without violating the Fair Credit Reporting Act. In general, get some understanding of how the bank is going to be reporting any potential resolution, advises Paperno.

And as you live up to the terms of your new permanent modification, those late payments keep moving further into the past and the size of the dings on your credit score keep shrinking. At the same time, as you make your new, reduced payments on time, your score will begin rising. And because your new monthly payment is lower, your monthly debt obligation is lower as well, again helping raise your credit score. 

Other choices and implications

As an alternative, a forbearance agreement requires you to make reduced “good faith” payments for two to six months to re-establish a positive payment history, after which you may have to resume your original monthly payments or continue reduced payments under a loan modification and sometimes immediately pay off the missed amounts. A forbearance agreement, as a partial payment program, would have the same impact on your credit score as a trial modification.

Other options include a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure, under which you turn ownership of your home to your lender, or a short sale, which is a sale for less than you owe but that is accepted by your lender as full payment. There are advantages to each, but Fair Isaac, developer of the FICO score, stresses that contrary to popular belief, foreclosure, short sale and deed-in-lieu will all have a similar impact on the your FICO score.

Other factors can affect credit scores and their ability to bounce back after any event, and you should check with a financial professional for the details in your particular situation.

State law also can affect your credit status. If, with a short sale, the proceeds are less than the amount of principal still owed, it could be treated as a charge-off and, in states that allow deficiency judgments, you could be on the hook for the difference. 

If you are in the Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives (HAFA) program, the lender must agree not to come after you for the deficiency judgment. However, even in states where lenders can’t come after you, the rules can be complex, so be sure to have a lawyer review your paperwork.

If a deed-in-lieu or short sale is reported as a charge-off, a “settled” debt, a “debt satisfied for less than the full amount” or as “not paid as agreed,” the impact to your score could be the same as that caused by that first late payment. Ideally, you want your debt reported as “paid in full,” “paid satisfactorily” or as a “total satisfaction of debt.”

Generally, a deed-in-lieu, a short sale or a foreclosure, including those that occur after walking away from your home, are all reported the same. Once reported that’s the end of it, except for the steps you will have to take to start rebuilding your credit score, and finding another place to live, which will have to be a rental property: You won’t be able to get another mortgage for at least two years, and then only after getting your credit score up to at least 580 for an FHA-insured mortgage and 680 for a conventional mortgage.

Meanwhile, managers of large rental properties, who use credit reports and credit scores to determine whether potential renters are credit worthy, may hesitate to rent to you. So you should explore all your options in managing a mortgage delinquency.

Jerry DeMuth has written about mortgages and other financial issues for more than two decades for trade publications, major newspapers, and consumer magazines. His writing has received four awards and has been included in eight non-fiction books.

“Visit Houselogic.com for more articles like this. Reprinted from HouseLogic.com with permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®.”

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