Posts Tagged ‘Announcements’

B of A and Countrywide Loans are now being modified…Modify your mortgatge now.

This is right from the Bank of America Press Kit!!!! 

Bank of America’s Nationwide Homeownership

Retention Program for Countrywide Customers

Fact Sheet

 

 

§         Countrywide and state Attorneys General has cooperated in the development of a comprehensive home retention program to systematically modify troubled mortgages with aggressive solutions, including interest rate and principal reductions.

§         It is anticipated that the loan modification program in this agreement will result in an estimated $8.4 billion in permanent payment relief to an estimated 400,000 Countrywide borrowers nationwide.

§         In participating states, the agreement provides up to $150 million in payments to borrowers who defaulted early in their loan terms, while committing to a “soft landing” program to help borrowers who are unable to retain their homes with relocation costs.

§         Countrywide will begin its proactive outreach to eligible borrowers on December 1, 2008.

 

Formalization of Existing Commitments

 

§         Countrywide no longer offers “subprime,” “high cost” or “negative amortization” mortgages and has significantly curtailed no- and low-documentations loans.

§         Broker compensation will be limited to 4% of the amount borrowed.

§         Countrywide will retain, for at least one year following the acquisition of BAC, a minimum of 3,900 personnel to assist with loan modifications and other foreclosure avoidance measures.

§         We will continue to proactively seek delinquent borrowers and offer streamlined loan modifications and report the progress of this agreement on a regular basis.

 

Home Retention Programs

 

§         Beginning December 1, 2008, Countrywide will proactively contact subprime and Pay Option ARM borrowers whose loans are scheduled for an interest rate change. We will invite them to contact us if they believe they will not be able to afford the new payments.

§         Countrywide will not advance foreclosures for eligible borrowers for the time necessary to determine the borrowers’ interest in staying in the home and their ability to afford the new terms as well as the investor’s willingness to accept a loan modification.

§         Countrywide will waive late/delinquency fees for missed payments when modifying loans and will not charge modification fees to borrowers in the participating states.

§         When possible, Countrywide will waive prepayment penalties in connection with any workout or refinance, whether or not the new loan is originated with Countrywide.


 

Eligibility

Borrowers eligible for loan modifications under this program must have received a qualifying subprime mortgage or a Pay Option adjustable rate mortgage prior to December 31, 2007, and the property must be a 1-4 unit owner-occupied residential property. In addition, certain other requirements are set out in the program:

  • The borrower is 60 days or more delinquent and the current loan-to-value ratio is 75% or higher;
  • The borrower is current today but becomes 60 days or more delinquent at any time prior to June 30, 2012, and the loan-to-value ratio at the time of the modification is 75% or higher;
  • The borrower has a subprime hybrid ARM and the borrower is current but reasonably likely to become 60 days or more delinquent as a consequence of a rate reset, and the loan-to-value ratio at the time of the modification is 75% or higher;
  • The borrower has a Pay Option ARM and the borrower is current but reasonably likely to become 60 days or more delinquent as a consequence of a rate reset or payment recast based on negative amortization, and the loan-to-value ratio at the time of the modification is 75% or higher.

 

In addition, customers may be eligible for the early payment default benefit of this program if: (1) the customer has a Countrywide-originated first lien loan; (2) the loan was on or prior to December 31, 2007; (3) the customer’s primary residence is the property that secures the loan; (4) the customer has made three or fewer payments over the life of the loan (the borrower’s state may expand eligibility); and (5) the customer has either lost his home to foreclosure or is at least 120 days in arrears on mortgage payments.

 

Loan Modification Program Details

Countrywide will first offer eligible borrowers an FHA refinance under the HOPE for Homeowners Program. If not eligible for that program, Countrywide will offer these specific programs based on product type. 

 

Subprime 2-, 3- 5-, 7- and 10-Year Hybrid ARM borrowers will receive an unsolicited extension/restoration of the introductory rate for five years and an invitation to contact Countrywide for additional relief if affordability concerns persist. Borrowers who cannot afford the introductory rate will be considered on a streamlined basis for a five-year interest rate reduction to as low as 3.5% (based on the affordability equation) and a conversion to a fixed-rate mortgage at the end of five years.

 

Pay Option ARM borrowers accepting a streamlined loan modification option will have the negative amortization feature eliminated from their loan. The mortgage interest rate will be reduced to as low as 2.5%, and the loan will be converted into either a fixed-rate mortgage or a ten-year interest-only loan. For single property owners who currently have no equity in their homes, Countrywide will write-down the principal balance to as low as 95% of the current value of the property to restore an equity position.

This Green Co. is flourishing…More jobs maybe?

This Green Co. is flourishing…More jobs maybe?

 

Sol is for Sun…This company (linked below) appears to be adding some sunlight to our recent rainy days.

SolFocus Inc. raised an additional $19.28 million in its third round of funding on a day when we are all focused on the economic stimulus.

The Mountain View-based company in January reported raising $47.5 million and said it expected to close the third round between $60 million and $70 million.

The developer of concentrator photovoltaic systems said it will use the new funding to accelerate expansion of its manufacturing operations and extend its early base of commercial CPV deployments. The company aims to grow deployments from .5 MW in 2008 to approximately 100MW by the end of 2010. 

This should help add jobs and relieve some pressure in our local real estate market.   Especially where most of the work force lives, San Jose right? 

Does the Green Economy have staying power though?  I think about the wind farm subsidies and how they went away in the 80′s.   I wonder if these new Solar co’s will last. 

 SolFocus Inc.

Sales increased 100.8% statewide in January 2009 compared to the previous year. Good News for both Sellers and Buyers.

Good News for both Sellers and Buyers.

Sellers will sell and buyers will buy at a 40% discount statewide according to the California Association of Realtors.

quote:

“Statewide sales in January edged past the 600,000 threshold for the first time since October 2005,” said C.A.R. President James Liptak. “The strength in California home sales in recent months signifies that the market is gradually working its way through the large numbers of distressed sales that have followed in the wake of the troubled mortgage problem. With favorable home prices and historically low mortgage rates, affordability in the California housing market is now at its highest since the start of the decade.” unquote

Closed escrow sales of existing, single-family detached homes in California totaled 624,940 in January at a seasonally adjusted annualized rate, according to information collected by C.A.R. from more than 90 local REALTOR® associations statewide. Statewide home resale activity increased 100.8% from the revised 311,160 sales pace recorded in January 2008. Sales in January 2009 increased 14% compared with the previous month.

The statewide sales figure represents what the total number of homes sold during 2009 would be if sales maintained the January pace throughout the year. It is adjusted to account for seasonal factors that typically influence home sales.

The median price of an existing, single-family detached home in California during January 2009 was $254,350, a 40.5% decrease from the revised $427,200 median for January 2008, C.A.R. reported. The January 2009 median price fell 9.5% compared with December’s revised $281,180 median price.

“A lot of attention has rightfully been directed toward the high number of distressed properties,” said C.A.R. Vice President and Chief Economist Leslie Appleton-Young. “California’s housing market also is feeling the effects of a drought in the availability of jumbo mortgage loans.

“Since the start of the credit crisis in 2007, jumbo lending has been severely constrained to the point where markets that rely on jumbo loans experienced a 24% year-to-year decline in sales in the month of January. This stands in contrast to the 100% sales gain the overall market experienced,” she said.

Highlights of C.A.R.’s resale housing figures for January 2009:

- C.A.R.’s Unsold Inventory Index for existing, single-family detached homes in January 2009 was 6.7 months, compared with 16.6 months (revised) for the same period a year ago. The index indicates the number of months needed to deplete the supply of homes on the market at the current sales rate.
- Thirty-year fixed-mortgage interest rates averaged 5.05% during January 2009, compared with 5.76% in January 2008, according to Freddie Mac. Adjustable-mortgage interest rates averaged 4.92% in January 2009, compared with 5.23% in January 2008.
- The median number of days it took to sell a single-family home was 49.9 days in January 2009, compared with 70.8 days (revised) for the same period a year ago.

In a separate report covering more localized statistics generated by C.A.R. and DataQuick Information Systems, none of the 331 cities and communities reporting showed an increase in their respective median home prices from a year ago. DataQuick statistics are based on county records data rather than MLS information. DataQuick Information Systems is a subsidiary of Vancouver-based MacDonald Dettwiler and Associates. (The top 10 list is generated for incorporated cities with a minimum of 30 recorded sales in the month.)

Note: Large changes in local median home prices typically indicate both local home price appreciation, and often, large shifts in the composition of housing market activity. Some of the variations in median home prices for January may be exaggerated due to compositional changes in housing demand.

Statewide, the 10 cities with the highest median home prices in California during January 2009 were: Santa Barbara, $939,250; Redondo Beach, $672,500; Pleasanton, $655,000; San Clemente, $602,500; San Ramon, $582,000; Yorba Linda, $566,750; San Francisco, $561,000; Huntington Beach, $555,000; Encinitas, $550,000; and Sunnyvale, $530,000.

Foreclosure Relief Plan Help for Buyers?

The Obama housing plan attacks two problems that are creating a vicious cycle in the nation’s housing market.

I am just not sure what it really does for Buyers.   We need Buyers to Buy the homes already on the Market.

Anyway…

First, Obama’s plan offers $200 billion to provide refinancing for some homeowners who owe more than their homes are now worth-shorthanded as being “underwater” on their mortgages. To qualify, these homeowners-5 million of them by administration estimates-must have their mortgages in the hands of Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, the mortgage finance giants that the government seized last September.

“We have been advocating for one unified approach to help modify or refinance delinquent and underwater loans and thus we think this program will undoubtedly help servicers keep more at-risk borrowers in their homes, which is a crucial step to helping stabilize the mortgage and housing markets,” stated John A. Courson, president and CEO of the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA).

Many of these homeowners would like to take advantage of today’s historically low interest rates and refinance but can’t, since the law prohibits refinancing if the current mortgages reflects less than 80% of the homes’ values. These homeowners now can seek to refinance if their mortgages are up to 5% higher than the present-day values of their homes. That helps some, but it won’t reach lots of homeowners in California, Florida and elsewhere whose homes are now worth substantially less than their mortgages.

Because most mortgages are bundled into securities and sold into a secondary market, it’s often difficult for homeowners to find out whether Fannie or Freddie owns their loans or whether they’ve been pooled with other loans and sold by an investment bank to other investors.

Second, Obama’s plan attacks the problem of affordability. The administration provides another $75 billion in incentives to help prevent foreclosures in cases in which the homeowners, up to 4 million of them, are about to lose their homes. The money comes from the $700 billion bailout fund approved last October.

Under this complex portion of the plan, the president offers a stream of financial incentives to mortgage servicers, who are essentially bill collectors for private investors who own pools of U.S. mortgages. Some incentives stay with the servicers while others flow through to investors.

In exchange for the incentives, a servicer would modify a mortgage so that no more than 38% of a homeowner’s monthly after-tax income was taken by the monthly mortgage payment. The government then would step in and share the cost of reworking that mortgage so that no more than 31% of the borrower’s monthly income was tied up in the payment.

This could result in some mortgages carrying interest rates as low as 2% for five years. Critics think that this mortgage subsidy interferes with the natural process of letting the marketplace find the floor on home prices.

Let’s just h.o.p.e THIS plan works~

Freddie Mac’s REO Rental Initiative for Foreclosure Occupants

March 17, 2009-Freddie Mac (NYSE: FRE) launched its new REO Rental Initiative giving qualified tenants and former owners the option to lease their recently foreclosed properties on a month-to-month basis. The REO Rental Initiative will be managed by HomeSteps®, Freddie Mac’s national real estate unit, and implemented through several national property management firms.

Freddie Mac also announced it will continue to suspend all eviction actions until April 1, 2009 to ensure there is ample time for current occupants to learn about the options available to them under the new initiative.

“Freddie Mac’s REO Rental Initiative can help ease a foreclosure’s impact by giving renters and former owners more time to determine what options are best for them and their families. At the same time, the REO Rental Initiative helps stabilize property values and local communities by keeping homes occupied and less vulnerable to vandalism,” said Ingrid Beckles, Senior Vice President, Default Asset Management at Freddie Mac.

Property management firms will begin the process of contacting occupants of foreclosed properties to determine their interest in staying in the home and their eligibility for a month-to-month lease. Occupants will be contacted only after the foreclosure gives Freddie Mac the legal authority to offer a lease.

To qualify for a lease, the tenant or former owner must occupy the property and show they have adequate income to pay the monthly rental amount established by the property management company based on market rents for the area in which the home is located. Occupants must agree to allow HomeSteps to show the home to potential buyers as it will be marketed for sale during the lease period.

Additionally, the home must be in safe, habitable condition and meet all local codes for rental properties to qualify for the REO Rental Initiative.

If an occupant does not wish to lease the property, Freddie Mac will continue its current practice of offering relocation assistance. In addition, Freddie Mac will also explore available workout options with owner-occupants after Freddie Mac gains title to the property through foreclosure.

Have you heard? Mortgage rates are again dropping to near-record lows –

Have you heard?  Mortgage rates are again dropping to near-record lows – below 5% – in the wake of the Federal Reserve’s decision to buy up Treasury bonds and mortgage securities. Lower rates may help spur home sales, but analysts expect much of the action to come from homeowners who are looking to refinance, but mortgage experts caution that many homeowners are bound to be disappointed.

The problems that created the mortgage meltdown mess mean that tighter rules and regulations have been put in place for home buyers and those seeking to refinance, and tight lending standards make it much harder for all but the most creditworthy borrowers to qualify.

Here I have added some quotes for you…

“A lot of people could not requalify for the loan they have now,” said Alex Stenback with Residential Mortgage Group in Minnetonka. “There are tougher credit standards in place and you have to have a certain amount of equity in the property in addition to meeting the now-tighter debt-to-income ratio requirements.”

Keith Gumbinger of HSH Associates, a publisher of mortgage information, said “good interest rates were available to all kinds of borrowers in all kinds of credit circumstances when the market was running flat out five years ago. That’s not the case today.”

“You must be a much better borrower than you had to be before,” he said. “For some borrowers, you might have to get used to hearing ‘no.’”

Maybe I should educate you a bit about the what the BIG GUYS are doing.

By snapping up Treasury securities, the Fed boosts their prices, and that drives down the yield, or interest rate. The 10-year Treasury bond dropped by the biggest one-day amount since 1981 this past Wednesday and rebounded slightly on Thursday.

Analysts expected mortgage rates to follow suit, and they did come down on both Wednesday and Thursday.

The national average rate on a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage fell to 4.94%, down nearly a quarter of a percentage point from a day earlier, according to HSH Associates.
Stenback said that rates on a 30-year fixed rate mortgage were 4.5% to 4.625% for a best-case scenario borrower.

Will they stay that low? Probably not.

“When we see these really dramatic drops, there’s a little bit of a snap-back effect,” said Stenback. “But they probably won’t go back up to where they were before.”

Paul Schuster, vice president of Marketplace Home Mortgage and head of the Minnesota Mortgage Association, called the downward trend positive but said it won’t solve the housing problem alone. “It’s a key to affordability, and low rates are critical to helping the housing market recover, and it was a commitment by the Federal Reserve to support that in a big way.”

Home buyers and owners who want to refinance should be prepared for a longer process, Schuster said, and for different rates or costs, depending on their credit scores and loan-to-value ratios. “Now, there might three or four different levels for transactions that previously would have been priced equally,” he said.

Stenback said he expected a “huge” number of people to try to refinance but urged patience as the underwriters, closers and others scramble to keep up with demand.

Seems like we never get exactly what we expect!!!!!   Now we have to wait OUR turn.    PPFFFFT!   I am an “I want it now person” too often…lol.   This should not stop you from starting the application process and getting prepared!

Heads Should Roll not “Bank Roll”

Heads Should Roll not “Bank Roll”

Bank bailout and home owners are paying Bailout plan?   Now even smaller regional banks want in…What next?  Will I be able to defer my car payment or get the government, or more accurately, fellow tax payers to make my car payment?

Well, I know I am being sarcastic but, really, this program seems to be unnecessary.  Have you ever played organized sports?   If you did,  remember if you did not perform you were benched or simply cut from the team?

I don’t remember anyone giving me their statistics, so I could stay in the game.  I believe that same philosophy should apply to financial institutions that are not performing.

Let the market take care of itself.   Similar to the animal kingdom..the strong will survive.  Sometimes it is not really strength that allows them to survive it’s the animal’s instincts.   Don’t these people, we trust our money with, have instincts…Oh,  or maybe some ethical compassion?

This whole failure is based on the repackaging of  Real Estate investment vehicles, to the degree, no one can even tell what it is.   What it called? A CBO?.   Most economists can’t even tell you what a CBO contains.  Not only that but, the agencies grading these investments,  were hired by the packager/holders.

Conflict of interest or what?!  How can an investment, rated by these agencies as AAA  (the highest of grades), be worthless to the extent that we have to bail these guys out?  I hope some heads roll after the election….

I understand that some families bought homes that they really could afford and simply find themselves in a bind.  I am not heartless!  They should get some help.

The problem is how to help those families and not bailout banks that failed to protect the interests of their investors in the process.   I believe solutions have been poorly explored, due to political expediency and C.Y.A.  Now we are all paying the price.

I am not done talking about this…I just need to stop to put my fingers under water and put out the fire!  You can take it from here.

What do you think about Banks getting a bailout while homeowners suffer?

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