Posts Tagged ‘leucadia homes’

Cash Is King In Home Buying Throughout California

Tuesday, March 1st, 2011

Investors have been buying up a lot of California real estate, with cash. According to DataQuick Information systems, 30.9% of all sales in California were made in cash, a new record.
Cash activity has been brisk for months in foreclosure-ridden areas such as Riverside and San Bernardino. But now, the cash buyer has become a major player in Southern California’s most expensive communities, where cash deals account for as much as two-thirds of home sales.
The trend is being driven by several factors, analysts say, including the difficulty of getting a “jumbo” loan from lenders still stinging from the mortgage meltdown. It also reflects speculation by wealthy investors who believe home prices are at or near a bottom.
According to the report, in the $1-million-and-up market, 29.2% of buyers paid cash last year — the highest percentage since 1994. For homes selling for $5 million and up, 62.2% paid cash.
Cash buying has reached fever pitch in parts of Orange County, where the Balboa community of Newport Beach saw the highest percentage of sales going to cash buyers last year of any $1-million-plus Southland community — 66.7%.
Other big cash markets were Montecito, with 57.2% of sales, and Beverly Hills, with 45.6%.
DataQuick shows that just shy of 52 percent of cash buyers seemed to be absentee owners who asked to have property tax bills sent to an address other than those of the house they were buying. Those buyers could be investors or people purchasing a second home for vacations.

 

cash homesaleschart Cash Is King In Home Buying Throughout California

 

Finding Your Way Through The Mortgage Qualifying Madness

Thursday, February 17th, 2011

thumbs thumbs up approval Finding Your Way Through The Mortgage Qualifying MadnessA new study shows more than 70% of Americans feel getting a mortgage today is a serious national problem. Since the housing markets fall has had such a huge impact on our economy, it’s really not  a shock that lenders have gone back to “old ways” of doing loans, ie…you actually have to show your income, not just state you make X amount of $$$ on your application.
Before stated income, many borrowers felt what they say they are feeling today, high levels of stress, confusion and frustration. In fact, 20.9% of the people surveyed said they felt waiting to hear if they had an approved mortgage loan was more stressful than finding out if they landed a new job.

There are several things you can do to make this process less stressful and significantly improve your chances of getting approved-

• Pay down your debt as much as you can before applying for a mortgage.
Lenders calculate the ratio of your debt to your income to determine how much you can afford to borrow. Your total debt-to-income is based on how much of your gross income would go toward all of your debt obligations, including mortgage, car loans, child support and alimony, credit card bills, student loans and condominium fees.
• Clean up your credit long before you apply for a mortgage.
Credit is critical today, not just to get a mortgage but to get the best terms. A marginal credit score can cost you tens of thousands of dollars over the life of the loan. Pull one or all of your three annual credit reports and check yourself, before you wreck yourself.
You’ll have to pay a nominal fee of $10 to $15 to each credit bureau — Equifax, Experian and TransUnion — to get your credit score. Review your report for errors and omissions.
• Don’t make a major purchase on credit and don’t apply for new credit before you apply for a mortgage or at any point before your mortgage closes. Purchases and credit accounts increase your debt and hurt your debt-to-income ratio.
• Increase your down payment. The more you put down the better your rate and your chances at scoring on that loan application. If you can’t increase your money down, buy a cheaper home. Now is not the time to stretch.
• Get all your docs in a row before you apply for a mortgage. Don’t waste time or raise the ire of lenders who are tougher than ever on documentation for income, assets, financial obligations and more. When you apply, have your paperwork ready.
• Know and prepare for your cash requirements. Cash expenses, beyond the down payment can crush you. Closings costs are on the rise. They can include transfer taxes, lenders fees, title insurance, escrow, settlement and home inspection costs. Also upfront property taxes, homeowner association dues homeowner insurance and other costs could come due before you close.
Get a Realtor that will negotiate tough. Ask for a purchase price lower than the value. A lower price serves both you by lowering your loan-to-value ratio and your lender, by reducing its risk.

If you would like a complete checklist of what you need for qualifying for a mortgage as well as purchasing your new home, email me at Rob@Robdennyhomes.com and I will send you the most detailed home buying packet there is out there with no obligation or cost to you.

Hud Loan modification Scam Alert

Friday, October 8th, 2010

Scams aren’t always easy to spot – but it helps if you know the warning signs to look for. Here are six red flags to indicate that you may be dealing with a loan modification scammer:
1. A company/person asks for a fee in advance to work with your lender to modify, refinance or reinstate your mortgage. They may pocket your money and do little or nothing to help you save your home from foreclosure.
2. A company/person guarantees they can stop a foreclosure or get your loan modified.Nobody can make this guarantee to stop foreclosure or modify your loan. Legitimate, trustworthy HUD-approved counseling agencies will only promise they will try their very best to help you.
3. A company/person advises you to stop paying your mortgage company and pay them instead. Despite what a scammer will tell you, you should never send a mortgage payment to anyone other than your mortgage lender. The minute you have trouble making your monthly payment, contact your mortgage lender.
4. A company pressures you to sign over the deed to your home or sign any paperwork that you haven’t had a chance to read, and you don’t fully understand. A legitimate housing counselor would never pressure you to sign a document before you had a chance to read and understand it.
5. A company claims to offer “government-approved” or “official government” loan modifications.They may be scam artists posing as legitimate organizations approved by, or affiliated with, the government. Contact your mortgage lender first. Your lender can tell you whether you qualify for any government programs to prevent foreclosure. And, remember, you do not have to pay to benefit from government-backed loan modification programs.
6. A company/person you don’t know asks you to release personal financial information online or over the phone. You should only give this type of information to companies that you know and trust, like your mortgage lender or a HUD-approved counseling agency.

Real Estate Market Offers Bright Spots

Monday, September 6th, 2010

The end of the tax credit hit with full force in July.
Realtors’ association economist Lawrence Yun acknowledged the downturn, but also offered perspective. “Since May, after the April 30 deadline, contract signings have been notably lower,” he said, “and a pause period for home sales is likely to last through September.” Still, Yun said, annual sales are expected to reach five million in 2010 because of the healthy activity in the first half of the year. “To place that in perspective, annual sales averaged 4.9 million in the past 20 years, and 4.4 million over the past 30 years.”
In July, the nation’s median price rose 0.7% over July 2009, to $182,600. The median is the middle value; half the homes sold for more, half for less.
Yun insisted that record-low mortgage interest rates, now averaging 4.5% would encourage the wary to get back into the hunt.
In fact, rate-conscious buyers are active in the market these days. They waited for rates to dip, more eager to save thousands over the life of their mortgages than to snag a one-time tax credit available only to qualified buyers. Buying a house is a long-term investment, and finding the right property and great loan over 30 years may be more important than $8,000 up front

Buyers Should Get In Hot Market

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

For quite a few months now I have been sharing with anyone that would listen that the residential real estate market in North San Diego County has changed. It is vibrant, positive and on the move. Things are Selling and Buyers are out looking hard. NSDCAR HomeDex shows year-over median single-family detached homes in North San Diego County increased 21.67% from April 2009 and North County attached homes increased 22.46% from a year ago; making nine straight months of rising year-over prices.

If you have been looking at any type of property in Carlsbad, Encinitas, Cardiff, Solana Beach or Del Mar you know first hand what I am talking about. Via this Blog and my Market charts (click market trend charts on my website www.RobDennyHomes.com) I try to keep you right up to date on the action. On May 11, the San Diego Union Tribune ran a front page article confirming claims of the last year. This area is currently tops in the country in appreciate and movement.

If you want up to the moment pulse of what is happening in the coastal market this is the place to check…right here! I am in the trenches doing the front line work. This effort later becomes the meat of the article that was printed in the Union encapsulating the last time period. To truly keep up read here and the news articles. You need both to be well armed in this market. If I can help call, 858-504-0449 or email RobDennyHomes@gmail.com with the zip code(s) you are interested and I will send you up to the most current charts. I can also send you the most current listing reports from the MLS, just ask!

“Relax…I’ll handle the details!”

So You Want to buy a foreclosure

Monday, May 10th, 2010

You want to buy a foreclosure? Remember, there are both great opportunities and great pressures and pitfalls in this market.

First, you have to decide at what stage of foreclosure you want to buy. There are three options: 1. pre-foreclosure; 2. sheriff’s auction; 3.

“The safest and best way to buy is when it’s a bank-owned property,” said Rick Sharga, a spokesman for RealtyTrac, the online marketer of foreclosure properties.

Pre-foreclosure: These homes are in the foreclosure process, but they have yet to be sent to auction. Owners are typically trying to unload them because they are “underwater,” owing more on the homes than they are worth.

As a result, potential buyers must negotiate a deal with the lender as well as the owner. That makes buying at this stage of foreclosure complicated and slow. But, you have the advantage of being able to inspect the home before purchase — which isn’t the case in other types of foreclosure sales. Sharga warned, however, that prices are usually higher than at other stages of foreclosure.

Sheriff’s auction: These sales yield the lowest prices, but they are fraught with difficulties. Often the house is unavailable for inspection, leaving buyers with a long list of expensive repairs — and much larger bill than they intended. This stage is usually best left to the professionals, the contractors and investors who regularly bid on these places and know what they’re doing.

Repossession: This occurs after the home has gone through a sheriff’s auction but does not sell and the bank gains possession of the property. Homebuyers may not get the best bargains during this stage, but they can nearly always perform a thorough inspection before closing, minimizing costly surprises. Plus, the property comes with a clear title.

In addition, the banks selling these places may extend preferential financing terms to the buyers and may have made some repairs before putting the property on the market.

Even in this safer stage, though, homes are still sold in “as is” condition. That means the bank won’t pay for cosmetic issues. Although, they will often pay for some or all of repairs that are health and safety issues. That makes the home inspection even more critical. You do not want to buy a bank owned or really any home for that matter, without paying for your own home inspection.

Since you’re buying from a corporation, not an individual, the buying process can be faster, so be prepared to move quickly. Many times a listing goes on sale on a Friday and is sold over the weekend.

Having your financing in order for a quick purchase is very attractive to banks. Buyers and their agents need to be on top of everything from the inspection to the financing. Some banks will even give you discounts for closing quickly. On the other hand, they may charge a per diem fee for late closings.”

Once you’ve decided which type of home to buy, there are several common mistakes foreclosure buyers should take care to avoid. These include:

Getting caught up in a bidding frenzy: The banks often under-price repossessions, hoping to generate excitement, attract multiple bids and sell them quickly. The problem is, as in any auction-type sale, bidders get excited and pay too much.

There are 800,000 REOs in the banks’ inventories. There’ll be another home to bid on tomorrow. At the same time, low ball offers are often scoffed at. A good agent should be able to show you comparables to make a strong offer.

Underestimating repair costs: Take full advantage of the home inspection and don’t delude yourself about how much the repairs will cost.

In some cases where a lot of work is required, take along someone who can give you a good estimate of how much repair costs will come to.

A good rule of thumb would be to factor in a cushion of 10% to 20% of the purchase price to pay for unexpected repairs. If you end up not using it, go on vacation after 6 months.

Buying in a neighborhood flooded with foreclosures: This is most important for people buying for the short-term. Any neighborhood saturated with REOs and foreclosures may be headed for further price falls. If you’re planning to relocate within a few years or buying a bigger house, that could mean selling at a loss. A better bet, if you can find it, is to buy the only foreclosed home in an otherwise stable community. That’s more likely to hold its value.

New-home sales rise fastest in 47 years

Sunday, April 25th, 2010

According to the Census Bureau, new home sales improved in March at the fastest single-month rate in 47 years. New-home sales rose 26.9% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 411,000 last month, compared to an upwardly revised annual rate of 324,000 in February.

The March sales were the strongest since last July, and the percentage gain was the biggest on a month-over-month basis since a 31% gain in March 1963.

New-home sales spiked in every region of the United States. The South saw the biggest jump in new home sales, up 43.5%, while the Northeast region saw sales climb 35.7%. The West and Midwest regions both saw single-digit percentage growth, with the West up 6% and the Midwest up 4%.

The Census Bureau data followed a report from the National Association of Realtors on Thursday that showed existing home sales soared nearly 7% in March, as new homebuyers raced to buy up properties before a tax credit expires on April 30.

The Census Bureau estimated that 228,000 new homes hit the market in March. At the current sales rate, it would take 6.7 months to sell through that inventory, down sharply from an estimated 9.2 months of inventory in February.

While things are not great, a firming housing market and improving jobs market (experts are predicting unemployment for April to be a still high 9.6% compared to 9.7% for March) shows we are heading in the right direction.

How foreclosure impacts your credit score

Saturday, April 24th, 2010

One thing I am asked often by clients and other agents is the impact of Foreclosures, short sales and died of lieu on credit scores. If you’re delinquent on your mortgage, your credit score will suffer. Everyone knows that. The question is, by how much?

Until recently, those answers were hard to come by. Credit bureaus were uncommunicative about expressing, in points, just how much impact different foreclosure types of mortgage delinquencies have on scores.

Recently, Fair Isaac, which developed FICO scores, pulled back the curtain a bit, revealing some estimates of point-score declines following mortgage delinquency problems.

Here are the average hit your credit will take:

30 days late: 40 – 110 points

90 days late: 70 – 135 points

Foreclosure, short sale or deed-in-lieu: 85 – 160

Bankruptcy: 130 – 240

To come to these figures, Fair Isaac created two hypothetical consumers, one who starts out with a fair-to-middling score of 680 and the other with a very good one of 780. (FICO scores range from 300 to 850.)

The hypothetical person with the 780 FICO has 10 credit accounts versus six for the 580, plus a longer credit history, lower utilization of total credit limit and no missed payments on any account. The other consumer has two slightly damaged accounts. Neither have any accounts in collection or adverse public records.

See the chart above to see how each scenario affected each borrower.

One reason credit companies were so closed-mouthed is that they often can’t definitively state how much each delinquencies will affect scores because there are too many variables.

Some borrowers will fall much more steeply than others for the same payment problem. Picture someone who has just one mortgage and one other credit account.  If they miss one payment that would impact their scores a lot more versus a mature credit user with 15 accounts, one missed payment would just be a blip.

The point loss also depends on the borrower’s starting point: People with very high credit scores have more to lose than low-score borrowers; the impact of a single blemish on an 800 score is more than on a 500.

It gets worse when you face foreclosure, depending on whether you lose your home through foreclosure, short sale or deed of lieu.

Credit bureaus generally slash scores equally for those three resolutions to someone losing their home. The important thing is that it’s reported that you paid less on a settled account.

Some borrowers may think that because they never missed a payment, they can “walk away” from their homes with relatively little impact on scores. Not true. When a deed-in-lieu or short sale is reported as a partial payment, it’s treated as a serious delinquency just like a foreclosure.

Even if borrowers made payments faithfully for years before short selling or doing a deed-in-lieu, their credit score will still take a hit. The total decline will run about 85 points for the 680 score borrower to as much as 160 for the 780 score.

March NCSDAR Single Family Attached Homes Report Shows North County Leading The Way

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

•The North San Diego County median-priced single-family attached (SFA) home increased 2.08 percent from $240,000 in February 2010 to $245,000 in March 2010, a second straight month price increase. The Non-North San Diego County SFA home median price rose 6.93 percent to $220,000 in March 2010 from $205,750 in February 2010.1

•North San Diego County SFA median prices increased 31.72 percent year-over from $186,000 in March 2009, for eight months of year-over price increases (the last two months exceeded 30 percent) following 24 months of year-over declines.

•The county-wide SFA home median price increased 4.65 percent from $215,000 in February 2010 to $225,000 in March 2010, and was up 28.57 percent year-over from March 2009.

•The median number of days-on-market for North County SFA homes sold fell from 41 in February 2010 to 34 in March 2010. The average number of days-on- market decreased from 66 in February 2010 to 63 in March 2010.2

Median Prices North San Diego County Single-Family Attached Homes

$350,000 $300,000 $250,000 $200,000 $150,000 $100,000

•The number of sold SFA units increased 67.17 percent in March 2010 from February 2010 in North San Diego County, and rose 25.32 percent in Non-North County. Year-over sales increased 30.83 percent from March 2009 in North County and increased 4.29 percent in Non-North County. North County SFA sales have reported year-over increases for 21 months, except for the months of February 2010 and October 2009.

•SFA listings (active and contingent) in North San Diego County fell to 1,449 ending March 2010 from 1,492 ending February 2010. San Diego County (active and contingent) SFA listings increased from 4,811 at the end of February 2010 to 4,878 in March 2010. North County SFA active listings increased 1.19 percent year-over, while active listings decreased 0.55 percent countywid

Common Mistakes made By Buyers

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

Buying a home is the biggest purchase most people will ever make, yet many go into it blind. Here are some common — and costly — mistakes homebuyers make.

1. Not knowing your credit score

If you’re even toying with the idea of buying a home, you must find out exactly what your FICO score is. If you find it is less than ideal, wage a systematic campaign to raise it. Too many borrowers ignore this step and get surprised when they get interest rate quotes. For a buyer with a credit score between 680 and 700, the fee comes to 1.5% of the mortgage principal. On a $200,000 mortgage, that adds up to $3,000. Someone with a 740 score pays nothing. Lower-score borrowers also get saddled with higher interest rates, about 0.4 percentage point more for the below 700 borrower. That costs an extra $62 a month — $744 a year — on a $200,000, 30-year, fixed rate loan.

2. Buying a car before a house

Anytime consumers open new credit accounts — credit card, auto loan, etc. — their FICO score could drop, according to Craig Watts, a spokesman for Fair Isaac, the creator of FICO scores.

“Hence the admonition to not open other new accounts while your mortgage application is in process,” he said.

A big purchase would use up a considerable proportion of a borrower’s total credit limit, which results in a drop in the score. Lenders often continue to check credit scores in the weeks before closing.

3. Skimping on a home inspection

Buying a pig in a poke can cost buyers big bucks — just when they can least afford it. So It’s vital to find all the costly flaws before you buy.

A home inspection can find problems with the foundation, electrical, plumbing, roof, attic insulation, and heating and air conditioning. In some states, separate licensed inspectors offer mold or termite inspections.

Often homebuyers, who may be strapped for cash, stint on inspections and look for the cheapest way to go. That can lead to disaster.

4. No contingencies

When signing a sales contract, buyers usually have to put up 1% to 3% in “earnest money,” which they don’t get back if they pull out of the deal except under certain conditions spelled out in the contract.

Sellers try to limit the grounds for canceling, and inexperienced buyers may sign contracts that don’t include common exceptions, such as uncovering major problems during the home inspection, failing to obtain financing and failure of the house to appraise.

Failure to obtain financing is common these days because lenders have become very picky; underwriting is very strict.

Even if your mortgage company is still willing to finance your purchase, the house itself may be worth less than you’ve contracted to pay for it, and the lender will pull its approval.
Losing a deposit of $2,000 to $6,000 on a $200,000 home hurts.

5. Not budgeting for insurance

Don’t underestimate insurance costs and fail to budget for them.

Many homebuyers don’t understand just what is — and what is not — covered. Standard policies pay for theft and wind, fire, lightning, hail and explosion damage. Not covered is flooding, earthquake damage or problems caused by neglect of routine maintenance.For flood insurance, most buyers use the National Flood Insurance Program. Earthquake coverage may be available through a state authority or some private companies. Depending on location, flood insurance can run into a lot of money. The cost of $250,000 worth of government flood coverage on the building and $100,000 of its contents can go as high as $5,714 in high-risk, coastal areas.