3/27/2012

Number of FHA Qualified HOAs Falling Drastically

This afternoon I was sent a list of FHA-approved condominium complexes for Long Beach.  They now currently number 34, with two approvals expiring in April, leaving 32 for all of Long Beach.  This is a huge reduction in number compared to a few years ago--these approvals are dropping off for two reasons: HOAs don't realize the requirements have changed or that their approval has expired and that they must renew again, or the HOA complex's financial circumstances don't currently meet FHA guidelines.  But I believe many complexes fall into the first category.

If you are an HOA member, or know someone who is, think about this: If your complex is not approved for FHA-HUD loans, you greatly reduce the number of approved buyers who can bring an offer, thus probably delaying the selling date of your property.

If you are a buyer with an FHA approved loan (especially one being used with certain buyer assistance programs), your selection is now greatly reduced because you simply will not be able to buy in a non-FHA approved condominium complex.

Property owners, you should take active steps to look into this issue.  With today's loan qualifying requirements, FHA loans are accessible for many 1st time and repeat buyers, and in the future they will become even more critical as former owners of distressed properties re-enter the market.

So you think you're going to keep living there, and it doesn't matter?  What if you would like to get a reverse mortgage?  They require your complex to be FHA approved.

Yes, there are lenders willing to qualify your association during escrow, but don't wait until then--it's a much longer process, and the buyer could decide to find another property.

Or the alternative is, if you're a buyer, be prepared to use a lender not of your choice, but one of the few who can give you a similar loan without needing to go FHA. In that case, call me, and I can send you to the right place.

But owners, remember, there are still FHA approvals required for reverse mortgages, therefore contacting your Board of Directors should be at the top of your agenda.

3/26/2012

Positive News in the Long Beach House Market

LB market up in some areas
While it's certainly not true everywhere, the coastal area news is surprisingly up!

Comparing February 2011 to February 2012 in 90803 zip code, there's a huge increase in sales prices! and a huge decrease in the listing supply, and a (huge) increase in pending and closed sales.  Average sales and median prices comparing the two February periods increased by 63% and 41%!

And when comparing the average 90803 sales price over the entire year period, the average sales price increased from $717,997 to $724.188.

This exact same price scenario is not true in all areas, however, but in general it is true throughout Southern California and elsewhere that sales activity has increased greatly, and listing inventory has decreased.

In the 90807 area (Bixby Knolls, California Heights, etc.), the median and average sales prices have increased for the February year comparison period by 16 and 17%, but is down 5-7% when looking at the entire last 12 month period, wtih a 20% increase in closed sales. Again, listing inventory is down by 37%.

Low interest rates are helping to fuel the march towards more buyers finally getting into the act of buying.

If you know of someone thinking of selling, is now the time to start making that move?

For a similar report for your area in Long Beach, Lakewood, Cerritos, Bellflower, San Pedro, Cypress, Seal Beach, Huntington Beach and many other cities in Los Angeles and Orange Counties, just contact me via e-mail or phone!

See more news: Local Regional Market Report--March 2012 -- and check out the 1-Minute Newsletter tab above.

3/22/2012

The 5 Best Home Improvements Projects in Southern California

It's should be no surprise that costs have gone up, but important to know is that the 9-year trend shows a downward cost-value ratio. But still, the Pacific Region in the 2011-2012 Cost vs. Value Report states, "In Pacific Region markets, the high cost of remodeling is more than offset by high values at resale, giving it the highest average cost-value ratio (71.3%) in the country."  And, overall, the report puts the top 10 projects nationwide as giving a value between 69-78%. 
Remodeling Magazine: Regional Comparison
Sellers, at this point, please take note that 1) because you put in a $40,000 bathroom remodel doesn't mean the value of your house went up $40,000, and 2) taking care of deferred maintenance projects, unless a large remodel/upgrade is the replacement, does not add a higher price tag to your home.

And, keep in mind that a low-cost re-do of $3000-$4000 can often be enough to prepare a property for sale, i.e., low-cost kitchen fix-up, vs. spending $19,000+.

Nationally, siding, window and door replacement projects were in the top 10, because certain costs have actually decreased, and also because they are under $19,000. Garage door replacement is now 6th in popularity (it was 13th in the past), and is 15% cheaper than a few years ago. Vinyl siding and vinyl window replacements are also in the top 10.  With remodel projects, adding an attic master bedroom/bath continues to rank in the top 10.  With single-story houses that were originally a two-bedroom/one bath, going up to add more living space has gotten high marks.

For the Pacific Region including California, the following are the top 5 value projects:
  1. Minor kitchen remodel stands out at retaining 91% of its value ( replace: cabinet fronts with new raised-panel wood doors and drawers, including new hardware;  wall oven and cooktop with new energy-efficient models; laminate countertops; install midpriced sink and faucet. Repaint trim, add wall covering, and remove and replace resilient flooring).
  2. Garage Door replacement -88%
  3. Entry Door replacement - 85%
  4. Deck addition - 81%
  5. Window replacement - 81%
Places to look  for contractor sources may be at local tile and kitchen shops, local area classified ads, online directories, and of course, referrals from friends.

3/16/2012

What to Know about the Mortgage Settlement with 5 Major Servicers

The Road to Solutions
The $25 billion proposed settlement with five major banks/servicers has not yet been approved by a judge. However, assuming it is as proposed, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup and Ally Financial will agree to stop the practice of robo-signing, to change their loan modification procedures, and to not foreclose on borrowers who are being considered for a loan modification. A single point of contact and adequate staff to handle consumers are also to be established by each bank. Approximately $20 billion is to go to those facing foreclosure--principal loan reduction and refinance--and $5 billion goes towards settling with consumers who lost their homes due to improper foreclosures between 2008 and 2011. Part of the settlement agreement will result in new requirements for short sales, which is supposed to speed them up and eliminate the often lengthy delays. A fact sheet describes cash payments to borrowers who went through foreclosure.

This settlement is not yet finally approved by a judge--a 4-page executive summary describes key points of the current proposed settlement.

It's important to know that FNMA and Freddie Mac loans are not included in this settlement, and that over half the loans in California in recent years are held by them.  To find out, go to their respective websites and use the Loan Lookup Tool.

California's Attorney General obtained $18 billion specific to California for benefits, and amounts allocated to counties.

It will probably take another 6-9 months for banks to reach out to owners they believe fit into this settlement, and the banks are given 3 years to fully execute the settlement.  As of March 16, Katherine Porter, a UCI Law professor, has been appointed to oversee the California settlement.

Borrowers may call the contact numbers below, but be aware information right now may be incomplete because the administration of this program has not yet begun.
If you or someone you know is unsure of your best option, the first thing to understand is that a refinance, loan modification, short sale, deed-in-lieu or foreclosure is a "waterfall" to be taken in sequence.  The borrower, to be successful, must spend the considerable time required and be prepared to gather the necessary documentation regardless of which option you work with--this cannot be stressed enough.  While contacting banks was a very frustrating and confusing process just 2 years ago, major servicers are much more streamlined, and now with this Settlement, face even more requirements to help borrowers.  Each servicer now has information on their websites about short sales, deeds-in-lieu and foreclosure, and a very informative and useful one is found at www.bankofamerica.com/hometransition .  Think twice before choosing the ultimate option of foreclosure without checking out the others first, and do this at the earliest possible date.  Additional resources are at http://www.juliahuntsman.com/homeowner-property-assistance.html

The borrower is also strongly advised to reach out to an experienced Realtor professional, legal and/or tax advisor, to reduce the time spent in this process and to have an important resource to guide them.

Website on the Settlement:  http://www.nationalmortgagesettlement.com/help

3/02/2012

Which is Better, A Longer or Shorter Turnaround Time For the Distressed Owner? Or, Buying. After a Short. Sale

Do you picture yourself here someday? or someplace like this?
I can't guarantee anything, but the likelihood that your life will turn better faster might be greater if you consider how quickly you (or someone you know) can shorten the time it takes to obtain a loan in the future.

Many people have friends and family members struggling with their situation, and all too often, they think foreclosure and/or bankruptcy are their best avenues--when they haven't really gotten all the information they could yet.  If you know someone like this, please share these guidelines with them because they can make a big difference for them in the future for the next several years:

  • FHA loan -- After a foreclosure, pre-foreclosure, short sale, or a deed-in-lieu, a homebuyer may obtain an FHA loan 3 years after the date of the event. The FICO score requirement today is about 620-640. (There may be exceptions to this time period, if you can prove the default was beyond your control.)
  • VA loan--After a bankruptcy, foreclosure, deed-in-lieu or short sale, a homebuyer may be able to obtain a VA loan 2 years later, with re-established credit.
  • FHA loan & Bankruptcy--After a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, a buyer may be able to obtain an FHA loan 2 years later, with re-established credit. Chapter 13 requires 1 year of payout and court approval for a mortgage.
  • Conventional loan -- After a pre-foreclosure sale/short sale or deed in lieu, a conventional loan requires 2 years from the completion date to get a 20% down loan, 4 years from completion to get a 10% down loan, and 7 years to obtain maximum financing loans. 
  • Conventional loan and foreclosure--It takes 7 years to obtain a conventional loan, and re-established credit.
  • Conventional loan & Bankruptcy--Chapter 7 requires 4 years, and re-established credit; Chapter 13 requires 2 years with a discharged BK, and 4 years with a dismissed BK. There can be no 30-day lates in previous 12 months.
Finally, a foreclosure stays on the credit report for 10 years, for all employers, insurance companies and others investigating your credit worthiness to see, regardless of how you've moved on.  A short sale's impact on your credit rating may be considerably less severe over a shorter period of time due to type of entry made, short sale negotation with the bank and depending on the policy of the servicer/investor.

Not all short sale situations succeed, unfortunately, and there are many reasons for this. However, banks would still prefer to do a short sale than a foreclosure: they don't want REO inventory, and they almost always recoup more money doing a short sale.

The banks come out ahead, and so do you, if you can do a short sale.  Doesn't it make sense to choose the option that would allow you to become a homeowner faster in the future, as well as the option that would have less impact on your long-term credit? And then someday you could be back here again--sooner.

2/29/2012

Staying on Top of HAMP, HAFA and HARP Homeowner Programs

Staying on top of the string of programs created to help owners caught up in the perfect storm of a high unemployment, rampant underemployment and declining home values, can be confusing to say the least. Here’s a brief overview of the acronyms spawned by the foreclosure crisis:
  • HAFA—The Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives program was designed to help homeowners to avoid the negative effects of foreclosure by establishing incentives for completing a short sale or a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure. In a short sale, the loan servicer accepts a loan payoff amount from an underwater borrower that is less than the amount actually owed on the first mortgage. With a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure, the borrower transfers ownership of the property to the loan servicer. HAFA provides for $3,000 in relocation assistance after a successful short sale or deed-in-lieu. Which  route you go depends very much on your immediate and longterm situation--before you act, you should consult with a professional for your options.
  • HAMP—The Home Affordable Modification Program was designed to help homeowners who are no longer able to make mortgage payments on time due to decreased income or an increase in the monthly payment amount. HAMP reduces a homeowner’s monthly mortgage payment to 31 percent of gross income following a series of steps on the part of the mortgage servicer that can include a rate reduction, a term extension of up to 40 years, deferred principal payments, and (possibly) a lowering of principle. Here is the link to the list of servicers or banks agreeing to participate in this program. On the Loan Lookup tool, you may be able to find out if Fannie or Freddie own your loan.
  • HARP—The Home Affordable Refinance Program enables homeowners whose mortgages are backed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac and who owe more than their home it’s worth, to refinance and take advantage of today’s historically low interest rates. Originally, HARP was only available to homeowners whose first mortgage did not exceed 125 percent of the current market value of their home.
  • HARP 2.0—Starting Dec. 1, 2011, the 125 percent loan-to-value ratio will be eliminated, enabling eligible borrowers to refinance under HARP regardless of how far underwater they are on their mortgage.
Making your way through the maze of programs can take time -- and the situation is often more complicated than it looks at first. Take this survey or contact me for additional help contacting or concerning your servicer, and finding out if your loan is owned by Fannie or Freddie.

And, homeowners looking for information on the national mortgage servicing settlement announcement by the Department of Justice should visit NationalMortgageSettlement.com. Click on the logo below for more information:

2/15/2012

Distressed vs. Equity Market in the Long Beach Area

There seems to be a perception (among some people) that high end or "luxury" areas are somehow immune to short sales and foreclosures--but that's not true. The subprime loans, originally targeted for "B" and "C" borrowers, eventually made their way into the "A" borrower range, the borrowers most often buying in the high end price range, because of the tempting terms offered by lenders at the time.  Other factors for distressed sales in those areas are that the accumulated market conditions caused job layoffs or other income reduction, and/or the market value drop caused a short sale or foreclosure in a forced relocation for a borrower otherwise current on mortgage payment. In the high end market areas, many sellers with equity who could not sell simply delayed their plans and took the home off the market if it didn't sell.  But others who needed to sell proceeded with a short sale listing, hoping to find a buyer.

  • For all of 2011, in the 90803 zip code (Naples, Belmont Shore, Bluff Park, Belmont Park, Belmont Heights), approximately 28% of single family homes in the $440,000 to $1.4 million market sold under distressed property conditions. Out of 172 single family home sales listed in the MLS, 47 were designated as a distressed property sale, most of those being short sales.   Condos distressed sales for 2011 were 37 out of 122, or 30% of the condo market in 90803.
  • In the 90814 zip code (Alamitos Heights, and adjacent areas), 34% of single family homes in the $400,000-$900,000 range sold as distressed properties in 2011.

These figures are lower than Long Beach as a whole for 2011, where according to the MLS, 46% of all single family homes sold in Long Beach sold under distressed property conditions.  (These figures for all areas may be lower than the true picture, because some properties are listed as "standard sale" when in fact they are recently foreclosed properties being re-sold by banks which impose their own contract conditions upon the buyer--so they really aren't a standard sales according to standard Realtor contract terms.)


  • In Cerritos, approximately 33% of single family homes listed in the MLS, or 77 out of a total of 231, sold as distressed properties in 2011.
  • Lakewood's distressed single family home sales in 2011 constituted 47% of all single family home sales, comparable to the entire city of Long Beach for distressed home sales.
There really isn't any place that is immune to this category of transaction, certainly not in Southern California. For a consultation about your residential property value, and what you may be able to do, please contact me, or visit my website at www.juliahuntsman.com at "Help for Homeowners".  Don't be one of the potential sellers who does not investigate all options, the bank would really rather have a sold property, a modified loan, a re-finance, rather than a foreclosed property--it helps their values as well.

2/13/2012

Just Sold: 5319 E. Brittain Long Beach CA 90808

5319 E. Brittain St., Long Beach
What a charming house -- beautiful 1945 home sold as a standard sale for $325,000 to the happy buyer represented by me as the selling agent in this sale.
  • 2 bedrooms
  • 1 bath
  • 2-car garage
  • lots of driveway parking space
  • located on cul-de-sac
  • established landscaping front and back
  • lots of rear yard space
If you are interested in an evaluation of your current property and want a comparable market analysis, or you just want to find out about your area market, please contact me right away! 
Whether you are a buyer or a seller, for more information about properties on the market, contact me by phone, or view properties at www.juliahuntsman.com "Property Search".
Lic 01188996

2/02/2012

Just Sold - in Lakewood City, Lakewood--4246 Ocana Ave.

 This 1942, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, home with original hardwood floors in the living room, added master bedroom and added family room, just closed escrow on February 1, 2012. The happy buyer willingly entered into a short sale transaction with the seller for this "opportunity" in Old Lakewood City section of Lakewood, which closed at $315,000. 

As is the case with many short sales, it was a rather lengthy affair, with the seller having obtained numerous offers--but waiting a long time for the right buyer to close escrow! Thanks to everyone who made this sale a success!

Huntsman Properties, Lic 01188996

1/18/2012

Some Increased Loan Costs Starting in 2012

There was a time just a few years ago when PMI (mortgage insurance premium), that cost for putting less than 20% down towards a mortgage, was not tax deductible. Then, with the upswing in the housing market, came the good news in 2006 that it was deductible, so there seemed at least some return on what seemed like an extra cost because you couldn't afford the higher cost (the 20% down payment). 

But, unfortunately for people who need every break possible now, that deduction has expired at the end of December. This will affect potentially millions of homeowners, who probably don't even realize its disappearance at this point. It could mean a difference of several hundred dollars a year, at a minimum, for the first-time and mid-income buyer. Congress failed to renew this, as well as many other benefits in the Tax Code.

In addition, there are new mortgage fee hikes for Fannie and Freddie Mac loans, fees which will undoubtedly get passed along to the consumer, and may mean about 1/8% of a 1 point increase in interest rates. Why?
"Unlike standard guarantee fees, which are used by Fannie and Freddie to defray loan-default expenses, the new funds will be sent directly to the Treasury to help pay for the $36-billion cost of the temporary payroll tax cut. FHA loans also will be hit with a fee increase by the payroll bill, raising the annual premiums the FHA charges new borrowers by one-tenth of a point."
More information on these costs from Ken Harney.
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