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Posts Tagged ‘Orlando Short Sales’

What Could Force More Orlando Short Sales

January 3rd, 2011 No comments


Despite a government program designed to streamline and incentivize the process, short sales have not even come close to keeping up with foreclosure sales.

That may be about to change.

If banks see higher losses from foreclosures than from short sales, they may put more resources into approving these deals, where the borrower is allowed to sell the home for less than the value of the loan.

“Loss severities on distressed U.S. residential mortgage loans are likely to increase an additional 5-10 percent from current levels due to higher loss mitigation and foreclosure expenses and weakening home values,” according to a report from Fitch Ratings.

Fitch: The anticipated increases for each sector’s average loss severities are expected to be as follows:

  • Prime loans: currently 44%, increasing to 49%-54%;
  • Alt-A loans: currently 59%, increasing to 64%-69%;
  • Subprime loans: currently 75%, increasing to 80%-85%.

We are already seeing home prices double dip in many markets, and that is expected to continue at least through the first half of 2011. One way to mitigate the losses is through short sales. “Short sales generally experience recovery rates about 10 percent higher than foreclosure sales,” according to Fitch.

Will this be enough to push the banks? Unclear.

Servicers actually rake in a lot of money from fees surrounding foreclosures, and so far the government’s “Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternative,” program, which pays servicers cash incentives for doing short sales, has had pretty poor results, really still in the hundreds of loans. Second liens pose a big problem, but many big bank servicers also hold the second liens.

It’s all about where the math comes out. If home prices fall far enough, the equation may tip from foreclosure to short sale.

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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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Short sales, tall benefits….Answers to your Orlando short sale questions

December 17th, 2010 No comments

Q: Would you let me know what the benefit of doing a short sale is? –Linda

A: Whether there are benefits to doing a short sale, and what they are, depends on a number of factors, including whether you are buying or selling, where you are located, and the specifics of your personal finances and situation.

For clarity’s sake, let’s start with a definition: A short sale is a home that is being sold for less than the payoff amounts owed at the time of sale to all outstanding mortgage holders and lien holders. More simply, to “short sale” a property is to sell a home for less than is owed on it, with the permission of all entities and persons who hold loans or liens that are secured by the property.

The way your question is phrased leads me to suspect that you are a seller, but I’m not 100 percent sure, so let’s talk quickly about benefits of buying a short sale as a buyer. There are really very few.

For a buyer, the primary motivation for buying a property that is a short sale is that the particular home desired has more loans and liens on it than will be paid off by the purchase price (and the sellers cannot or will not make up the difference).

It is not necessarily, or even usually, the case that short sales reflect a discount from the fair market value of the home to the buyer; the discount that gives rise to the “short” moniker is actually a discount to the seller from the amount they owe

For buyers who are concerned that they may not receive absolutely clear title when they purchase a foreclosed home, due to bank problems with processing foreclosure documents, the short sale does offer the advantage of all parties — bank, buyer and seller — agreeing to the transfer of title, rather than the title being forcibly taken by the bank via foreclosure.

This is a small or illusory advantage, though; given the fact that short-sale approvals by banks can take anywhere from six weeks to eight months, with no certainty that they will actually close, the advantage to a buyer of doing a short sale arises almost entirely from the ability to secure a particular home the buyer wants very badly.

Also, in some markets, many of the homes on the market are short sales, so there’s not much of a choice on the buyer’s part.

For sellers, though, there are many more factors at play. To begin with, usually a short sale is being considered only by a seller who owes more on the home than it is worth, who has come to the conclusion that he can no longer afford to keep the home for whatever reason, and is resigned to selecting between letting the home go back to the bank via foreclosure or selling the home via a short sale. So, let’s look at the pros and cons of short sales in the context of comparing them with foreclosures.

At the dawn of the housing crisis about four years ago, the conventional wisdom was that short sales were less injurious to the sellers’ credit scores than a foreclosure, and that’s why many sellers decided to go the short-sale route.

Since then, though, the FICO score algorithm has been revised and we’ve seen the credit effects of many more short sales AND foreclosures than we had before; the consensus among industry insiders is now that short sales and foreclosures cause roughly equivalent credit score damage — especially since banks have a tendency to mostly approve short sales on accounts that are in default, or behind on their mortgage payment.

As a result, most successful short sales incur credit damage not just from the short sale, but also from multiple late mortgage payments, similar to a foreclosure.

For purposes of income taxation, both foreclosures and short sales involve cancellation of debt income, which is normally taxable by the federal and most state governments. Currently, though, the Mortgage Debt Forgiveness Relief Act of 2007 exempts homeowners from incurring federal income tax when they divest of their homes through either foreclosure or short sales through 2012; most states have a similar rule, so there’s no advantage (or disadvantage) to a short sale there.

There are really two significant, possible advantages to selling your home via short sale vs. letting it go to foreclosure, as I see it. The first is that with some loan products, the post-short-sale waiting period before you can qualify to buy another home may be shorter than the post-foreclosure waiting period.

There are lots of caveats and exceptions, but on an FHA loan, some short-sale sellers — namely those who are not behind on their loans at the time of sale, a small population indeed — may be eligible for a new loan immediately after their short sale closes.

For conventional (i.e., non-FHA) loans, one most common guideline requires a two-year waiting period following a short sale or deed-in-lieu of foreclosure (more on the deed-in-lieu in a moment), compared with a seven-year post-foreclosure waiting period for conventional loans.

To be clear, though, FHA loans only impose a three-year waiting period after a foreclosure, and FHA loans have a much lower minimum down payment requirement and similar interest rates (on today’s market) to conventional loans. As a result, the short sale effectively allows you to buy within one to three years sooner than you would if your home was lost to foreclosure, assuming that’s something in which you’d be interested.

The other advantage of a short sale over foreclosure is that in a short sale, sellers can sometimes eliminate their exposure to a later deficiency judgment or lawsuit by their second mortgage or home equity line lender.

In some states, a lender who forecloses on a home can later sue the homeowner for the difference between what they owed and what the lender was able to sell the home for; in a short sale, smart sellers (and their agents and attorneys) can negotiate for the lender to agree not to later come after the seller for any deficiency.

Similarly, it may be possible to get to waive later liability on the seller’s part as part of their agreement to accept less than they are owed in the course of a short sale. This can be a very big deal; even in non-deficiency-judgment states — these subordinate loans and lines of credit expose the former homeowner to liability for years following a foreclosure.

I like to think of these alternatives — short sale, deed-in-lieu and foreclosure — as stages in a single process. While it’s true that the post-short-sale waiting period is only two years on a conventional loan if the mortgage was current before the short sale, the reality is that most short-sellers find it nonsensical to pay the mortgage on a home they know they will be losing, one way or the other. Additionally, many banks simply don’t approve short sales on accounts with current payments.

Also, I feel there’s no sense in agonizing over whether to sell your home via short sale when, ultimately, much of whether you’d be able to successfully do so is out of your control as a seller; without putting the place on the market, you don’t know whether you’ll get a buyer to bite or the bank(s) to sign off on a short sale.

As a result, for upside-down homeowners who are clear that they can’t keep their homes, one wise course of action is to stop making mortgage payments and immediately list their home for sale as a short sale. (The commissions and taxes on sale are paid out of the proceeds of the sale, if it goes through, FYI.)

If you get an offer and the bank approves the short sale, make sure to work with your broker and/or attorney to get all future liability for your loans and liens waived as part of the deal.

If you don’t get an offer, most banks will allow you to apply for a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure after you’ve had the property on the market for at least 90 days.

If the bank approves of that, you should still try to get all liability waived by the lender in first position and try to negotiate a cash-for-keys exchange to help defray your move-out expenses (note: you may still have to deal with subordinate lenders and HELOC holders in the future).

If the bank rejects your application for a deed-in-lieu, continued non-payment of the mortgage will eventually result in losing the home to foreclosure, in a time frame ranging anywhere from six to 20 months-plus following the first missed mortgage payment.

Whatever route you go, I would advise any seller considering a short sale to consult with us first or your real estate attorney and/or certified public accountant.

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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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Is Home affordable Modification Program (HAMP) dead? It seems so, here in Orlando, Fl.

November 20th, 2010 No comments

“It’s safe to say that HAMP isn’t meeting its goal of preventing foreclosures,” Representative Maxine Waters said at a House Financial Services subcommittee hearing after the Treasury provided a preview of a report by the U.S. Treasury Department. According to the report, homeowners are dropping out of the Obama administration’s foreclosure prevention program at a faster rate than they are joining it. Bankers, housing regulators and members of Congress agreed on this much in the week’s second congressional hearing on foreclosure problems: The system needs fixing. Borrowers aided by the Home Affordable Modification Program grew to nearly 520,000 in October, up 23,750 from a month earlier, the Treasury said in its monthly report. The increase was less than five percent. A total of 36,300 borrowers have dropped out of the plan for failing to make their payments, an increase of 24 percent from a month earlier.

The Treasury and the Department of Housing and Urban Development issue monthly progress reports on HAMP, a $50 billion program authorized by Congress in 2009. The program was targeted to reach more than 3 million homeowners by paying mortgage servicers $1,000 to rewrite loan terms and $1,000 annually as long as the borrower participates, up to three years. The program has been faulted by lawmakers and watchdogs including Neil Barofsky, special inspector general for the Troubled Asset Relief Program, for the high number of recipients who default on mortgages after getting the government aid. Banks seized more than 93,000 homes in October, according to Irvine, California-based data seller RealtyTrac Inc.

There were nearly 3.3 million foreclosure starts from September 2009 through September 2010, according to LPS Applied Analytics in Jacksonville, Florida. Mortgage servicers say they are trying to balance the needs of borrowers and the demands of investors who own their loans. “We’ve reached a crossroad between modification efforts now and the reality of foreclosure. Despite our best efforts and numerous programs, for some customers foreclosure will be unavoidable,” said Rebecca Mairone, default servicing executive for Bank of America Corp. home loans, at today’s House hearing.

Nearly everyone that I’ve spoken with has tried to a loan modification but has failed for one reason or another. If you are in this situation, don’t let the bank foreclose. The next step is to do a short sale. Call or contact me for information on what it is and how to get started.

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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 Real Estate Market Statistics November 2010

November 15th, 2010 No comments

Orlando Real Estate Market Pulse Nov 2010

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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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The 3 F’s mean trouble

November 9th, 2010 No comments

“Now that we’ve gotten the Q3 reports from Fannie, Freddie and the FHA, the picture of housing’s future is becoming ever clearer.  The combined Real Estate Owned (REO) inventory of the three rose 24 percent quarter to quarter and 93 percent year over year.

In real numbers, at the end of Q3 there were a record 293,171 REO’s sitting on their books. This of course doesn’t count REO held by the banks and private label securities. That’s up from 153,007 at the end of Q3 2009.  Granted, the GSE’s and FHA have disposed of (sold) an awful lot of properties. In the first 9 months of this year they’ve sold over 200,000, but that still leaves us, net, with the above numbers, which are also rising at a fast clip.  Now let’s add the foreclosure mess.

The numbers I just reported don’t account for the foreclosure sale freezes that are still in place in many states, because the freezes didn’t happen until the very last few weeks of Q3. REO inventory will likely drop precipitously in Q4, as all those foreclosures sit in limbo with no sales and no evictions, only to surge again once the banks get the paperwork flowing again.  None of this should come as any surprise, given that the number of bank repossessions surged to new record highs at the end of the summer.  So why am I bombarding you with all these numbers? Because as I have always said, over and over, the housing’s recovery is based almost entirely on inventory.  We can talk prices, affordability, confidence, foreclosures, scandals, politics, whatever you want, but in the end it comes down to supply and demand.  We are looking at a ballooning supply coupled with dwindling demand. You do the math.”

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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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31% of defaults could be strategic, Orlando may be the same.

November 2nd, 2010 No comments

The financial crisis and ensuing recession apparently changed the mindset of Americans toward their homes, turning what long has been the American Dream into just another financial investment.

The result, strategic defaults – people walking away from the property and mortgages not because they have to, but because they can.

The key consideration is time, said Jon Maddux, of YouWalkAway.com, which helps people turn their properties back to their banks. Some experts estimate nearly a third of all mortgage defaults – 31 percent – are of the strategic variety.

RealtyTrac reported 2 million foreclosures in September and said one in 371 housing units received a foreclosure notice.

Easy mortgages made people glorified renters rather than proud homeowners, with no emotional or financial ties.

“People who made the decision to buy at the wrong time got stuck in a house that may not recover (its value) for 10 to 15 years. Does it make sense to keep it as an asset? No. It’s throwing good money after bad when it takes so long to break even. So they decide to stop now. Their credit will recover in three or four years,” Maddux told UPI.

“Life is too short,” Jeff Horton, 33, of Orlando, Fla., told the Chicago Tribune earlier this month. Horton has $400,000 in mortgages with Bank of America and said he decided to walk away from his loans because he can’t sell or rent the properties for enough money to cover the payments.

As the housing bubble burst, real estate values plummeted and homeowners found themselves “underwater” – owing more than their homes were worth.

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

Banks made the situation worse, giving people who wanted to refinance a hard time, even refusing to do anything for them at all – sometimes because the homeowners were still making payments.

Chris Deaner of Sun City, Ariz., told CBS’ “60 Minutes” he was fed up. Deaner and his wife bought a house in 2006 for $262,000 but the property is worth only $142,000 on today’s market. He asked his bank for help.

“They refused to,” he said. “They said it was going to affect my credit and they were going to take my house. And I pretty much said, ‘Go for it.’”

The federal government has to take some of the blame. As Washington pushed banks to make homeownership easier, bankers heard “open the floodgates,” Maddux said. Banks started offering no-money- or little-money-down mortgages to people who wouldn’t be able to sustain the payments for the long-term, then bundled the mortgages into security instruments and sold them off.

“They (the banks) didn’t hold the paper any more. They felt no responsibility to make good loans,” Maddux said. “They only had to be good for a little bit of time and then they could sell them off. It was make money quick and pass the hot potato.”

Gone are the days of George Bailey’s Building and Loan where the bank took its proceeds and invested them back into the community.

But home ownership still is usually one’s biggest investment and there are indications attitudes toward mortgages are changing.

Freddie Mac, the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp., reported last week people are putting more money into their mortgages rather than taking out when they refinance – something that was all but unheard of in recent years. The report said 33 percent of refinancers put more money into their principal, compared to 18 percent who pulled equity out.

Foreclosures are running 65 percent higher than last year in the third quarter, RealtyTrac reported.

“The underlying problems that are causing homeowners to miss their mortgage payments – high unemployment, underemployment, toxic loans and negative equity – are continuing to plague most local housing markets,” RealtyTrac Chief Executive Officer James Saccacio said. “And these historically high foreclosure rates will continue until those problems are resolved.”

And the foreclosure process itself is not without problems. A number of large mortgage lenders in the past month halted foreclosures because of paperwork errors and Wells Fargo last week admitted problems with 55,000 of its foreclosures, although saying the problems were minor and no one who was current on payments had been affected.

“People need to know a mortgage contract clearly spells out you have two options: You promise to pay and if you don’t you’ll give the property back to the lender. It’s not a solemn oath you’re going to pay,” Maddux 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:

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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More Than One In Three Say It’s Okay To Walk Away From Mortgage, What do the Orlando homeowners think?

October 29th, 2010 No comments

The majority of Americans, say it’s “unacceptable” for homeowners to stop making their mortgage payments and abandon their homes, but more than a third, 36 percent, say “walking away” is okay.

A Pew Research Center study found that 59 percent believe it is wrong for homeowners to deliberately stop paying their mortgages and surrender their homes to the mortgage lender.

Among those who said walking away is okay, 19 percent said it’s acceptable outright and an additional 17 percent volunteered that it depends on the circumstances.

Either way, walking away can sink your credit score and come with an extra tax burden, not to mention the potential of a court suit.

The survey, conducted May 11 to May 31, queried 2,967 adults and found more than one-in-five homeowners (21 percent) say they owe more on their mortgages than their home is worth.

The “underwater” situation compels some homeowners to stop making their mortgage payments and let the bank foreclose on their homes.

Many homeowners, who can afford a mortgage payment, have nevertheless stopped making payments in what’s called a “strategic default” and that’s caused mortgage finance giant Fannie Mae, reeling from mounting losses, to sue them.

Alternatives to walking away, say a short sale, mortgage modification, a refinance (if possible), even an outright sale for less than the home is worth, are probably better ideas.

According to RealtyTrac.com, in August, lenders foreclosed on 95,364 U.S. properties in August, the highest monthly total in the half-decade history of the report.

Nearly half (48 percent) of all homeowners say the value of their home declined during the recession, and as a group they were more likely than those whose home did not lose value to say it’s acceptable to bail out on a mortgage (20 percent vs. 14 percent).

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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. 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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Foreclosure starts, inventories grow, How’s Orlando doing?

September 29th, 2010 No comments

Foreclosure starts continued to accelerate in August as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac enforced more aggressive timelines on early stage delinquencies, loan data aggregator Lender Processing Services Inc. said in releasing its latest monthly loan performance report.

The pace at which seriously delinquent homeowners transition into foreclosure — in many cases after leaving the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) — also continued to pick up, LPS said.

The 282,528 foreclosure starts initiated by lenders in August represented a 29 percent increase from the low for the year, seen in April, and was the highest level since July 2009.

That helped the total number of homes in the foreclosure process grow to 2.04 million, even as the number of delinquent loans not yet in foreclosure eased 7 percent from a year ago, to 4.95 million — the first year-over-year decline since 2006.

 All told, LPS estimates that 6.98 million mortgages — 13.02 percent of all outstanding loans — were past due in August, down from 7.32 million at the same time a year ago.

The five states with the highest percentage of non-current loans were Florida (23.5 percent), Nevada (21.3 percent), Mississippi (18.6 percent), Georgia (15.6 percent) and Illinois (14.4 percent).

States with the highest rates of foreclosure starts are also the ones with the highest rates of new, seriously delinquent loans, LPS said.

Top 20 states for non-current loans

State % delinquent % in foreclosure Total % non-current
Florida 10.7 12.8 23.5
Nevada 12.8 8.6 21.3
Mississippi 15.6 3 18.6
Georgia 12.5 3.1 15.6
Illinois 9.2 5.2 14.4
Arizona 10.2 4.1 14.3
Ohio 10.2 4.1 14.3
Louisiana 11 3.3 14.2
Indiana 10.3 3.9 14.2
New Jersey 8.3 5.9 14.1
Michigan 10.9 3 13.9
Rhode Island 10.3 3.5 13
California 9.9 3.4 13.3
Tennessee 11.4 1.8 13.2
Maryland 10.2 2.8 13.1
West Virginia 10.8 2.2 13
Alabama 11.2 1.7 12.8
South Carolina 9.5 3.3 12.8
New York 8.6 4.1 12.7
North Carolina 9.7 2.1 11.8
U.S. 9.22 3.8 13.02

Source: Lender Processing Services

For the last three months, the report showed, Fannie and Freddie’s loan servicers have been ramping up foreclosure starts on borrowers who are behind on their payments by only two months. Foreclosure starts are also up even more sharply among borrowers who are behind by six months or more.

Among all loans in foreclosure, the average number of days delinquent was 478, up from 361 a year ago.

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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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