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How long is the wait to buy after foreclosure in Orlando?

July 9th, 2011 No comments

Orlando Short Sales, expert, specialist, Realtor, Keller Williams Realty, agent, broker, short sale, stop foreclosure
A sluggish housing market has caused millions of homeowners to lose their home to foreclosure, short sale, or deed in lieu of foreclosure. But once these former homeowners get a better handle on their credit, how long do they have to sit on the sidelines until they can secure future financing to buy a home again?

As an article in The New York Times notes, “there are plenty of asterisks and conditions” when it comes to how long a borrower must wait after a “significant derogatory event,” like a foreclosure or short sale.

In general, however, The New York Times reports that the longest wait to buy again will come if there is a foreclosure in the former homeowner’s past.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have a three-year waiting period following a foreclosure, and a two-year wait following a short sale, deed in lieu, or discharge or dismissal of bankruptcy. However, if borrowers can justify that the circumstance for the foreclosure or bankruptcy occurred because of an illness or job loss — or other “extenuating circumstance” — that may help reduce their wait. But with no such extenuating circumstances, these former homeowners may have to wait longer, even up to seven years following a foreclosure or four years after bankruptcy, the article notes.

For loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration, borrowers with perfect credit afterwards also will, in general, have to wait three years after a foreclosure and two years after a bankruptcy is discharged, The New York Times notes.

Following a short sale, borrowers will have to wait three years to secure another FHA loan — however, there are plenty of exceptions. Borrowers will have to wait three years if they were in default at the time of the short sale and had no extenuating circumstances. However, if the borrowers were on time with all their payments a year prior to the short sale, they may have no wait at all and might even qualify for an FHA loan immediately.

“The key is to avoid the foreclosure,” Andrew Wilson, a spokesman for Fannie Mae, told The New York Times. “That is what will help you be eligible for the shorter period.”

Source: “The Post-Foreclosure Wait,” The New York Times, (June 23, 2011)

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Jerry LaRose is an Orlando Area Residential Real Estate Expert and Foreclosure Specialist who can assist you with the purchase and/or sale of Real Estate in Orlando, Windermere, Winter Garden, Kissimmee, St. Cloud, East Orlando, Longwood, Altamonte Springs, Maitland, Winter Park, Oviedo, Apopka, Lake Mary, Clermont, Ocoee Florida or any place in the country. Jerry has created a team of professionals throughout Orlando and the country to ensure that you enjoy a smooth transition to your new area.
Please visit:
Avoid Foreclosure / Short Sale Help http://OrlandoShortSaleExpert.com, or http://ShortSellMyOrlandoHome.com
Our Website http://JerryLaRose.com or www.JerrySellsOrlando.com, or http://OrlandoRealEstateVoice.com ,
If you’re a Buyer looking for Great Deals – http://InvestmentPropertyDealsOrlando.com
Please give me a call if you have questions about the Orlando and Central Florida real estate market.
P.S. If you are listing your home as a short sale in Orange, Seminole, Polk, Lake, Osceola and Brevard County Florida and Orlando, East Orlando, St. Cloud, Davenport, Clermont, Longwood, Windermere, Winter Garden, Kissimmee, Winter Park, Altamonte Springs, Maitland, Apopka, Lake Mary, Oviedo or Ocoee Florida make sure you hire an agent and realtor who knows how to do short sales and has the experience to get the job done. We are doing successful short sale packages. The short sale process is complicated and we can help simplify it.
We also have now expanded to help homeowners to Stop Foreclosure in Brevard County Florida. Servicing Melbourne, Coco, Coco Beach, Satellite Beach, Palm Bay, Indian Harbour Beach, South Patrick Shores, Palm Shores, Rockledge, Cocoa West, Merritt Island, Port Saint John and Titusville Florida

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Many Orlando area Homeowners ask Do we stay and pay, or walk away?

June 27th, 2011 No comments

Dayna and Scott Merritt ask themselves almost every day if they should keep paying their mortgage.

Many other residents on their street, Helens Pouroff Avenue, stopped long ago. Since the 69 new homes on this street were sold in 2006, almost half the owners have defaulted on their mortgages. Most of the houses went into foreclosure, which helped drive prices down for others on the street.

The Merritts’ house has suffered a typical fate. The couple paid $385,000 for it in 2006. It’s now worth about $180,000, recent sales indicate, and Las Vegas prices are still falling.

The Merritts are torn between continuing to sink money into a house that may never regain its value or finding a way out. They have plenty of company. About 11 million U.S. homeowners are underwater on their mortgages, meaning they owe more on them than their homes are worth. Of those, 2 million are so deeply underwater that market researcher CoreLogic predicts their homes will go into foreclosure or distressed sales.

The risk that more of those homeowners will default threatens housing markets nationwide, says CoreLogic economist Sam Khater. What’s happened here does little to quell those fears.

Five years after the carnage began, those who walked from their Helens Pouroff homes say they’re recovering from financial ruin. Several say they’re considering buying homes again. But those still here have only seen values erode further. One by one, more consider an escape, which could mean walking away from their mortgage.

“We’ve stuck it out. But there’s been no ‘attaboy,’“ says Dayna Merritt, 43, a substitute teacher. “We’re paying on something that seems like it won’t work out for us.”

The threat of defaults driven by continued home price declines and a sputtering U.S. economy is particularly acute in Las Vegas, the foreclosure capital of the U.S. for more than four years.

Here, 66 percent of homeowners with a mortgage are underwater, compared with 23 percent nationwide. Almost one in four Nevadans who lost homes to foreclosure admitted in a survey that they walked away from their mortgages even though they could afford to pay, according to the Nevada Association of Realtors.

Defaulting on a mortgage can have dire consequences, including a 150-point drop in credit scores, tainted credit reports for up to 10 years if one goes bankrupt, lost access to credit, and higher costs for such things as insurance and new loans. In most states, lenders have years to try to collect losses suffered from foreclosures or other distressed home sales. That can lead to seized bank accounts and garnished wages, says Michele Johnson, CEO of Las Vegas Consumer Credit Counseling Service. People who abandon a mortgage will “live under a cloud” for years, she says.

Still, the grinding down of resolve to keep paying on deeply underwater homes is evident on Helens Pouroff, a straight, sun-baked street behind security gates where stucco homes are separated by a few feet of rock garden and small changes in floor plans.

Last year, Helens Pouroff saw just one new notice of default after 17 were filed in 2009, according to public records tracked by researcher ForeclosureRadar. This year, four homeowners who bought in 2006 have defaulted, public records show. “There’s two types of people,” says Dave Peterson, 38, a former Helens Pouroff homeowner. “People who see it coming and do something right away, and people who try to hold on until something forces them to let go.”

A ‘toxic asset’

Peterson let go fairly early. He defaulted on his Helens Pouroff home in late 2008.

Like others, the former real estate agent bought in the up-and-coming Las Vegas suburb expecting prices to continue to sizzle. Instead, they peaked the month he bought and then tanked, as did Peterson’s income. “I looked at our expenses like a corporation looks at their expenses, and the (house) was a toxic asset,” Peterson says.

Peterson declared bankruptcy in 2009 and moved out of his $353,000 Helens Pouroff home. He loved the house, 1,800-square-feet with a tile courtyard, but not the $3,000-a-month mortgage for an asset declining in value.

Peterson suffered the pains of bankruptcy. His father, a Wyoming man who bought one house in his lifetime, thought the mortgage default was “irresponsible,” Peterson says. He searched six weeks to find a rental for his wife and new baby as Las Vegas landlords scoffed at his credit rating, which fell to the 500s from the respectable 700s.

Now, almost two years out of bankruptcy, Peterson’s credit score is back to 680, he says. That’s about 60 points below the level needed to get the best pricing on home loans.

Without a $3,000-a-month mortgage to worry about, the couple pays $1,350 a month for a rented townhouse in a nicer neighborhood.

Instead of running up credit card debt to stretch income mainly devoted to paying their mortgage, Peterson, who now works in health care sales, and his wife, Gabby, save one of four paychecks they earn each month.

The couple hopes to buy a house in their neighborhood next year. Peterson could be eligible for a home loan through the Veterans Administration. To get a conventional loan, he’d probably have to wait another year, because of his bankruptcy.

“I think we’re in a good place now,” Peterson says. To have stayed on Helens Pouroff, he says, “would’ve felt like prison.”

Numbers told the story

Tamara Lemmon, a 33-year-old Internet marketing entrepreneur, feels the same way.

She bought the same month as Peterson but defaulted months earlier, after running through savings and losing an advertising job. A former professional poker player who’s good with numbers, Lemmon sat with a spreadsheet in 2008 and calculated how long it might be before her home again would be worth what she paid for it 18 months before. “It was like 20 years,” she says.

Lemmon filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection in 2008, listing $1.4 million in real estate debt, including the Helens Pouroff house and three rental properties. They all went back to the banks. Lemmon remarried and moved to Utah. She could be eligible for a home loan this summer through the Federal Housing Administration.

Not paying her previous debts “still bugs me,” Lemmon says. But leaving Helens Pouroff “was absolutely the best financial decision.”

Because they filed for bankruptcy, their mortgage debts were erased and Peterson and Lemmon run no risk that they’ll be hunted down by lenders for losses suffered on their homes.

In most states, including Nevada, mortgage lenders have years to go after debtors who don’t file for bankruptcy to try to recoup losses from foreclosures or short sales. A short sale is when lenders and borrowers agree to sell a house for less than what’s owed.

Nationwide, lenders have not been aggressive in pursuing foreclosure losses on a broad basis, real estate attorneys say. But they still have time, and many will likely sell such cases to debt collection agencies, says Florida foreclosure defense attorney Roy Oppenheim. “I don’t think we’ve seen the end of this yet,” he says.

Lemmon opted for bankruptcy to avoid such a cloud. “I didn’t want to feel I was looking over my shoulder. I just wanted closure,” she says. One regret in letting the house go?

“That I didn’t do it sooner,” she says.

Money ‘we’ll never see again’

Busting out was easier for Peterson and Lemmon than for others. Like 31 of the 69 original Helens Pouroff buyers, Peterson put down no money, taking advantage of the lending standards of the time. Lemmon put about 6 percent down.

Those with minimal downpayments have been more likely to default, USA TODAY found in analyzing ForeclosureRadar data.

Of the homeowners who put less than $100 down to buy, about half defaulted on the mortgage, records indicate. Of those who put more than $69,000 down, about 40 percent defaulted. The Helens Pouroff homes, in 2006, ranged from $322,000 to almost $470,000, depending on size.

Belinda and William Haag were one of the couples who put a big chunk down, $82,000 that “we’ll never see again,” says Belinda Haag, 53.

The couple, both federal government contractors, have failed to get their Helens Pouroff loan modified and still owe $344,000 on a home they estimate might sell for $180,000. They pay $2,044 a month on the mortgage. They could rent a similar house in the same area for about $1,000 a month, Haag says.

After paying for five years, the Haags expect to put their home on the market this summer. They’re hoping for a short sale, which can be less damaging to credit ratings than a foreclosure. If the bank doesn’t agree to a short sale, “We walk,” Haag says. “We’re going to go back to renting and will put money in our 401(k)s.”

Rachael, 41, and Joseph Stewart, 46, likewise have run out of patience with their Helens Pouroff mortgage. They recently stopped paying and are hoping their lenders alter their loan.

The Stewarts, who paid top dollar for their home, have watched one house after another go into foreclosure. They’ve picked up trash and plucked weeds in abandoned front yards. The couple also altered their lifestyle as the recession hammered Joseph’s chiropractor practice.

Rachael Stewart, a high school chemistry teacher, now shops at T.J.Maxx and Target, not Dillard’s. She gets her hair cut every nine weeks, not every six. The couple sold their Mini Cooper.

“I took a coupon class,” she says. “I used to throw those things away.”

The last straw for the Stewarts came a few months ago when a law enforcement official showed up at their door, looking for a new neighbor who rents a similar house for far less than what the Stewarts pay to own, Stewart says. When the Stewarts bought in 2006, the development barred rentals. “I’m just irritated,” she says. “Everybody else gets a break. I’ve never stopped paying my bills before,” she says.

The Stewarts’ loan was modified last year to run 40 years instead of 30. Given continued price drops, they want more concessions. If they don’t get them, “We could buy a house like this for half as much,” Stewart says, perched at the long granite counter in her kitchen. “We thought we’d raise our kids here. But it is just a house.”

The Stewarts live across the street from their friends, the Merritts. The Merritts started the loan-modification process in 2009. They never finished as reports of others’ failed attempts flew through the neighborhood and the news media.

The Merritts also made a big downpayment, almost $80,000, when they bought in 2006.

Now, Scott Merritt’s father, a retired Marine, sends him a spreadsheet each month detailing how long it will take the couple to climb out of the hole not even considering getting their $80,000 back. The latest estimate: 2020.

“He says, ‘Walk away; walk away,’“ says Scott Merritt, 40. “But what then?”

Merritt has searched for nearby rentals so his children could stay in the same schools or other good ones. There isn’t much to rent in those neighborhoods, he says. Merritt, who moved a lot as a kid, wants more stability for his children, ages 8 and 10. The couple have good credit, a sense of obligation for their debts and distaste for the uncertainty of moving. They bought the home knowing they wouldn’t be able to save early on. But Dayna was pursuing a master’s degree, which she completed to be a school counselor. Jobs are now scarce, and the Merritts still can’t save.

Scott Merritt’s income, as a tipped banquet server at Caesars Palace, fell 10 percent in recent years. The family now goes to the park, for free, not the movies. Last year, instead of flying to San Antonio for vacation, they drove. Twenty hours.

The Merritts also are five years closer to college bills and retirement than when they bought the home. If the Stewarts leave the street, there’s one less reason to stay. “Every month,” Dayna Merritt says, “I ask myself, ‘Why are we paying this?’“

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Jerry LaRose is an Orlando Area Residential Real Estate Expert and Foreclosure Specialist who can assist you with the purchase and/or sale of Real Estate in Orlando, Windermere, Winter Garden, Kissimmee, St. Cloud, East Orlando, Longwood, Altamonte Springs, Maitland, Winter Park, Oviedo, Apopka, Lake Mary, Clermont, Ocoee Florida or any place in the country. Jerry has created a team of professionals throughout Orlando and the country to ensure that you enjoy a smooth transition to your new area.
Please visit:
Avoid Foreclosure / Short Sale Help http://OrlandoShortSaleExpert.com, or http://ShortSellMyOrlandoHome.com
Our Website http://JerryLaRose.com or www.JerrySellsOrlando.com, or http://OrlandoRealEstateVoice.com ,
If you’re a Buyer looking for Great Deals – http://InvestmentPropertyDealsOrlando.com
Please give me a call if you have questions about the Orlando and Central Florida real estate market.
P.S. If you are listing your home as a short sale in Orange, Seminole, Polk, Lake, Osceola and Brevard County Florida and Orlando, East Orlando, St. Cloud, Davenport, Clermont, Longwood, Windermere, Winter Garden, Kissimmee, Winter Park, Altamonte Springs, Maitland, Apopka, Lake Mary, Oviedo or Ocoee Florida make sure you hire an agent and realtor who knows how to do short sales and has the experience to get the job done. We are doing successful short sale packages. The short sale process is complicated and we can help simplify it.
We also have now expanded to help homeowners to Stop Foreclosure in Brevard County Florida. Servicing Melbourne, Coco, Coco Beach, Satellite Beach, Palm Bay, Indian Harbour Beach, South Patrick Shores, Palm Shores, Rockledge, Cocoa West, Merritt Island, Port Saint John and Titusville Florida
Call us at 407-580-7011 or email at jerry@JerryLaRose.com to find out more about Orange County Short Sales and Orlando Area Short Sales.
Orlando Short Sales, expert, specialist, Realtor, Keller Williams Realty, agent, broker, short sale, stop foreclosure

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Foreclosure sales slow, but remain very high, Orlando still among the top

May 28th, 2011 No comments

Orlando Short Sales, expert, specialist, Realtor, Keller Williams Realty, agent, broker, short sale, stop foreclosure

 

Sales of homes in some stage of foreclosure declined in the first three months of the year, but they still accounted for 28 percent of all home sales — a share nearly six times higher than what it would be in a healthy housing market.

Foreclosure sales, which include homes purchased after they received a notice of default or were repossessed by lenders, hit the highest share of overall sales in a year during the first quarter, foreclosure listing firm RealtyTrac Inc. said Thursday.

“It’s an astronomically high number,” said Rick Sharga, a senior vice president at RealtyTrac. “In a normal market, you’re looking at the percentage of homes sold in foreclosure to be below 5 percent.”

The pace at which homes are entering the foreclosure process has slowed in recent months amid bank and court delays. But distressed properties remain a fixture of a housing market still searching for a sustained recovery. The properties, often in need of repair, typically sell at a discount, weakening prices for other types of homes.

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

 

 

As a slice of all home purchases, foreclosure sales peaked two years ago at 37.4 percent. In the first quarter, they rose from 27 percent in prior quarter, but fell from 29 percent a year earlier, according to RealtyTrac.

Sales of foreclosure properties didn’t fare much better than other types of homes, however.

In all, 158,434 homes in some stage of foreclosure were sold in the first quarter, down 16 percent from the last three months of 2010 and down 36 percent versus a year ago. Sales of all other types of homes also declined sharply, according to RealtyTrac’s figures, which differ from other home-sales estimates.

While the number of bank-owned properties sold declined, they grew as a share of all home sales. Bank-owned homes accounted for nearly 19 percent of all sales, up from 17 percent in the fourth quarter and up from 18 percent a year ago, the firm said.

That’s not good news for the housing market.

Story: Bill would let appraisers ’round up’ home values

RealtyTrac estimates there are 872,000 homes that have been repossessed by lenders, but have yet to be sold. At the first-quarter’s sales pace, it will take three years to clear the inventory of 1.9 million properties already in some stage of foreclosure.

For bank-owned properties alone, that amounts to a 2-year supply.

“Clearly, the housing market is not out of the woods,” Sharga said.

Homebuyers who purchased a bank-owned home in the first quarter saved an average of 35 percent versus the average price of other types of homes, RealtyTrac said.

That discount is unchanged from the previous quarter, but up from an average of 33 percent a year ago.

Buyers who snapped up other homes in the foreclosure process, including short sales, got an average discount of 9 percent, the firm said. That’s down from an average of 13 percent in the fourth quarter and an average of 14 percent a year ago. In a short sale, the seller and their lender agree to sell the home for less than what is owned on the mortgage.

The biggest foreclosure discounts were to be had in Ohio, where foreclosure properties sold for an average of 41 percent less than other types of homes, RealtyTrac said.

The average sales price of a foreclosure property was $168,321, down 1.9 percent from the fourth quarter and 1.5 percent from the first quarter last year, the firm said.

At a state level, Nevada led the nation with foreclosure sales accounting for 53 percent of all home sales, RealtyTrac said. That was down from 59 percent the year before.

The state has the highest foreclosure rate in the nation and an inventory of nearly 28,000 bank-owned properties on bank’s books. Buyers scooping up foreclosure properties there in the first quarter got an average discount of nearly 18 percent compared to the average sales price of other types of homes, RealtyTrac said.

In California, foreclosure sales accounted for 45 percent of all home sales in the first quarter, down from nearly 48 percent a year earlier. The average foreclosure property sold for nearly 34 percent less than the average sales price of homes not in foreclosure.

In Arizona, foreclosure sales represented 45 percent of all home sales for the quarter, down from 47 percent a year earlier.

Several other states had foreclosure sales that accounted for at least one quarter of all home sales in the first quarter: Idaho, Florida, Michigan, Oregon, Virginia, Colorado, Illinois, Georgia and Ohio.

 

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Jerry LaRose is an Orlando Area Residential Real Estate Expert, who can assist you with the purchase and/or sale of Real Estate in Orlando, Windermere, Winter Garden, Kissimmee, St. Cloud, East Orlando, Longwood, Altamonte Springs, Maitland, Winter Park, Oviedo, Apopka, Lake Mary, Clermont, Ocoee  Florida or any place in the country. Jerry has created a team of professionals throughout Orlando and the country to ensure that you enjoy a smooth transition to your new area.

Please visit:

Avoid Foreclosure / Short Sale Help  http://OrlandoShortSaleExpert.com, or http://ShortSellMyOrlandoHome.com

Our Website http://JerryLaRose.com or www.JerrySellsOrlando.com,  or http://OrlandoRealEstateVoice.com ,

If you’re a Buyer looking for Great Deals –  http://InvestmentPropertyDealsOrlando.com

Please give me a call if you have questions about the Orlando and Central Florida real estate market.

P.S. If you are listing your home as a short sale in Orange, Seminole, Polk, Lake  or Osceola County Florida and Orlando, East Orlando, St. Cloud,  Davenport, Clermont, Longwood, Windermere, Winter Garden,  Kissimmee, Winter Park, Altamonte Springs, Maitland,  Apopka,  Lake Mary, Oviedo or Ocoee Florida make sure you hire an agent who knows how to do short sales and has the experience to get the job done. We are doing successful short sale packages. The short sale process is complicated and we can help simplify it.

Call us at 407-580-7011 or email at jerry@JerryLaRose.com to find out more about Orange County Short Sales and Orlando Area Short Sales

 

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Fannie Mae’s Delinquencies Continue Year-Long Decline, Orlando Short Sales the way to go

May 2nd, 2011 No comments

Orlando Short Sales, expert, specialist, Realtor, Keller Williams Realty, agent, broker, short sale, stop foreclosure

Fannie Mae has released new details on its book of business, which shows the share of mortgages it owns or guarantees that’s past due by three months or longer has been on a steady decline for a year now.

The nation’s largest mortgage company reported that its seriously delinquent rate on single-family mortgage loans slipped to 4.44 percent in February of this year. That’s down just 1 basis point from 4.45 percent in January, but it marks the 12th straight month that the rate has decreased.

In February 2010, the Washington, D.C.-based GSE’s seriously delinquent rate stood at 5.59 percent, and it’s dropped every month since.

On Thursday, both Fannie Mae and its government-backed counterpart Freddie Mac announced that under the directive of their regulator, the two companies are aligning their procedures for handling past-due mortgages.

With the new guidelines, the GSEs’ goal is to create a consistent and transparent process that enables homeowners to make better informed decisions to avoid foreclosure.

The new rules direct servicers to reach out to delinquent homeowners earlier, provide a single point-of contact for borrowers throughout the loss mitigation process, align

mortgage modification terms between the two companies, put all borrowers into a trial period prior to a permanent modification, and adhere to specific foreclosure processing timelines.

Under the new guidelines, servicers must conduct a formal review of each case to ensure a borrower has been considered for foreclosure alternatives before the loan is referred for foreclosure. In addition, the servicer will not be allowed to move ahead with a foreclosure action while engaged in loss mitigation efforts to resolve the delinquency.

Monetary incentives will be awarded to servicers that perform well and fines will be imposed on those that do not. Fannie Mae anticipates providing its servicers with full guidelines on the updated requirements during the second quarter. Dates for putting the new rules into effect have not yet been issued.

“Fannie Mae has long advocated for servicing standards that include clear and consistent options,” said Michael J. Williams, president and CEO of Fannie Mae. “We have taken unprecedented steps to educate families about their options through our Fannie Mae Mortgage Help Centers, KnowYourOptions.com, and other mortgage relief efforts.”

Williams continued, “The servicing alignment initiative complements these efforts, which is good for families and good for American taxpayers. Fannie Mae fully supports this Initiative, and we remain committed to stabilizing communities and building a stronger foundation for housing.”

Fannie Mae recently released its 2010 Mission Report, detailing the company’s efforts to provide liquidity and stability to the nation’s mortgage finance market.

The GSE reports that last year, it provided funding for 599,000 borrowers to buy homes, refinanced the mortgages of 2.1 million homeowners to put them into more sustainable loans, and helped more than 500,000 homeowners avoid foreclosure.

 

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Jerry LaRose is an Orlando Area Residential Real Estate Expert, who can assist you with the purchase and/or sale of Real Estate in Orlando, Windermere, Winter Garden, Kissimmee, St. Cloud, East Orlando, Longwood, Altamonte Springs, Maitland, Winter Park, Oviedo, Apopka, Lake Mary, Clermont, Ocoee  Florida or any place in the country. Jerry has created a team of professionals throughout Orlando and the country to ensure that you enjoy a smooth transition to your new area.

Please visit:

Avoid Foreclosure / Short Sale Help  http://OrlandoShortSaleExpert.com, or http://ShortSellMyOrlandoHome.com

Our Website http://JerryLaRose.com or www.JerrySellsOrlando.com,  or http://OrlandoRealEstateVoice.com ,

If you’re a Buyer looking for Great Deals –  http://InvestmentPropertyDealsOrlando.com

Please give me a call if you have questions about the Orlando and Central Florida real estate market.

P.S. If you are listing your home as a short sale in Orange, Seminole, Polk, Lake  or Osceola County Florida and Orlando, East Orlando, St. Cloud,  Davenport, Clermont, Longwood, Windermere, Winter Garden,  Kissimmee, Winter Park, Altamonte Springs, Maitland,  Apopka,  Lake Mary, Oviedo or Ocoee Florida make sure you hire an agent who knows how to do short sales and has the experience to get the job done. We are doing successful short sale packages. The short sale process is complicated and we can help simplify it.

Call us at 407-580-7011 or email at jerry@JerryLaRose.com to find out more about Orange County Short Sales and Orlando Area Short Sales

 

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State foreclosure facts, Orlando area amongst the worst, More people need to learn about the Short Sale Process

February 25th, 2011 No comments

One media story says foreclosures are up – the next story says foreclosures are down. A report released by Florida Realtors clears up the confusion by explaining the three different levels of foreclosure activity that analysts consider, and listing the state numbers for each during 2010.

“The Florida Foreclosure Report” found general confusion about the definition of foreclosure. One group might focus on the number of homeowners who received at least one notice of foreclosure and consider that “the number of homes in foreclosure.” A second group might focus only on the number of homes actually taken over by a bank. But while the number of foreclosure notices could be rising, the number of homes actually taken over by a bank could be declining.

The report outlines three levels of foreclosure, which added together are the “foreclosure rate”:

• Lis Pendens: Homes under Lis Pendens have received at least one foreclosure notice.

• Notice of foreclosure sale: Homes that received a notice have been scheduled for a foreclosure sale, but the homeowner may still find a way to keep the house.

• Real estate owned (REO): Bank-owned homes post-foreclosure.

In 2010, only 2,800 Florida properties made it through the foreclosure process to become REOs. Of the rest, 180,402 were Lis Pendens and 140,105 received a notice of foreclosure sale. However, the total number of homes in some phase of foreclosure – all three categories – comes out to 323,307 Florida households.

Other report highlights:

• In 2010, 1 in every 29 Florida housing units were in some phase of foreclosure. In 2008, it was only 1 in every 54.

• The top Florida counties for high foreclosure rates are, in order: Lee, Miami-Dade, Osceola, Charlotte and Orange.

• The Florida counties for lowest foreclosure rates are, from least up: Taylor, Union, Jefferson, Lafayette and Liberty.

The complete report is posted online on Florida Realtors website under Legislative Research.
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Jerry LaRose is an Orlando Area Residential Real Estate Expert, who can assist you with the purchase and/or sale of Real Estate in Orlando, Windermere, Winter Garden, Kissimmee, St. Cloud, East Orlando, Longwood, Altamonte Springs, Maitland, Winter Park, Oviedo, Apopka, Lake Mary, Clermont, Ocoee Florida or any place in the country. Jerry has created a team of professionals throughout Orlando and the country to ensure that you enjoy a smooth transition to your new area.
Please visit:
Avoid Foreclosure / Short Sale Help http://OrlandoShortSaleExpert.com, or http://ShortSellMyOrlandoHome.com
Our Website http://JerryLaRose.com or www.JerrySellsOrlando.com, or http://OrlandoRealEstateVoice.com ,
If you’re a Buyer looking for Great Deals – http://InvestmentPropertyDealsOrlando.com
Please give me a call if you have questions about the Orlando and Central Florida real estate market.
P.S. If you are listing your home as a short sale in Orange, Seminole, Polk, Lake or Osceola County Florida and Orlando, East Orlando, St. Cloud, Davenport, Clermont, Longwood, Windermere, Winter Garden, Kissimmee, Winter Park, Altamonte Springs, Maitland, Apopka, Lake Mary, Oviedo or Ocoee Florida make sure you hire an agent who knows how to do short sales and has the experience to get the job done. We are doing successful short sale packages. The short sale process is complicated and we can help simplify it.
Call us at 407-580-7011 or email at jerry@JerryLaRose.com to find out more about Orange County Short Sales and Orlando Area Short Sales.

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Orlando Foreclosure Sellers 4 options

January 31st, 2011 No comments

Foreclosure Options For Sellers


Seller’s Four Choices

1. Do Nothing
2. Become a “professional” litigant
3. Seek forbearance, loan modifications, and/or deed in lieu
4. Choose to do a Short Sale
a. retail buyer only
b. investor buyer

Click below on “Foreclosure Seller’s 4 Options” to Listen to a 7 minutes audio from attorney Jeff Watson on your Foreclosure options.

Foreclosure Seller’s 4 Options

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Jerry LaRose is an Orlando Area Residential Real Estate Expert, who can assist you with the purchase and/or sale of Real Estate in Orlando, Windermere, Winter Garden, Kissimmee, St. Cloud, East Orlando, Longwood, Altamonte Springs, Maitland, Winter Park, Oviedo, Apopka, Lake Mary, Clermont, Ocoee  Florida or any place in the country. Jerry has created a team of professionals throughout Orlando and the country to ensure that you enjoy a smooth transition to your new area.

Please visit:

Avoid Foreclosure / Short Sale Help  http://OrlandoShortSaleExpert.com, or http://ShortSellMyOrlandoHome.com

Our Website http://JerryLaRose.com or www.JerrySellsOrlando.com,  or http://OrlandoRealEstateVoice.com ,

If you’re a Buyer looking for Great Deals –  http://InvestmentPropertyDealsOrlando.com

Please give me a call if you have questions about the Orlando and Central Florida real estate market.

P.S. If you are listing your home as a short sale in Orange, Seminole, Polk, Lake  or Osceola County Florida and Orlando, East Orlando, St. Cloud,  Davenport, Clermont, Longwood, Windermere, Winter Garden,  Kissimmee, Winter Park, Altamonte Springs, Maitland,  Apopka,  Lake Mary, Oviedo or Ocoee Florida make sure you hire an agent who knows how to do short sales and has the experience to get the job done. We are doing successful short sale packages. The short sale process is complicated and we can help simplify it.

Call us at 407-580-7011 or email at jerry@JerryLaRose.com to find out more about Orange County Short Sales and Orlando Area Short Sales.

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Orlando, Florida Foreclosure Relief

January 28th, 2011 No comments

Orlando, Florida Foreclosure Relief

When is Foreclosure Removed from Your Credit Report?

Use this handy guide to figure out how quickly you can buy a home after a major financial setback when applying for a loan through FHA, Fannie Mae, or Freddie Mac. Read

Foreclosure Help: 5 Pros You Need on Your Team

Know which experts provide foreclosure help—often at no cost to you—and how to find them. Read

Foreclosure Alternative: The Short Sale

A short sale is far from hassle-free, but it’s a better alternative than foreclosure. And now you’ve got a little help from your friends in D.C. Here are the facts about short sales and how to get started. Read

Facing Foreclosure: What to Do Right Now

If you’re facing foreclosure, don’t panic: Take steps right now to save your home or at least lessen the blow of its loss. Read

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Jerry LaRose is an Orlando Area Residential Real Estate Expert, who can assist you with the purchase and/or sale of Real Estate in Orlando, Windermere, Winter Garden, Kissimmee, St. Cloud, East Orlando, Longwood, Altamonte Springs, Maitland, Winter Park, Oviedo, Apopka, Lake Mary, Clermont, Ocoee  Florida or any place in the country. Jerry has created a team of professionals throughout Orlando and the country to ensure that you enjoy a smooth transition to your new area.

Please visit:

Avoid Foreclosure / Short Sale Help  http://OrlandoShortSaleExpert.com, or http://ShortSellMyOrlandoHome.com

Our Website http://JerryLaRose.com or www.JerrySellsOrlando.com,  or http://OrlandoRealEstateVoice.com ,

If you’re a Buyer looking for Great Deals –  http://InvestmentPropertyDealsOrlando.com

Please give me a call if you have questions about the Orlando and Central Florida real estate market.

P.S. If you are listing your home as a short sale in Orange, Seminole, Polk, Lake  or Osceola County Florida and Orlando, East Orlando, St. Cloud,  Davenport, Clermont, Longwood, Windermere, Winter Garden,  Kissimmee, Winter Park, Altamonte Springs, Maitland,  Apopka,  Lake Mary, Oviedo or Ocoee Florida make sure you hire an agent who knows how to do short sales and has the experience to get the job done. We are doing successful short sale packages. The short sale process is complicated and we can help simplify it.

Call us at 407-580-7011 or email at jerry@JerryLaRose.com to find out more about Orange County Short Sales and Orlando Area Short Sales.

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Florida leads U.S. in serious mortgage delinquencies

November 22nd, 2010 No comments


Florida still leads the nation in the percentage of homeowners who are “seriously delinquent” on their loans, the Mortgage Bankers Association said Thursday.

In the state, 19.52 percent of borrowers were either 90 days past due or in foreclosure in the third quarter. Add in borrowers who are 30 and 60 days late, and nearly one in four Floridians are behind on their loans.

The good news is that Florida’s seriously delinquent rate is down from 20.13 percent in the second quarter. But no other state met Florida’s lofty level of late payers. Nevada was No. 2 at 17.83 percent, while Illinois’ 10.77 percent ranked third.

With Florida’s job market still weak and home prices way down from a few years ago, it’s no surprise that the state’s delinquency rates are so high, said Jack McCabe, a real estate analyst in Deerfield Beach.

“With 48 percent of the state’s homeowners underwater, we’re going to continue to see delinquencies go up,” McCabe said. “The truth is a lot of people have given up and have stopped paying their mortgages.”

Part of the blame lies with the way foreclosures are handled in Florida, said Michael Fratantoni, the Mortgage Bankers’ vice president of research and economics. Florida and other states where foreclosures go through the courts have foreclosure inventories that are twice as high as so-called non-judicial states, he said.

Of course, the court system is only partly to blame for Florida’s delinquency problem. The bigger culprits are a withering collapse in prices and an 11.9 percent jobless rate that’s well above the national unemployment rate of 9.6 percent.

Nationally, the delinquency rate fell, too, which the Mortgage Bankers Association attributed to modest improvements in the job market. The foreclosure freeze at some lenders hasn’t played a role in falling delinquencies.

“The foreclosure paperwork issues announced by several large servicers in late September and early October are unlikely to have had a large impact on the third-quarter numbers,” Fratantoni said.

This certainly tells us that that we’re not close to being out of this foreclosure mess. Once again, I’ll say that things will continue until 2015 before we start seeing any improvement. If you’re in this situation and need help give us a call. We specialize in short sales and we can help.

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Jerry LaRose is an Orlando Area Residential Real Estate Expert, who can assist you with the purchase and/or sale of Real Estate in Orlando, Windermere, Winter Garden, Kissimmee, St. Cloud, East Orlando, Longwood, Altamonte Springs, Maitland, Winter Park, Oviedo, Apopka, Lake Mary, Clermont, Ocoee Florida or any place in the country. Jerry has created a team of professionals throughout Orlando and the country to ensure that you enjoy a smooth transition to your new area.
Please visit:
Avoid Foreclosure / Short Sale Help http://OrlandoShortSaleExpert.com, or http://ShortSellMyOrlandoHome.com
Our Website http://JerryLaRose.com or www.JerrySellsOrlando.com, or http://OrlandoRealEstateVoice.com ,
If you’re a Buyer looking for Great Deals – http://InvestmentPropertyDealsOrlando.com
Please give me a call if you have questions about the Orlando and Central Florida real estate market.
P.S. If you are listing your home as a short sale in Orange, Seminole, Polk, Lake or Osceola County Florida and Orlando, East Orlando, St. Cloud, Davenport, Clermont, Longwood, Windermere, Winter Garden, Kissimmee, Winter Park, Altamonte Springs, Maitland, Apopka, Lake Mary, Oviedo or Ocoee Florida make sure you hire an agent who knows how to do short sales and has the experience to get the job done. We are doing successful short sale packages. The short sale process is complicated and we can help simplify it.
Call us at 407-580-7011 or email at jerry@JerryLaRose.com to find out more about Orange County Short Sales and Orlando Area Short Sales.

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Foreclosures fall 9%

November 11th, 2010 No comments


According to a report released by RealtyTrac, Foreclosure filings of all kinds, including notices of default, notices of auctions and notices of auction sales, dropped 4.4% during October, but it’s not because fewer people are losing their homes. Instead, the market is seeing a temporary stay from banks freezing foreclose auctions to review loan documents. The drop in repossessions came after increases in four of the six previous months, topped by an all-time high in September, when 102,000 people lost their homes. In October, 93,246 homes were repossessed.

Rick Sharga, Senior Vice President of RealtyTrac, believes there could be a further drop-off in November, because the impact of the freeze was not fully reflected in the October report. While that may result in further declines in bank repossessions, Sharga expects it to take many months before overall foreclosure rates really improve. There is still a very large backlog of borrowers who stopped paying their mortgages long ago but who have not yet been served with a single foreclosure filing and so are not being counted in RealtyTrac’s statistics. “Today, servicers are waiting longer and longer to put people in foreclosure,” said Sharga. “It’s not unusual for someone in default go six to nine months without receiving a notice of default.”

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Jerry LaRose is an Orlando Area Residential Real Estate Expert, who can assist you with the purchase and/or sale of Real Estate in Orlando, Windermere, Winter Garden, Kissimmee, St. Cloud, East Orlando, Longwood, Altamonte Springs, Maitland, Winter Park, Oviedo, Apopka, Lake Mary, Clermont, Ocoee Florida or any place in the country. Jerry has created a team of professionals throughout Orlando and the country to ensure that you enjoy a smooth transition to your new area.
Please visit:
Avoid Foreclosure / Short Sale Help http://OrlandoShortSaleExpert.com, or http://ShortSellMyOrlandoHome.com
Our Website http://JerryLaRose.com or www.JerrySellsOrlando.com, or http://OrlandoRealEstateVoice.com ,
If you’re a Buyer looking for Great Deals – http://InvestmentPropertyDealsOrlando.com
Please give me a call if you have questions about the Orlando and Central Florida real estate market.
P.S. If you are listing your home as a short sale in Orange, Seminole, Polk, Lake or Osceola County Florida and Orlando, East Orlando, St. Cloud, Davenport, Clermont, Longwood, Windermere, Winter Garden, Kissimmee, Winter Park, Altamonte Springs, Maitland, Apopka, Lake Mary, Oviedo or Ocoee Florida make sure you hire an agent who knows how to do short sales and has the experience to get the job done. We are doing successful short sale packages. The short sale process is complicated and we can help simplify it.
Call us at 407-580-7011 or email at jerry@JerryLaRose.com to find out more about Orange County Short Sales and Orlando Area Short Sales.

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As more Orlando homeowners walk away, experts fear for nation’s morals

October 11th, 2010 No comments

Americans have taken a sharp slap in the face from the housing crisis, financial crisis and jobs crisis. Now, some wonder if the residue of those harsh realities is an ethical crisis.

For the first time in the nation’s history, bankers say, people are walking away from mortgages they can otherwise afford to pay. The phenomenon known as strategic default was once unthinkable. It represents a calculated decision to hand over the keys to a home without making good on a loan, reasoning that it makes no sense to keep paying the monthly mortgage when the home is worth thousands of dollars less than the obligation.

Jeff Horton, a 33-year-old Orlando, Fla., technology manager, is among those who recently decided to take the step. He told his lender that he’s done making payments on the condo he bought in 2005 and the home he bought in 2007, because he wants to move from Florida and can’t sell or rent the properties at a price nearly high enough to cover his payments.

“Life is too short,” said Horton, who has mortgages totaling about $400,000 with Bank of America – about twice as much as he thinks he would get if he could sell the property. He says he has little choice because the bank has refused to refinance the mortgages or adjust original terms.

Strategic default is a symptom of a housing market that suddenly turned from “American Dream” to financial trap. With the Norman Rockwell-like images of homeownership decimated by a 30 percent plunge in prices, some fear America is also losing its grip on another idyllic notion: that people will live by the slogan, “My word is my bond.”

Morgan Stanley recently estimated that about 18 percent of defaults will be strategic. In a recent Pew Research Center survey, 36 percent of Americans said that walking away without paying a mortgage is acceptable, at least under certain circumstances. Fifty-nine percent said the practice is unacceptable.

The saying “My word is my bond” was first posted in the London Stock Exchange in the late 1920s to convey living up to promises. Now, after the worst financial disaster since that period, people such as Horton say they have no such image of Wall Street or large banks as trustworthy institutions, and that has allayed guilt about walking away from mortgages.

“I felt guilty at first,” said Horton. “It all stopped when I saw them take $90 million in executive bonuses. They take bailout money and do nothing for the little guy. They wouldn’t do anything for me.”

Overburdened with mortgages, people conclude they won’t be able to send their children to college, save anything for retirement or move to a place where they can find a job. But as they go through the soul-searching and guilt connected with walking away, Maddux noted they often point to a sense of betrayal.

He said he frequently hears: “I don’t feel bad for the banks. They let this happen. Banks made the mistake of giving a loan to anyone if they had a pulse. Their loose lending standard led to a bubble, and the regulators should have controlled this.”

Banking expert E. Philip Davis sympathizes with that point of view, but he also points out the implication of homeowners walking away from a commitment.

“It makes them as bad as the bankers,” said Davis, a Baptist minister in the United Kingdom who teaches courses on fostering stability in the financial system.

The erosion of the ethic of keeping promises “will be a cancer for society,” said Davis, who was with the Bank of England and is now a fellow at the U.K.’s National Institute of Economic and Social Research.

On the surface, one consequence is evident: If bankers don’t trust that people will pay off their loans, banks will demand higher interest and other assurances before lending in the future.

In fact, there’s research behind the concern, says Tom Donaldson, a University of Pennsylvania Wharton business ethics professor. And it shows that both bankers and borrowers are at risk if trust erodes.

“We’ve known for decades that trust is critical to successful business,” said Donaldson. “Studies have shown that if one party cheats on one end, the other party feels more entitled to cheat. It’s not the most noble way, but it is human nature, and it becomes a race to the bottom.”

Research into strategic default by University of Chicago Booth School of Business professor Luigi Zingales shows what he calls “the contagion effect.” “The stigma goes down once you see someone else do it,” he said.

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Jerry LaRose is an Orlando Area Residential Real Estate Expert, who can assist you with the purchase and/or sale of Real Estate in Orlando, Windermere, Winter Garden, Kissimmee, St. Cloud, East Orlando, Longwood, Altamonte Springs, Maitland, Winter Park, Oviedo, Apopka, Lake Mary, Clermont, Ocoee  Florida or any place in the country. Jerry has created a team of professionals throughout Orlando and the country to ensure that you enjoy a smooth transition to your new area. Please visit http://OrlandoShortSaleExpert.comhttp://OrlandoRealEstateVoice.com ,  www.JerrySellsOrlando.com, or http://InvestmentPropertyDealsOrlando.com for your Orlando real estate needs.  Please give me a call if you have questions about the Orlando and Central Florida real estate market.

P.S. If you are listing your home as a short sale in Orange, Seminole, Polk, Lake  or Osceola County Florida and Orlando, East Orlando, St. Cloud,  Davenport, Clermont, Longwood, Windermere, Winter Garden,  Kissimmee, Winter Park, Altamonte Springs, Maitland,  Apopka,  Lake Mary, Oviedo or Ocoee Florida make sure you hire an agent who knows how to do short sales and has the experience to get the job done. We are doing successful short sale packages. Call us at 407-580-7011 to find out more about Orange County Short Sales and Orlando Area Short Sales.

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