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Boise Real Estate ~ The GOOD news about buying a “fixxer upper”

Friday, March 5th, 2010

Did you know you can buy a fixxer upper and with the right kind of loan include the money in the loan to fix it up? What a great idea, huh? With all the distressed properties on the market there are this seems like the perfect solution to a market full of “fixxer uppers”The purchase of a house that needs repair is often a catch-22 situation, because the bank won’t lend the money to buy the house until the repairs are complete, and the repairs can’t be done until the house has been purchased.

HUD’s 203(k) program can help you with this and allow you to purchase or refinance a property plus include in the loan the cost of making the repairs and improvements. The FHA insured 203(k) loan is provided through approved mortgage lenders nationwide. It is available to persons wanting to occupy the home.

The downpayment requirement for an owner-occupant (or a nonprofit organization or government agency) is approximately 3.5% of the acquisition and repair costs of the property.

The 203(k) loan includes the following steps:

 -   A potential homebuyer locates a fixer-upper
and executes a sales contract after doing
a feasibility analysis of the property with their
real estate professional. The contract should
state that the buyer is seeking a 203(k) loan
and that the contract is contingent on loan
approval based on additional required repairs by the FHA or the lender.

 -   The homebuyer then selects an FHA-approved 203(k) lender and arranges for a detailed proposal showing the scope of work to be done, including a detailed cost estimate on each repair or improvement of the project.

 -   The appraisal is performed to determine the value of the property after renovation.

 -   If the borrower passes the lender’s credit-worthiness test, the loan closes for an amount that will cover the purchase or refinance cost of the property, the remodeling costs and the allowable closing costs. The amount of the loan will also include a contingency reserve of 10% to 20% of the total remodeling costs and is used to cover any extra work not included in the original proposal.

 -   At closing, the seller of the property is paid off and the remaining funds are put in an escrow account to pay for the repairs and improvements during the rehabilitation period.

 -   The mortgage payments and remodeling begin after the loan closes. The borrower can decide to have up to six mortgage payments (PITI) put into the cost of rehabilitation if the property is not going to be occupied during construction, but it cannot exceed the length of time it is estimated to complete the rehab.

 -   Escrowed funds are released to the contractor during construction through a series of draw requests for completed work. To ensure completion of the job, 10% of each draw is held back; this money is paid after the lender determines their will be no liens on the property.

For answers to the most asked questions follow this link http://www.fhainfo.com/fha203k3.htm.

as always, untill next time…………

blessings

Tonya and Tifni

Visit our website for 24/7 market access www.BoiseHomes4u.com

Boise Real Estate – Walk away from your morgtage? Maybe?

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

Some homeowners who owe more than their homes are worth are choosing to walk away from their mortgages. (© Thinkstock/Jupiterimages)

When homeowners reach a point where they’re considering walking away from a mortgage on an underwater home that they no longer can afford, one professor suggests that maybe they should do just that.

 

The Wall Street Journal recently spoke with Brent White, a professor of law at the University of Arizona, regarding his recent discussion paper (.pdf file) titled “Underwater and Not Walking Away: Shame, Fear and the Social Management of the Housing Crisis.” To sum it up, from WSJ:

 

“The real mystery is not — as media coverage has suggested — why large numbers of homeowners are walking away, but why, given the percentage of underwater mortgages, more homeowners are not,” the professor says.

 

In case you haven’t already figured it out, underwater mortgages apply to homes that have lost so much value that borrowers are paying significantly more for their homes than the homes are worth. And with property values expected to rise an average of only 3.5% a year for the next decade, according to Bloomberg, some of those homeowners can’t expect to reach home price and mortgage equity for more than 10 years.

USA Today tells the story of Sharon Sakson, who after losing her job was burning through her savings to pay her $2,400 monthly mortgage – until she realized it simply wasn’t worth it anymore.

 

“I’m walking away from my house,” says Sakson, 57, who stopped making payments about six months ago on her home in Pennington, N.J. “The bank can have it.”

 

In 2004, she bought the house for $320,000, then had it appraised at $390,000 and refinanced in 2006. Now, she told USA Today that she can’t imagine it’s even worth what she initially paid for it.

The consequences for walking away? You could lose 100 points from your credit score and you likely won’t be able to buy another home for seven years.

 

But maybe that’s worth it for some people, like the 588,000 people who walked away from their homes in 2008, which USA Today says is double the number in 2007.

 

And if you think strategic defaults will slow once the job market picks up, Mark Zandi, an economist at Moody’s Economy.com, warns in the article that even then it may not make financial sense for some homeowners to stay. Which means the high foreclosure level could remain, even as the economy picks up.

 

Banks also fear the effect that a rising number of strategic defaults will have on the housing market, but White, the Arizona professor, says maybe they’re the ones who need to be taking some of the blame.

 

The bank and the borrower both screwed up in making a bad bet on real estate; now they could share the pain.”It is time to put to rest the assumption that a borrower who exercises the option to default is somehow immoral or irresponsible,” White writes. White even proposes that if lenders were prohibited from reporting mortgage defaults to credit bureaus, that could actually result in more loan modifications that actually work; then, fewer homeowners would walk away and everybody would be happy.

 

Of course, we can’t say banks aren’t doing their part. They recently met their goal to modify 500,000 loans through the Obama administration’s program. But since homeowners who owe more than 25% above their home’s value are nixed from the program, maybe they really aren’t doing enough.

 

By the way, if you’re thinking White might simply have written this paper for his own guilt-ridden purposes, The Journal notes that, no, he actually isn’t planning on walking away from his Tucson, Ariz., home. Since White estimates that it’s only about 3% to 5% underwater, that’s “not enough that walking would make sense,” he told the newspaper.

 

But what if the home was 30% or even 50% underwater? Would you walk away from a mortgage that cost you that much more than the house was worth? If not, what would prevent you from doing so?

that’s all for now, until next time……………..

Blessings

Tifni &  Tonya

visit our website for 24/7 market information www.BoiseHomes4u.com. A quick thank you to our writters from MSN Real Estate, they provided the information posted above.

 

Boise Real Estate – Loan Modification…. are you kidding me?

Friday, January 29th, 2010

With no end in sight regarding short sales or bank owned properties, the talk of the town is loan modification to keep you out of either situation, but are the banks really serious?

With the current economy, people have lost their jobs, had their income cut in half and most of us are scraping the bottom of the barrel penny by penny, so the answer has to be a loan modification right? Well, tell me how are you going to qualify for a new loan with no job or an income that has been cut in half? I’m sure the government had big plans when they introduced the loan modification idea but they have failed to realize that you have to “QUALIFY” for the loan, and if the home is “under water” {lost value” the bank isn’t going to give you a loan for more than the home is worth, are they? You’re guess is as good as mine.

I’m sorry to bring the negativity in but the need to vent has been hanging over my head for months now. What do you think the answer is? When do you say enough is enough!!! Have you, like many of us, cashed in your retirement account, 401K, IRA, etc. just to stay afloat only to be just as broke as you were the day you left high school with BIG dreams and aspirations ready to conqueror the world? Back then you didn’t know any better, broke was just a way of life, remember digging for change in the couch or seats of your car for gas money? Again, we didn’t know any better.

We sell Real Estate for Re/Max Elite Properties and day after day we see people coming to their wits end, after spending every last dime trying to hang on only to feel defeated and beaten down. They come to us for advice on how to get out of their home, hence, short sales or if they’ve waited too long, a foreclosure is inevitable.

Before you spend every last dime, educate yourself, cut your losses and save yourself and your dignity.

until next time…………

Blessings

Tonya & Tifni

Boise Real Estate – Investment property

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010

Changing times, changing rules……..HUD temporary flipping requirements rule waived.

HUD announced a temporary waiver of the 90 day flipping requirements rule. The waiver is effective for FHA purchases with contracts signed on or after February 1, 2010. Purchase contracts signed before February 1, 2010 are not eligible for the waiver.

The waiver is limited to sales meeting the following general conditions which are designed to protect FHA borrowers against “flippers” where properties are quickly resold at inflated prices to unsuspecting borrowers.

All transactions must be arms-length, with no identity of interest between the buyer and seller or any other parties participating in the sales transaction, including:

  • Seller must hold title
  • LLS’s Corporations and trusts must be established in accordance with state and federal law
  • No evidence of previouse flipping within 12 months
  • Evidence that property was marketed openly; via MLS, Auction, FSBO

If the sales price of the property is 20 percent or more above the seller’s acquisition cost, the waiver will ONLY apply if the lender meets the following conditions:

  • Significant work has been done to the home {documented by a second appraisal verifying repair and rehabilitation have been completed to substantiate an increase more than 20 percent}
  • In cases where no work has been done, the appraiser must provide explanation to support the increase since the prior transfer.
  • A property inspection must be provided to the buyer prior to closing. {The lender may charge the borrower for the inspection.} The inspector does not need to be FHA approved, but must have NO interest in the property, must not receive compensation other than from the lender and may not be involved with the repairs recommended from the inspection. at a minimum, the inspection MUST include:
  1. Property structure, foundation, floor, ceiling, walls and roof
  2. Exterior, siding, doors, windows, any decks, balconies, walkways and driveways
  3. Roofing, plumbing, all electrical, heating and A/C systems
  4. All interiors
  5. All insulation/ventilation systems as well as fire places and fuel burning appliances.
  • The waiver does not apply to the Home Equity Conversion Mortgage {HECM} for purchase program.

The waiver is scheduled to be effective for one year, unless otherwise extended or withdrawn by HUD. If HUD discovers that there is a significant increase in mortgage defaults and claims attributable to the waiver, HUD may withdraw the waiver immediately.

The following exceptions to the 90 day flipping guidelines are still applicable and ramin unchanged from previous guidelines:

  • Re-sales by employers to employees
  • Builders selling a newly built home
  • Sales by HUD of Real Estate Owned {REO}
  • Inherited property
  • Real Estate sales owned by Federal Agencies
  • State and Federally chartered financial institutions and government sponsored enterprises {GSE – e.g. Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae, Bank foreclosures}
  • Non-profit organizations approved to purchase HUD REO single family properties at a discount with resale restrictions http://www.Lhud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/np/np_hoc.cfm
  • Local and state government agencies and the instrumentalities of local governments approved by HUD to provide secondary financing. http://www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/np/np_hoc.cfm
  • Presidential declared disaster areas {must be sold in the time frame the exception will be in effect and in the specific disaster areas} www.fema.gov/news/disasters/fema
  • Lenders that have taken properties back in foreclosure
  • Sales of previously foreclosed  abandoned properties and sold by “for-profit” & “not-for-profit” entities using funding with state & local government agencies under the NSP program.

The complete text of the Waiver is available on the HUD website at: http://www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/waivpropflip2010.pdf

Until next time……………

Blessings,

Tonya & Tifni

visit our website at www.boisehomes4u.com or contact us for any real estate needs or questions Tonya 208-860-1598 or Tifni 208-861-8295

Boise Idaho Real Estate – Need to purchase a home NOW? Here’s How

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

Four strategies to make sure your home purchase goes smoothly. I’m sure by now you’ve done your homework, you’ve mapped out the area you want to live in, decided how many bedrooms you want, and number of bathrooms that will accomodate your needs, visualized the perfect master suite and you’ve met with your lender, now you’re good to go!!! Let’s do it!

If you think you have time on your hands, think again. The tax credit doesn’t run out until June so what’s the rush? If you’ve been out shopping with your Realtor and seen several homes you probably understand that your “perfect” home is out there and realized that it’s someone elses “perfect” home as well. While there are some great deals right now, there are also ready, willing and able buyers that may be a few steps ahead of you. Let’s not forget that the history making interest rates won’t be around forever either. You don’t want to get priced out of your dream home because you sat on the fence too long waiting for the right place and the right time scenario.  All this being said let’s make sure once you find your “perfect” home and you’re ready to make an offer that there are no surprises along the way. 

Here are four strategies that can expidite your closing.

1.  Make sure you’re liquid: When it’s time to make a down payment, homebuyers should make sure they have enough cash available. You’re funds should not be tied up in a stock portfolio, 401(k) plan or other investment that could delay the money for days.

Using gift money for a down payment is sanother potential snag for homebuyers. The bank underwriting your mortgage needs a paper trialto track the money’s origin, money that suddenly shows up in your account can raise a red flag. It won’t be a deal breaker for the transaction but it will slow it down.

2. Forget about short sales: A short sale occurs when a homeowner is no longer able to make their mortgage payments and owes more on his home loan that what it can get in the current market.

Although short sales are attractive regarding price, they can (and do) take months to close. So it you’re looking to qualify for the tax credit stay away from them.

3. Don’t go on a shopping spree before you close: And I mean DON’T! I’ve seen transactions fall apart at the closing table because buyers when shopping just days before they got to closing thinking they “needed” new furniture for their home or a new car for the new garage. YIKES! The other “don’t” on the list is stay away from making big purchases on your credit cards before you get to the closing table.

Making big purchases can trigger concerns because a buyer’s debt-to-income ratio is usually the most important factor lenders use to determine how much home they can buy. This ratio compares the amount you earn to the amount you owe (including, but not limited to, credit-card debt, student loans and car loans) Once you enter the loan application process, that ratio is set. If you’re in the middle of trying to secure financing buying a living room set for $5000 can throw off the ratio numbers.

4. Be aware of closing costs: Buyers should know in advance how much they are going to bring to the closing table. Also, be aware of the verbaige in your purchase contract, are you going to have a home inspection? Who is going to pay for it? Who is paying for the appraisal?Hold on to every dime until you get to closing, you don’t want to be short at the 11th hour.

until next time……..

Blessings

Tifni & Tonya

Visit our website for 24/7 market access www.BoiseHomes4u.com or contact us for any and all real estate questions or needs, Tifni 208 861-8295 or Tonya 208 860-1598

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