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Scott Morris
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    Years of Experience: 33

    SFR - Short Sale, Foreclosure Resource
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Office: 941-473-7399



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Keller Williams Realty
3155 S Access Rd
Englewood, FL, 34224
941-473-7399


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Posts Tagged ‘Englewood Florida Foreclosed Homes’

Foreclosures Fall while Bank Repossessions Increase

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

Sounds like a contradiction on terms, doesn’t it? In actuality, they are pretty much the same thing.

Foreclosures are viewed as homes that the bank is in the process of taking back from homeowners. Reposessions are homes that are already taken back by the bank.

Banks are trying to get rid of what the inventory they currently have on their books. They are less motivated to take on more homes, as it will only serve to further deteriorate the market.

The majority of banks are working to work out short sales, to reduce potential repo inventory. There are more homes in peril than banks and government officials want to acknowledge.

More homes on the market is not a path to neighborhood stabilization.

Hundreds of Overpriced Listings Set To Expire in July

Monday, July 5th, 2010

As a pricing specialist, I tend to be very direct with my sellers.

I have a very agressive, comprehensive marketing plan to help my sellers get their homes under contract as fast as the market will allow.

At each listing consultation appointment, I discuss market trends, recent neighborhood sales, and the nearby homes currently on the market.

My job is to assist my sellers in determining the best possible price to list their home to sell within the 1st 30 days, as well as keep them informed regarding the sellers they are competing against.

Buyers have a wealth of information available, and easy access to view the thousands of homes currently available on the market.

 They are well informed, and can spot a good deal when one presents itself.

Homes priced properly attract a lot of showings very quickly.

Over priced homes get very little activity, and will likely expire unsold after a 6 month listing contract.

In January 2010 , many home owners “resolved” to sell their homes this year.

Many priced their homes too high, and those listings will expire in July.

Those that choose to put their homes back on the market will likely reduce their prices in a more aggressive approach to selling their homes.

I have advised my sellers my opinion that in these final days of June they should be aggressive to get ahead ahead of the curve.

For many, there are certain tax advantages for capital gains, and estate taxes that are expiring at the end of 2010.

For the small group of home owners that are considering an increase in their listing price, I wish them luck, but feel they are wasting their time.

For these reasons, I believe that its a great time to sell.

Waiting may very well make a bad situation worse.

Plenty of Reasons to Buy a Home Even After the Tax Credit

Friday, June 25th, 2010

  Even though the home buyer tax credit expired on April 30 and won’t be renewed, there may never be a better time to buy a home than today, according to the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB). Many outstanding opportunities still exist for home buyers, but they may not be around forever.      

“The home buyer tax credit was just one of many factors motivating Americans to buy homes,” said NAHB Chairman Bob Jones, a builder and developer in Bloomfield Hills, Mich. “But buyers can still take advantage of today’s low interest rates and competitive prices to get a home they may not have been able to purchase just a few years ago.”  

Besides mortgage interest rates that have been hovering at near-record lows, homes in many markets have become more affordable. Prices have moderated from the highs of the housing boom that occurred in most of the country, especially in major markets where they had increased significantly.  

Today’s new homes are also built to be much more energy efficient than homes constructed a generation ago, making them more affordable to operate. New homes are designed to support modern lifestyles with open floorplans, flexible spaces, improved safety features, and low-maintenance materials.  

Consumers who are thinking about buying a home should not count on interest rates or prices staying at current levels, however. Mortgage rates are sensitive to market conditions, and even a slight increase can push monthly payments beyond a family’s budget. As the country recovers from the recession and people stabilize their financial situations, NAHB economists expect that home prices will begin to increase by 2011.  

NAHB’s home buyer brochure “Opportunity Knocks for Home Buyers” describes many of the opportunities in today’s market, as well as the long-term financial benefits of homeownership. It provides examples of how interest rates affect monthly mortgage payments and the typical federal tax savings over the first five years of homeownership. The brochure can be downloaded from NAHB’s web site at: www.nahb.org/homebuyerbrochure.   

The home buyer tax credit is still available for eligible home buyers who had a signed sales contract by the April 30 deadline and who close by June 30, 2010, as well as for qualified members of the military, foreign service and intelligence communities, who have until April 30, 2011, to sign a contract.

Written by Realty Times Staff

Check out Scott’s new websites and listing.

Friday, June 4th, 2010

I have recently moved to Keller Williams Realty as a team member of TeamWorksFLA.

See www.TeamWorksFLA.com

My other web sites are:

www.scott-morris.com

www.scottsflahomes.com

http://scott-morris.mfr.mlxchange.com/

My newest listing is a great investment opportunity in a nice neighborhood. The bank is selling it ‘AS IS’ so the price is reduced, making it very competetive in today’s market. See http://mfr.mlxchange.com/Pub/EmailView.asp?r=1856783825&s=MFR&t=MFR

This market is active and inventories are dropping. It is still a great time to buy.

New rulings make Foreclosures in Englewood Florida and the state of Florida more involved.

Friday, March 5th, 2010

Two Florida court rulings will make foreclosures in this hard-hit housing market even more painful for lenders. The Florida Supreme Court said last month that a lender must show that it has all the proper documents, including proof it owns the mortgage in question. If a lender cannot produce this proof, they could be fined for perjury. This isn’t as easy as you might think, because during the securitization boom of the last two decades, mortgages may have been sold several times or the originating lender may have closed and it’s loan portfolio acquired. Foreclosures in other states have been dismissed for lack of such proof, but those rulings were handed down on a case-by-case basis.

Late last year the Florida Supreme Court said all Florida foreclosure cases must go through a mediation process. That similar process has been gaining popularity in other states and that, mortgage servicers say, makes foreclosures more expensive for them. Both rulings are designed to help ease the backlog of foreclosure cases that have been clogging Florida courts. The verification requirement, for example, precludes long, drawn-out arguments over whether the lender has the right to bring an action against the borrower in the first place

Florida’s approach isn’t expected to be widely duplicated elsewhere. Only 20 states even require lenders to go through courts to conduct foreclosures. In most other states, lenders file a foreclosure action with a public trustee to obtain a deed to the property. Some states have a hybrid system where a lender can choose to process a foreclosure in or out of court.)

Even so, anything affecting foreclosures in Florida has a huge impact on loan servicers. Florida has one of the highest foreclosure rates in the country, with one in every 187 homeowners receiving a foreclosure filing in January.

Contact me for information on Foreclosed Homes in Englewood Florida

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