Archive for February, 2010
Why would you advertise, “Please rob me!”
Posted by Danny in Health and Safety on February 23rd, 2010
If you are going out of town, would you hang a sign on your door stating that your home is empty? Most people have been doing just that! The meteoric rise in the use of social networking sites is having some unintended consequences. One that is gaining a lot of attention is that by publicly posting online that you are on vacation or just away from home, you are declaring to the world that your home is currently empty!
This post was inspired by this article: Your Facebook profile: An open invite to Crime?
But most credit for raising awareness to this risk in the security of your home goes to Please Rob Me, which is a site that is now drawing a great deal of online media attention.
VA loans, closing costs required to be paid by the seller
On loans guaranteed by the Veterans Administration, the seller is required to pay 100% of escrow, not the traditional 50% split between the buyer and seller.
The VA also states that approximately $1,200 of lender fees CANNOT be paid by the veteran. Typically, these fees will be stated as seller expenses on the HUD-1 statement, though a lender may choose to pay or waive some of these closing fees. Common names for these lender fees include: document preparation, underwriting, processing, administration, etc…
Sources:
Kelly Parkman of the KParkman Mortgage Group
If you have any questions regarding purchasing a home with a VA Home Loan, selling your home to a buyer using a VA loan, or any other real estate questions, please give me a call at 503-267-8370 or email me at dannyshepard@oregonfirst.com.
Danny
Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives Program (HAFA) goes into effect on April 5, 2010
Posted by Danny in Short Sales and Foreclosure on February 19th, 2010
If you have questions concerning this program or know a distressed home owner in need of viable options, please contact me at:
dannyshepard@oregonfirst.com
503-267-8370
Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives Program (HAFA)
On November 30, 2009, the Treasury Department released guidelines and forms for its new Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives Program (HAFA). HAFA is part of the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP). HAFA provides incentives in connection with a short sale or a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure (DIL) used to avoid foreclosure on a loan eligible for modification under the HAMP program. Servicers participating in HAMP are also required to comply with HAFA. A list of servicers participating in HAMP is available at MakingHomeAffordable.gov.
HAFA applies to loans not owned or guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, which will issue their own versions of HAFA in coming weeks.
HAFA is a complex program, with 43 pages of guidelines and forms, designed to simplify and streamline use of short sales and deeds-in-lieu of foreclosure. HAFA:
- Complements HAMP by providing a viable alternative for borrowers (the current homeowners) who are HAMP eligible but nevertheless unable to keep their home.
- Uses borrower financial and hardship information already collected in connection with consideration of a loan modification.
- Allows borrowers to receive pre-approved short sales terms before listing the property (including the minimum acceptable net proceeds).
- Prohibits the servicers from requiring a reduction in the real estate commission agreed upon in the listing agreement (up to 6 percent).
- Requires borrowers to be fully released from future liability for the first mortgage debt (no cash contribution, promissory note, or deficiency judgment is allowed).
- Uses standard processes, documents, and timeframes/deadlines.
- Provides financial incentives: $1,500 for borrower relocation assistance; $1,000 for servicers to cover administrative and processing costs; and up to $1,000 for investors for allowing a total of up to $3,000 in short sale proceeds to be distributed to subordinate lien holders (on a one-for-three matching basis).
- Requires all servicers participating in HAMP to implement HAFA in accordance with their own written policy, consistent with investor guidelines. The policy may include factors such as the severity of the potential loss, local markets, timing of pending foreclosure actions, and borrower motivation and cooperation.
The program does not take effect until April 5, 2010, but servicers may implement it before then if they meet certain requirements. The program sunsets on December 31, 2012.
Source: http://www.realtor.org/government_affairs/short_sales_hafa














