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Make Improvements to Your Home With FHA 203K Rehab Loan

We have all heard the negative news lately about the real estate market and the glut of home foreclosures on the market.  You may be thinking now is the time to take advantage of the low interest rates and purchase a foreclosed home.  But the problem may be some of the foreclosed homes you have seen need a lot of repairs and improvements.  You don’t have the cash to make these repairs.  Well, there is good news and it comes in the form of the FHA 203K Rehab Loan.

When I refer to the FHA 203K Loan, I am referring to the FHA Streamlined 203(k) Limited Repair Program.  It is for improvements and repairs that don’t require structural improvements.  It is not for total renovation of a property but for repairs not totaling more than ,000.  The FHA 203K Rehab Loan did have a minimun of ,000 costs of repairs, but that has been eliminated.

There are many benefits for using a FHA 203K Rehab Loan for improvements to a house you are planning on buying.  Also, you can use this FHA Loan Program to refinance your existing mortgage and do repairs and improvement to your existing home.

Some of the benefits of a FHA 203K Streamlined Rehab Loan Are:

1.  The borrower can take out just one mortgage to cover both the purchase of the property and the cost of upgrades.  This loan can be amortized over 30 years, unlike a conventional rehab loan that has a shorter amortization period and higher interest rates.

2.  Like I said before that there is no minimum cost for repairs.  You could use it only to put in an energy-efficient furnace.

3.  There are many different repairs and improvements you can use the loan for.  You can read an article on the list of improvements by clicking on the links at the bottom of this article.

4.  This is not a government loan, it is a FHA insured loan.  There are a lot of FHA Approved Lenders across the country.  Because it is insured by FHA, the FHA Approved Lenders are more willing the make the FHA 203K Rehab Loan.

5.  On of the biggest benefit is the low down payment of 3.5%.  Most conventional rehab loans require a 20% down payment.

6.  Lower interest rate.  Because FHA insures the loan, FHA Approved Lenders can make loans to people that don’t have perfect credit.  That doesn’t mean any one can get a loan, you still have to prove you can pay the loan back.

7.  The FHA 203K Streamline Loan eliminates the need for a consultant, engineers, plans, and consultant’s fees.  This speeds the process up and lowers the costs of the improvements.

As you can see if you are considering buying a home that need repairs or want to make improvements to your own home, the FHA 203K Rehab Loan could be just what you are looking for.

 Make Improvements to Your Home With FHA 203K Rehab Loan

BREAKING NEWS: Refinancing Program For ‘Underwater’ Homeowners Kicks Off TODAY

2712537696 daca568320 m BREAKING NEWS: Refinancing Program For Underwater Homeowners Kicks Off TODAY

Good news for “underwater” homeowners! Starting tomorrow, they can start submitting applications under a revised government program meant to make refinancing easier.

The Obama Administration announced this fall it’s making changes to the Home Affordable Refinance Program so more struggling homeowners can take advantage of it.

The government is doing away with a cap that prevented borrowers whose mortgages exceed 125% of the value of their homes from being eligible for the program. Other changes include reduced risk for lenders and lower fees for borrowers.

Furthermore, Fannie Mae now says it will allow some homeowners to refinance even if they’ve had a foreclosure in the past seven years.

Paton wishes more people knew about the program, saying it’s the best opportunity yet for homeowners to get out of underwater mortgages and refinance into 15-year loans without a huge hit to their monthly budgets.

According to research by Corelogic, the revamped program potentially could help tens of thousands of homeowners in South Florida who owe far more than their homes are worth. More than four out of 10 residential properties with a mortgage in Broward and Palm Beach counties are underwater.

While tomorrow is the official launch date nationwide, some lenders may not be prepared to accept applications right away.

Among the criteria homeowners must meet:

• They need to be current on their mortgage payments.

• The loans must be backed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, the government-run companies that guarantee about half of all home loans nationwide.

• The loans must have been bought by Fannie or Freddie no later than May 31, 2009.

To find out if your loan is owned by Fannie, click here. To see if it’s owned by Freddie, click here.

 BREAKING NEWS: Refinancing Program For Underwater Homeowners Kicks Off TODAY

Report: Foreclosure Crisis has Just Begun

Today, according to a report from the Center for Responsible Lending (a nonprofit agency formed to fight predatory lending), the nation isn’t even halfway through the foreclosure nightmare.

As of February, 2.7 million homeowners who received mortgages from 2004 to 2008 have lost their homes to foreclosure.  It estimates that 3.6 million households remain in serious jeopardy of losing their homes. The report states:  “It is notable that these serious delinquencies represent only a sub-set of likely foreclosures ahead, since they do not include foreclosures on loans originated (outside of 2004 to 2008) or those that are not yet at imminent risk.”

Two other bullet points from the study, based on an analysis of 27 million mortgages originated from 2004 to 2008:

• Florida leads the nation with 17.4 percent of first mortgages on owner-occupied homes that are seriously delinquent or in foreclosure.

• Foreclosure rates are worse for homeowners who took out risky loans touted before the housing bust.

 Report: Foreclosure Crisis has Just Begun

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The agency concluded in a statement: “The bottom line: The foreclosure crisis isn’t going away. Families that could have benefited from homeownership are instead being kicked down the economic ladder, home prices keep falling and economic recovery remains stalled. Many home losses have been and will be unnecessary. With so many losses still ahead, lenders must end loan servicing abuses and get serious about sustainable loan modifications that keep families in their homes.”

 Report: Foreclosure Crisis has Just Begun

Average Rate on 30-Year Fixed Mortgage Increases to 4.74%

300px Freddie Mac.svg Average Rate on 30 Year Fixed Mortgage Increases to 4.74%
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Following increases in Treasury yields, the average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage rose slightly this week.

Yesterday, Freddie Mac announced that the average rate rose to 4.74% this week from 4.71& the previous week. The average rate on the 15-year loan, a popular refinance option, slipped to 4.05% from 4.08%.

Mortgage rates have changed little in the new year after spiking more than half a percentage point in the last two months. Investors sold off Treasurys bonds during that stretch, driving yields lower. Mortgage rates tend to track the yield on the 10-year Treasury note.

The 30-year loan rate reached a 40-year low of 4.17% in November, and the 15-year mortgage rate fell to 3.57%, the lowest level on records dating back to 1991.

Yesterday, the National Association of Realtors said the historically low rates have done little to boost the struggling housing market. Fewer people bought previously owned homes last year than in any year since 1997. The group said sales fell 4.8% last year to 4.91 million units. That was a few thousand homes lower than sales levels in 2008, making it the worst level in 13 years.

Record high foreclosures, a weak job market and expectations that prices will fall further have convinced potential buyers to hold off on purchasing homes.

In order to calculate average mortgage rates, Freddie Mac collects rates from lenders across the country on Monday through Wednesday of each week. Rates often fluctuate significantly, even within a single day.

The average rate on a five-year adjustable-rate mortgage slipped to 3.69% from 3.72%. The five-year hit 3.25% last month, the lowest rate on records dating back to January 2005.

The average rate on one-year adjustable-rate home loans rose to 3.25% from 3.23%.

The rates do not include add-on fees, known as points. One point is equal to 1% of the total loan amount. The average fee for the 30-year and 15-year loan in Freddie Mac’s survey was 0.8 point. The average fee for the five-year ARM was 0.7 point, and the fee for the 1-year ARM was 0.6 point.

 Average Rate on 30 Year Fixed Mortgage Increases to 4.74%

Bank Repossessions Jump Almost 80% in 2010

2010 was a record year for bank repossessions of South Florida homes. Lenders foreclosed on 20,400 homes in Broward County, 11,000 in Palm Beach County and 23,000 in Miami-Dade County, according to CondoVultures.com, a consulting firm. The 54,400 repossessions represent a 79% increase over 2009.

Lenders have taken back more than 121,000 properties since 2007, when the foreclosure mess exploded.

Peter Zalewski, principal of CondoVultures, states: “Nearly as many properties were taken back by lenders in 2010 as in the previous two years combined.”

 Bank Repossessions Jump Almost 80% in 2010

New Study Claims Borrowers are Less Likely to Default on Local Lenders

4570927521 8f1cf4b561 m New Study Claims Borrowers are Less Likely to Default on Local Lenders
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According to a study done at Ohio State University, low and moderate-income homeowners who borrowed from local lenders were less likely to default than those who secured mortgages from more distant banks or mortgage brokers.

Stephanie Moulton, an assistant professor at OSU, states: “The door you walk into when you’re looking for a loan matters a lot. Local banks seem to offer some protection to homebuyers, particularly those with low incomes who may be seen as risky borrowers.”

She said local lenders may do a better job of collecting information on prospective borrowers. These banks typically take other factors into consideration besides credit scores, such as length of employment and whether the borrowers make regular deposits in a savings account. Moulton’s definition of “local” focused on an institution’s lending concentration and bank branch locations in a particular market.

Moulton said borrowers may feel more obligated to pay if they have a relationship with a particular lender. And those banks tend to provide more education to borrowers, helping them be better homeowners. She concludes: “This kind of information may give a more complete picture of whether a person can really afford a mortgage, particularly for higher-risk borrowers. Some of the local bankers told me they won’t even look at a credit score until they have talked to an individual and determined if they think he or she can make the payments.”

 New Study Claims Borrowers are Less Likely to Default on Local Lenders

2011: Freddie Mac Announces They Will Provide Pool-Level Delinquency Data on Securities

300px Freddie Mac.svg 2011: Freddie Mac Announces They Will Provide Pool Level Delinquency Data on Securities
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Yesterday, Freddie Mac announced that beginning in January 2011, the company will begin disclosing pool-level delinquency data on a monthly basis for all single-family Freddie Mac Participation Certificate (PC) and Giant PC securities.

Freddie Mac says providing this delinquency disclosure data at the pool level will make the company’s delinquency disclosures consistent with an industry practice previously established by Ginnie Mae.

Currently, Freddie Mac provides aggregate delinquency data by PC cohort each month to the market and investors about the GSE’s single-family securities. However, market participants have expressed interest in more detailed delinquency information when analyzing the attributes of Freddie Mac securities.

Starting next month, Freddie Mac will provide the disclosures on a special section of the company’s Web site. Each month, Freddie will disclose for each PC and Giant PC the loan count and associated aggregate unpaid principal balances (UPB) for mortgage loans that fall into one of four delinquency groups: 30-59 days delinquent, 60-89 days delinquent, 90-119 days delinquent, and 120 days or more delinquent. The information will also include the percentage of delinquent loans as measured against the total number of loans in each security.

Additionally, the new monthly disclosures will include information about certain seriously delinquent loans purchased by Freddie Mac from each PC and Giant PC. As previously announced by the GSE, the company purchases these loans from the related securities because the loans are 120 days or more delinquent and the cost of making guarantee payments exceeds the cost of holding such loans in Freddie Mac’s portfolio or the loans have continued their delinquency for a total of 24 months.

Mark Hanson, Freddie Mac’s VP of mortgage funding, concludes: “Freddie Mac is providing the market more timely and detailed information about delinquencies of loans backing our PC and Giant securities. We understand that the new disclosures may aid market participants in modeling prepayment speeds. We will continue to consider disclosure enhancements that meet our investors’ changing needs.”

 2011: Freddie Mac Announces They Will Provide Pool Level Delinquency Data on Securities

1 in 4 Florida Mortgages are in Trouble

300px US mortgage delinquencies 1 in 4 Florida Mortgages are in Trouble
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Yesterday, the Mortgage Bankers Association released a survey stating that  one of four mortgages is in trouble.

As the huge number of loans already in trouble began to decline, the rate at which home loans fell into foreclosure in Florida in the third quarter increased.

Florida has the largest percent of loans in foreclosure – 13.68% – of any state. That’s down, slightly, from 14.04% in the previous quarter.

Additionally, 11.02% of mortgages in Florida are past due, 30 days or more. That is a small increase from 10.97% in the previous quarter.

Add it all up and in the third quarter, Florida had 813,652 loans either delinquent or in foreclosure, which is down from 849,002 in the second quarter.

Although major lenders including Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase began to halt foreclosures or foreclosure sales at the end of September, those announcements came at the end of the quarter and did not have a big impact on the numbers.

A most troubling point in the report was the percent of new foreclosures started, which rose both in Florida and in the nation. In Florida, that figure was 2.32% in the third quarter, up from 2.07% in the previous quarter.

 1 in 4 Florida Mortgages are in Trouble

Latest Foreclosure Freeze Will Not Hurt Housing Market

300px Chase al Latest Foreclosure Freeze Will Not Hurt Housing Market
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According to industry experts at this weekend’s Fort Lauderdale Foreclosure Convention, the foreclosure freezes by big lenders won’t have a dramatic effect on the South Florida housing market. They stated that inventory may be tight, but plenty of distressed homes remain for sale even as JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, and other institutions have pulled properties from the market during the past six weeks over concerns about paperwork errors.

Peter Zalewski, principal at CondoVultures thinks the banks likely will take the rest of the year to review filing procedures before resuming foreclosures at the beginning of 2011. He states: “Come January, they’re going to get very, very aggressive.” Even though questions have been raised about what might happen to properties that were improperly repossessed by lenders and later resold, Zalewski concluded he doesn’t envision investors losing their money. He maintains that investors and other buyers who get title insurance shouldn’t have any worries.

This past weekend at the convention, Boca Real Estate Investment Club founder David Dweck encouraged investors to be careful but insisted there is opportunity. He told them to buy inexpensive homes and hold the properties for three to five years while earning rental income. He states: “Do not get caught up in all the hype. If you overpay, you will pay later.”

 Latest Foreclosure Freeze Will Not Hurt Housing Market

JPMorgan Chase Announces They Will Restart Suspended Foreclosures

2137209605 4a092d6a6f m JPMorgan Chase Announces They Will Restart Suspended Foreclosures

JPMorgan Chase Tower

Great news for everyone in the default servicing business! JPMorgan Chase will begin re-filing affidavits later this month for some 127,000 foreclosures that have been on hold because of “robo-signing” issues.

Yesterday in Boston, Charlie Scharf, head of the bank’s retail financial services unit, told a group of analysts and investors that the company will begin resubmitting affidavits in these cases within “the next couple of weeks.”

Scharf says his company risks losing a couple million dollars each month the foreclosure proceedings are delayed. The re-filings should begin by mid-November and will take at least three to four months to complete.

Bank of America says it has begun resubmission of 102,000 cases affected by procedural errors. GMAC Mortgage has re-filed 9,523 affidavits with the courts, and is in the process of reviewing another 15,500.

Scharf says JPMorgan’s reviews have identified two fundamental problems in its foreclosure process: 1) Affidavits were approved and recorded without the signer having personal knowledge of all information in the filing. 2) Documents were notarized without being properly witnessed.

In his presentation, Scharf attempted to dispel what he said were common misconceptions about the affidavit issues. He stressed that borrowers who are current have not been foreclosed on and that all of the company’s foreclosure decisions are “based on materially accurate information” that calls for repossession of the property.

According to Scharf, JPMorgan has multiple checks and controls in place throughout the foreclosure process to confirm sufficient contact and modification efforts have been made and foreclosure decisions are appropriate.

He also assured analysts and investors that all liens and records of ownership have been properly transferred.  According to Scharf, another myth is that foreclosures are being pursued too aggressively – he states they are not. On average,

homeowners have not made a mortgage payment in over 14 months at the time of foreclosure. Some have argued that servicers aren’t able to cope with the high volumes of defaults – Scharf disagrees and claims his company can handle the workload. Scharf noted that JPMorgan currently has over 17,000 default employees with almost 13,000 involved in loss mitigation efforts. In efforts to avoid another foreclosure “freeze”, he added that staff members that are independent of the operational process are responsible for checking the loan status at least twice, once before a loan is referred to foreclosure and once before foreclosure sale.

 JPMorgan Chase Announces They Will Restart Suspended Foreclosures
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