Florida
47% of all Mortgages in Palm Beach, Broward, and Miami-Dade Counties are “Underwater”
Bank of America Offering $20K to Florida Homeowners
Bank of America, the nations’ largest mortgage servicer has just announced a new program that offers up to $20,000 to Florida homeowners who short sale their homes. While the program has several requirements, it could be a saving grace for homeowners who are behind on their mortgage payments yet want to avoid foreclosure.
To be eligible for the program homeowners must:
- Submit a purchase agreement from a buyer to Bank of America by November 30, 2011 and close the transaction before August 31, 2012.
- The home must have a Bank of America first mortgage.
- There cannot be a previous or existing offer on the home.
For further information, homeowners are advised to contact Bank of America at 877-459-2852.
Home Prices Decline in Broward & Palm Beach Counties
Today Florida Realtors announced that Broward County’s three-month run of home price increases ended in September. The county’s median price for existing homes was $188,800, which is down 7% from September 2010.
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New FHA Ceiling Implemented
FHA mortgages are extremely popular, particularly among first-time buyers, because of low interest rates and 3.5% down payments.
However, this past Saturday, a new Federal Housing Administration loan limit kicked in nationwide, limiting some buyers who want FHA-back mortgages.
In Broward and Palm Beach counties, the FHA ceiling dropped to $345,000 from $423,750. Therefore, buyers who can’t go the FHA route will have to pay cash or apply for conventional mortgages (which carry higher interest rates and down payments of 20%).
Alonzo Mourning Lists His Coral Gables Mansion for $14.5M
According to the Wall Street Journal, former Miami Heat star Alonzo Mourning is listing his Coral Gables mansion for sale at $14.5 million.
The 13,000-square-foot waterfront home has eight bedrooms, a library, gym and a four-car garage.
What’s the reason for this sale? Mourning, whose arrival with coach Pat Riley in 1995 gave the mostly middling Heat instant credibility, is looking to downsize!
Home Ownership > Renting (If you can get a loan)
According to a report this week from a TD Bank affiliate, South Florida’s ratio of rents to home prices is its highest since 1997.
According to Alistair Bentley of TD Economics, during the recession, home prices in Palm Beach, Broward and Miami-Dade counties dropped by roughly 50%, while rents declined by just 2.5% over the same period. He cites data from the Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller Home Price Index and the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Bentley says that with homes so affordable now, owning is better than renting. “Of course, that’s if you can get a loan.”
According to TD, the region’s rental market soared by 40,000 households from 2006 to 2009, mainly due to the big change to the onslaught of foreclosures following the housing boom.
Bentley states that because of strong demand, rents gradually are increasing, but the pendulum eventually will swing back to homeownership as rents become less affordable.
Bentley concludes that ultimately, South Florida needs homeowners to lift the region out of its housing slump. He predicts a complete recovery “is a couple years off.”
Palm Beach County is #8 Slowest Market in the US
According to the most recent data from Realtor.com, Palm Beach County ranks among the 10 slowest markets in the country.
County homes for sale are listed on the real estate website for a median 139 days, down 2% from a year ago. The median is the midpoint; half the homes sell quicker than 139 days and half sell slower.
Palm Beach County is ranked eighth. Naples is first at 153 days. Seven of the 10 metropolitian statistical areas are in Florida — not surprising, given that this is one of the hardest hit states during the housing boom.
Broward County is tied for the nation’s 33rd slowest market for sales, at 109 days. That’s up 14% from July 2010.
42% of all Broward County Real Estate is in Some Stage of Foreclosure
Yesterday, according to RealtyTrac Homes and condominiums in some stage of foreclosure accounted for 42% of all Broward County sales in the second quarter, which is a slight increase from a year ago.
In Palm Beach County, 37% of all home and condo sales in April, May and June were in the foreclosure process, up from 25% during the same period last year.
Nationally, foreclosures accounted for 31% of all sales. In 2005, at the height of the housing boom, the share was only about 1%.
Properties in some stage of foreclosure are those in default, scheduled for auction or bank-owned, according to RealtyTrac, an Irvine, Calif.-based foreclosure listing firm.
The RealtyTrac figures also show an increase in the number of sales before they end up in foreclosure. In many cases, lenders are agreeing to short sales – taking less for the home than the mortgage is worth.
“Lenders are being more accommodating toward short sales and seeing that as a better alternative to foreclosing on a property,” said Daren Blomquist, a spokesman for RealtyTrac.
Blomquist described the judicial foreclosure process in Florida and other states as “messy” and said banks increasingly are trying to avoid that. Still, it takes an average of 410 days to complete a short sale in Florida, according to RealtyTrac.
The average price of a foreclosure-related sale in Broward was $125,466, according to RealtyTrac. The average discount compared with a home not in the foreclosure process was 25%.
In Palm Beach County, the average price was $116,642, and the average discount was 38%.
Broward led the state with 4,565 sales of properties in the foreclosure process during the second quarter. Miami-Dade County was second with 4,397, and Palm Beach County was third at 3,253.
Despite the large numbers of distressed home sales, fewer homes are coming on the market.
“That’s a good indicator that we’re bumping along the bottom,” said Richard Barkett, chief executive of the Realtor Association of Greater Fort Lauderdale.
Story by By Paul Owers | Sun Sentinal
Home Sales in Broward and Palm Beach Remain STRONG
According to last week’s data from the Florida Realtors, home sales in Broward and Palm Beach counties remain strong even as the national numbers are dismal.
Compared to 2010, sales have been up in the two counties in every month this year.
But what can we expect for the rest of the year?
David Cohen of GSIG LLC Realty in Boca Raton states: “Housing prices are finally affordable again. We are back at pre-bubble era pricing. This makes a huge difference to new home-buyers and cash investors!”
30 Year Fixed Mortgage Rate Hits All Time Low – 3.92%
Did you ever think interest rates would go below 4%?
It just happened…
According to Zillow Mortgage Marketplace, today’s 30-year fixed mortgage rate has taken a fall from Tuesday’s 9-month low of 4.14% to a new all-time low of 3.92%. This rate represents the first time the rate has dropped below 4% as well as the lowest rate recorded since Zillow Mortgage Marketplace launched in April 2008. Prior to today, the lowest rate recorded on Zillow Mortgage Marketplace was 4.07% on Nov. 9, 2010.
What lead to such a drop? Perhaps with this week’s Fannie/Freddie downgrade, stock market tumble, and the Fed’s promise to keep interest rates low until 2013, many have been left wondering what the impact will be on the housing market and, more specifically, how mortgage rates will change.












