Joe Capote

HAFA’s Short Sale Changes

The Treasury Department has recently changed the rules regarding a short sale and the HAFA program.  You can read complete details on the HAFA program on our HAFA resource page.

Currently short sales are taking many months with many of them not being approved or loosing buyers that finally wander off.  No one would call them short. The HAFA program has attempted to put timelines and accountability on the short sale process, with some success.

Short-sales still make up a large percentage of the north San Mateo County real estate market. In San Bruno, Daly City and South San Francisco short sales account for nearly 40% of the available market, including multi-unit investments.

In a nutshell here are some of the changes:

  • Those seeking a short sale must get an answer within 30 days.
  • Servicers will no longer be required to verify a borrower’s financial information.
  • Servicers are no longer required to determine if the debt-to-ratio incomes exceeds 31%.
  • Second lein holders no longer must accept 6% of the unpaid balance.

The Government is clearly focused on making short sales a viable option.  However, the question is whether or not the lenders follow suit. Certain banks are much easier to work with on a short sale transaction. Others not so much.

Below are some of the basics of the HAFA program for short sales.

HAFA Basic Eligibility Requirements For Short Sales

The home must be owner-occupied principle residence.

  • It must have a first trust deed mortgage(loan) in place prior to January 1, 2009.
  • The mortgage must be delinquent or delinquency is likely.
  • The unpaid loan balance is no more than $729,750 for a single family home.
  • Your monthly payment is more than 31 percent of your gross income.

HAFA short sale advantages.

  • Buyer’s will know where they stand in the purchase.
  • Seller’s will walk away from the property more dignity.
  • Fewer deals with fall through at the last minute.
  • Uniformity of forms used in the process.
  • 10 day business response from lender upon presentation of executed offer.
  • If Seller not approved for HAFA may be considered for deed-in-lieu of foreclosure.
  • Mandatory deficiency release.
  • $3,000 in moving expenses.

Short sales continue to make up a large chunk of the real estate market. Though the federal government is attempting to make them a viable option to save borrower credit and avoid foreclosure, lenders vary with regards to short sale negotiation.

Stay tuned for more updates as they become available.

For more information regarding short sales, please visit me on the web at www.JosephCapote.com or contact me directly.

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Navigating Short Sales: What to Do When the Sale Price Leaves You Short

If you’re thinking of selling your home, and you expect that the total amount you owe on your mortgage will be greater than the selling price of your home, you may be facing a short sale. A short sale is one where the net proceeds from the sale won’t cover your total mortgage obligation and closing costs, and you don’t have other sources of money to cover the deficiency. A short sale is different from a foreclosure, which is when your lender takes title of your home through a lengthy legal process and then sells it.

 1. Consider loan modification first. If you are thinking of selling your home because of financial difficulties and you anticipate a short sale, first contact your lender to see if it has any programs to help you stay in your home. Your lender may agree to a modification such as:

When a loan modification still isn’t enough to relieve your financial problems, a short sale could be your best option if

  • Your property is worth less than the total mortgage you owe on it.
  • You have a financial hardship, such as a job loss or major medical bills.
  • You have contacted your lender and it is willing to entertain a short sale.

2. Hire a qualified team. The first step to a short sale is to hire a qualified real estate professional* and a real estate attorney who specialize in short sales. Interview at least three candidates for each and look for prior short-sale experience. Short sales have proliferated only in the last few years, so it may be hard to find practitioners who have closed a lot of short sales. You want to work with those who demonstrate a thorough working knowledge of the short-sale process and who won’t try to take advantage of your situation or pressure you to do something that isn’t in your best interest. 

A qualified real estate professional can:

  • Provide you with a comparative market analysis (CMA) or broker price opinion (BPO).
  • Help you set an appropriate listing price for your home, market the home, and get it sold.
  • Put special language in the MLS that indicates your home is a short sale and that lender approval is needed (all MLSs permit, and some now require, that the short-sale status be disclosed to potential buyers).
  • Ease the process of working with your lender or lenders.
  • Negotiate the contract with the buyers.
  • Help you put together the short-sale package to send to your lender (or lenders, if you have more than one mortgage) for approval. You can’t sell your home without your lender and any other lien holders agreeing to the sale and releasing the lien so that the buyers can get clear title.

3. Begin gathering documentation before any offers come in. Your lender will give you a list of documents it requires to consider a short sale. The short-sale “package” that accompanies any offer typically must include

  • A hardship letter detailing your financial situation and why you need the short sale
  • A copy of the purchase contract and listing agreement
  • Proof of your income and assets
  • Copies of your federal income tax returns for the past two years

4. Prepare buyers for a lengthy waiting period. Even if you’re well organized and have all the documents in place, be prepared for a long process. Waiting for your lender’s review of the short-sale package can take several weeks to months. Some experts say:

  • If you have only one mortgage, the review can take about two months.
  • With a first and second mortgage with the same lender, the review can take about three months.
  • With two or more mortgages with different lenders, it can take four months or longer.

When the bank does respond, it can approve the short sale, make a counteroffer, or deny the short sale. The last two actions can lengthen the process or put you back at square one. (Your real estate attorney and real estate professional, with your authorization, can work your lender’s loss mitigation department on your behalf to prepare the proper documentation and speed the process along.)

5. Don’t expect a short sale to solve your financial problems. Even if your lender does approve the short sale, it may not be the end of all your financial woes. Here are some things to keep in mind:

  • You may be asked by your lender to sign a promissory note agreeing to pay back the amount of your loan not paid off by the short sale. If your financial hardship is permanent and you can’t pay back the balance, talk with your real estate attorney about your options.
  • Any amount of your mortgage that is forgiven by your lender is typically considered income, and you may have to pay taxes on that amount. Under a temporary measure passed in 2007, the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act and Debt Cancellation Act, homeowners can exclude debt forgiveness on their federal tax returns from income for loans discharged in calendar years 2007 through 2012. Be sure to consult your real estate attorney and your accountant to see whether you qualify.
  • Having a portion of your debt forgiven may have an adverse effect on your credit score. However, a short sale will impact your credit score less than foreclosure and bankruptcy.

To find out how I can help you save your credit by coordinating your short sale, call Joseph Capote at (650) 269-3000 or visit my website at www.JosephCapote.com.

Note: This article provides general information only. Information is not provided as advice for a specific matter. Laws vary from state to state. For advice on a specific matter, consult your attorney or CPA. 

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The Road to Foreclosure – Part 2 – Loan Modifications

This post is part 2 in a series on understanding a borrower’s road to the foreclosure. This series attempts to help borrowers to make better choices and retain their options through better understanding of the foreclosure process as a whole.

What is a loan modification?
Answers.com defines loan  modifications as ” a modification to an existing loan made by a lender in response to a borrower’s long-term inability to repay the loan. Loan modifications typically involve a reduction in the interest rate on the loan, an extension of the length of the term of the loan, a different type of loan or any combination of the three. A lender might be open to modifying a loan because the cost of doing so is less than the cost of default.” (http://www.answers.com/topic/loan-modification, par 1).

What makes a loan modification possible?
When a borrower has defaulted on the loan, generally the first step should be to investigate a loan modification. In the first entry in the series, it was pointed out that a loan modification is not a right of the borrower and is dependent upon the lender’s willingness to negotiate. While this is true, new programs are cropping up in an effort to promote guidelines and standardize loan modifications, such as the HAMP (Home Affordable Modification Program) which offer guides to the modifcations of first mortgages only. Lenders that have received TARP funds are required to participate in the HAMP program. More on this a little later in the post.

The current state of loan modifcations is a hodgepodge of lenders and possible programs. Addtionally, unscrupulous characters in both the real estate and legal professions have added to the confusion regarding what a loan modification is and who qualifies. Since the modification is really been dependent on the lender’s willingness to negotiate, this has resulted in a lot of consusion and leads folks to believe they could receive a loan modifcation based on the experience of someone they already know receiving one. For example, “My neighbor Joe modifed his loan, and I should be able to do the same at the same terms”.  Since each loan modification case is handled differently, even by the same lender, this is most always not true and adds to the already abundant confusion around loan modifications.

What about loan modificaton fraud?
The current amount of loan modification fraud awareness has reached the desks of the regulators. The California Department of Real Estate and the California Bar Association have investigated and/or taken action against realtors and lawyers who have been unscrupulously promoting loan modification services and not delivering. Scam artists will make lofty promises requiring an upfront fee and then never be heard from again. The list of lawyers under investigation is HERE. The California Department of Real Estate now has more than 1,340 open investigations into loan modification scams around the state, up from just 10 in August 2008 (More info on this HERE). In fact, the state attorney general has issued ways to help borrowers recognize and avoid loan modification scams, that is posted HERE.

The good news is, the government is attempting to regulate and standardize loan modifications. Programs like the Home Affordable Modification Program (or HAMP) are setting the stage for both borrower and lender to understand and participate in loan modifications under standardized guidelines, not just on a case by case basis. This program also standardizes the loan modification terms, conditions and length. There is a lot to know about the HAMP, and the official website is HERE. Additionally, the California state bar does recognize a VERY small number of lawyers who are qualifed to represent borrowers on loan modifcations. Check out this list at http://www.localloanmodification.com/CA.

Initiate loan modification as soon as loan default is imminent.
Many lenders require that a borrower be in default before the loan modification process can begin. The HAMP program requires the borrower be in default or “at risk of imminent default”. This depends on the lender, but generally is true. However, if the borrower has a choice they should try to modify the loan before defaulting, thereby preserving their credit rating as much as possible. This is especially true if the borrower can prove the ‘risk of imminent default”. Clearly, lenders are trying to protect themselves against borrowers attempting to modify loans who do currently have the means to continue to keep current.

Here is the takeaway for borrowers. If loan modification is the goal, then the borrower should begin contacting lenders as soon as default is imminent. They should attempt to work out a loan modification with their lender under the HAMP guidelines. They should be communicative and ready to submit all pertinent documentation to prove that default is imminent (w2’s, tax returns, pay stubs, etc). If the lender is not willing to negotiate, consider free credit counseling or  consider contacting an attorney who not only specializes but is recognized by the state bar as a qualified loan modification specialist. Be persistent when working with lenders.

Unfortunately, there are cases where a borrower just will not qualify for a loan modification, and must begin to cosinder the next option. Selling the home in pre-foreclosure or short sale. That is the next chapter in the road to foreclosure series.

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U.S. Begins to Crack Down on Loan Modification Scams

Source: by Mike Webb, Pro Publica & NBC Los Angeles
Posted on: 12th October 2009
 

21st Century Legal Services, Fidelity National Legal Services under federal investigation

You’ve probably heard ads on the radio from those companies that promise to get your mortgage payments slashed, sometimes in half. They’re called loan modification companies.

Authorities say many of them are scammers and con artists, but they haven’t always been able to shut them down. NBC investigative reporter Joel Grover exposes how one of the biggest loan modification companies has managed to stay in business, even though authorities in several states have tried to stop it.

The company has been widely known as 21st Century Legal Services, and its ads say it can get you a lower monthly payment and lower interest rate on your home mortage.

Joanne and Dave Steffin signed up with 21st Century, because they say the company promised to help them avoid foreclosure on their Rancho Cucamonga home. But the Steffins say all 21st Century did was take their money and not deliever on its promises.

“It’s not even the fact that they took your money. It’s the fact that you may lose the home still,” Joanne Steffin said.

In the last year, 21st Century became a giant in the loan modification business, operating out of a business park in Rancho Cucamonga, with dozens of employees working the phones, signing up homeowners desperate to avoid foreclosure. But two ex-employees tell NBC that the majority of 21st Century clients never got their loans modified.

“You were told to promise (clients) that they could get their loan modified?” Grover asked one of the former employees.

“Yeah, 100 percent,” the ex-employee answered.

Four states have sued 21st Century, and the Better Business Bureau says 21st Century has more complaints than any other loan modification company in business. But that didn’t stop 21st Century from signing up more and more clients.

Those two ex-employees explained to NBC about how 21st did business. The company always asked homeowners to pay them a hefty fee upfront, supposedly to get their loan modified.

Joanne and Dave Steffin had to fork over $3,500, and were told that 21st Century would be “working diligently with their lender” to try and get their payments cut in half.

“I just felt that if this is what they’re going to do and they can do this, we’re stupid not to do it,” said Dave Steffin.

But months later, the Steffins say 21st Century had cashed their checks, wouldn’t return their calls and didn’t even contact their lender.

“Do you feel like you were scammed?” Grover asked the Steffins.

“Yes, very much,” said Dave Steffin.

And those ex-employees interviewed by NBC say the customers they signed up kept calling them, saying things like, “You’ve taken my money,” “Nothing has been done to help my home,” and “Now I’m in foreclosure.”

Complaints like those caught the attention of the attorneys general in Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas and North Carolina. All four states banned 21st Century from doing business in their states.

But authorities say 21st Century Legal Services changed its name to Fidelity National Legal Services and continued signing up new clients.

Ex-employees say Fidelity was run out of the same office as 21st Century; was owned by the same woman, Andrea Ramirez; and even used the same ads to snare customers.

But the feds might finally be catching up with the owners of 21st Century and Fidelity. The FBI recently served search warrants on the home of Ramirez and searched the company’s offices. The FBI says the company is now under federal investigation. The company’s lawyer didn’t return our calls for comment.

NBC did this investigation with help from the non-profit investigative journalism organization Propublica.

California homeowners can get advice avoiding scammers at Attorney General Jerry Brown’s website.

Posted via web from josephcapote’s posterous

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5 Tips to Avoid a Loan Modification Scam

There has been a lot of talk about loan modifications and loan mod scams in the news lately. Recently, law firms as well as credit specialists have jumped headfirst into the fray, working with (or possibly preying) on good people in bad situations. While loan modifications are possible and can help many borrowers make it through these tough times, here are five tips to help you avoid a possible loan modification scam.

1. DON’T pay up-front fees. Foreclosure consultants are prohibited by law from collecting money before services are performed.
2. DON’T ignore letters from your lender or loan servicer. Responding to those letters is your best bet for saving your house.
3. DON’T transfer title or sell your house to a “foreclosure rescuer.” Beware! This is a scam to convince homeowners they can stay in the home as renters and buy their home back later. It might also be part of a fraudulent bankruptcy filing. Either way, a scammer can then evict the victim and take the home.
4. DON’T pay your mortgage payments to anyone other than your lender or loan servicer. Mortgage consultants often keep the money for themselves.
5. NEVER sign any documents without reading them first. Many homeowners think that they are signing documents for a loan modification or for a new loan to pay off the mortgage they are behind on. Later, they discover that they actually transferred ownership of their home to someone who is now trying to evict them.

Courtesy of the State of California’s Attorney General, Department of Justice.

For more information, visit the Short Sales Center my website at http://www.JosephCapote.com.

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Benefits of Working with a Certified Short-Sale Professional (CSP)

Benefits of Working with a Certified Short-Sale Professional (CSP)

As a certified short-sale pro, I realize that short sales are a sensitive time for the parties involved. Sometimes folks may feel vulnerable and look for advice from any source. It’s been my experience that there are distinct benefits in working with a certified short-sale pro when listing your short-sale. I’d like to list them here for your convenience.

Short Sale Benefits for the Seller:

1. The CSP is well trained in the short sale transaction. The short sale is different from a regular real estate listing. Many agents take a short sale and learn “on the fly”. The short sale adheres to a very tight timeline, and agents learning on the job can make mistakes that can cost the seller the transaction. The CSP has been trained and is well versed in all aspects of the short sale process. Whether it’s writing an effective hardship letter, understanding foreclosure timelines, proper market pricing, and package documentation or closing the short sale, the CSP has been trained on all areas of the short sale process.

2. The CSP has developed relationships with the lenders. The CSP has been working with lenders, and can use that relationship to better negotiate the short sale. An inexperienced agent my not have that established relationship, nor understand the differences in lender requirements for a short sale.

3. The CSP understands the difference between a likely short sale and an unlikely short sale. Inexperienced agents will take the listing without realizing the likelihood of the success of the short sale. This can cost a seller time and money, possibly risking the success of the transaction. A CSP can be upfront with the seller regarding the chances of the sale, and be honest with the seller regarding the likelihood of the short sale’s overall success.

4. A CSP understands the necessary marketing tools and tricks to achieve a better rate of success while selling the short sale property. The short sale needs to be marketed differently than a traditional sale, and the CSP has been trained market this property for the best possible success. The inexperienced agent will often market the short sale as a traditional transaction, which can ultimately reduce the chances of the success of the short sale.

5. A CSP understands the requirements of successfully closing a short sale. There are many aspects of a short sale that differ from a traditional sale. The CSP understands that working with lenders, escrow, title, appraisers, buyers and other Realtors differs from a traditional sale. The CSP knows he/she must adjust strategies accordingly to account for the overall short sale process.

For more information, go to www.JosephCapote.com.

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