Mortgage Defaults Idaho

Although defaults are showing as a decline in three straight months I expect to see them go up again, there is lots of shadow inventory still out there. As explained in the article below from Idaho Business Review there is the now and there is what will be coming in the next few months ( more delinquent loans). If you or some you know is having experiencing a hardship and worried about there mortgage we specialize  for the homes in these Idaho cities- Boise,Eagle,Meridian,Nampa,Star,Middleton,Caldwell or Kuna-

Joshua Groesbeck 208-353-7131  or josh@homeswithjosh.com or www.homeswithjosh.com and www.idshortsale.com

Mortgage defaults in the Treasure Valley have declined for the third straight month. Idaho Data Providers is reporting that 577 defaults were filed in June, down from a high of 949 in March.

In their June market report, Idaho Data Providers stated that there would be some months of decline on default filings due to the two government programs that have been implemented to help homeowners avoid foreclosure. Both the Home Affordable Modification Program and the Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives Program have slowed down the filings, as these programs must evaluate non performing loans for short sale eligibility.

“There has been a huge number of “shadow inventory” created. It is taking servicers longer to complete the filings of mortgage defaults because of the high number of non performing loans that need to be evaluated and processed,” said Idaho Data Providers.com President Charlie Nate.

Nationally the average number of days delinquent for more than 90 has grown from 189 days in January 2009 to 282 days in May 2010.

Locally, seven percent of all loans in Idaho are 30+ days delinquent and 2.5 percent of loans are in the foreclosure stage, for a total of 9.5 percent of all loans that are non current.

Source: IBR

HAUP Home Affordable Unemployment Program

The Home Affordable Unemployment Program (HAUP) begins today. It is designed to provide relief to unemployed homeowners. HAUP (referred to as “UP”), “offers eligible unemployed borrowers a forbearance plan to temporarily reduce or suspend their mortgage payments.”

By August 1, 2010, all servicers who are participating in Making Home Affordable will be helping homeowners who are struggling to stay current because of unemployment.

Here are the details:

Forbearance Plan Eligibility:

A borrower must meet the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) eligibility criteria as well as:

  • be unemployed when request is made;
  • be entitled to receive unemployment benefits in the month of the UP forbearance plan effective date (servicers have discretion to require a borrower to have received unemployment benefits for up to three months before commencement of the forbearance plan); and
  • request an UP forbearance plan before they become seriously delinquent (i.e., miss three monthly mortgage payments).

Forbearance Plan Evaluation:

Servicers must follow these requirements when evaluating a borrower for an UP forbearance plan:

  • Unemployed borrowers who request assistance for HAMP must first be evaluated for an UP forbearance plan. If they qualify, they must be offered an UP forbearance plan before they can be considered for HAMP.
  • Borrowers currently in a HAMP trial period plan who become unemployed may receive an UP forbearance plan if they have missed less than three monthly payments as of the first payment due date of the HAMP trial period plan. If they do qualify, their existing HAMP trial period plan must be cancelled and the UP forbearance plan must immediately begin without waiting until the borrower has received three months of unemployment benefits.
  • Borrowers previously determined to be ineligible for a HAMP modification may request an UP forbearance plan if they meet the eligibility requirements.
  • Borrowers in a permanent HAMP modification who become unemployed are not eligible for an UP forbearance plan.

Forbearance Plan Terms

  • Term must be three months or upon reemployment (whichever is less). Servicers may extend this period according to their investor/regulatory guidelines.
  • Monthly mortgage payment must be reduced to less than or equal to 31% of the borrower’s gross monthly household income and may be suspended in full.

Transition to HAMP

  • Borrowers in an UP forbearance plan will be evaluated for HAMP at either reemployment or 30 days prior to the UP forbearance period expiring (whichever happens first).

Source: HSH

If you are experiencing problems making you house payment or see that foreclosure is possible we can help!

Joshua Groesbeck

208-353-7131 or josh@homeswithjosh.com

www.homeswithjosh.com and www.idshortsale.com

2010 Canyon County Short Sales

Canyon county has 651 short sale homes that are currently active on the market to be sold- So far this year 281 properties have been sold via short sale and there are currently 66 that are shown as pending final funding and recording. These numbers are starting from January  through June 2010.

If you are behind in payments or and can see a problem coming please don’t hesitate to call Joshua for help- Specializing in Short Sales with Solutions to your housing problems. You may need us….

Joshua Groesbeck

208-353-7131 or josh@homeswithjosh.com

www.homeswithjosh.com or www.idshortsale.com

Pre-Approved Short Sale In Eagle Idaho

Pre-Approved Short Sale in Eagle, Idaho – Bring Offers! Gorgeous Custom Home in very desirable Senora Creek with huge water feature behind for privacy, granite counters, custom cabinets, stainless steel appliances including gas range, 9 foot ceilings, breakfast bar, birch wood floors in kitchen, dining, entry & hallway, large master bedroom with sitting area and access to private patio, separate vanities in master bath with garden tub and walk-in shower, tile in all baths, his & her walk-in closets, Jack & Jill bath, plumbed for central vac, huge laundry room w/sink, oversized 3 car garage, patio off kitchen area. Club House and Pool! Don’t Miss This Opportunity!

Simply go to www.homeswithjosh.com and put in Mls# 98423866   Call or email Josh to schedule your showing today!  208-353-7131 or josh@homeswithjosh.com

Of course if you would like more information on short sales in Eagle, Boise, Meridian,Garden City, Nampa, Caldwell, Star, Middleton or Kuna look on my accurate real estate website or give me a call. Don’t lose out on the $,8000 tax credit for first time home buyers and the $6,500 tax credit for home owners looking make the next move.

Overwhelming Negative Home Equity

With more and more evidence of more and more borrowers walking away from their mortgage commitments due to overwhelming negative equity, I got to thinking: What exactly is the monetary tipping point for a homeowner, someone occupying the home, hanging pictures on the walls, perhaps raising their kids in the second and third bedrooms, going to the neighborhood block parties…what exactly is the negative equity number that makes them say, “We’re outta here.”

Negative $70,000.

At least according to First American Core Logic. FACL put out its quarterly negative equity report today, showing that the number of “underwater” loans is rising, from 10.7 million in Q3 to 11.3 million in Q4 or 24 percent of all borrowers from 23 percent.

What interested me was a paragraph lower down in the report:

“The rise in negative equity is closely tied to increases in pre-foreclosure activity and is a major factor in changing homeowner default behavior. Once negative equity exceeds 25 percent, or the mortgage balance is $70,000 higher than the current property values, owners begin to default with the same propensity as investors.”

This behavior is apparently measured by the actual data, that is, the default rates of investors vs.. owners and comparing that to loan-to-value ratios.

Source: Diana Olick

This is a measuring stick of how most home owners view their property. Take into consideration that there still are many people that aren’t quite 25% negative equity but do have loss of income and not enough equity to still sell their home outright that may still qualify for short sale. For more information go to http://idshortsale.com also more information at www.homeswithjosh.com or simply call Joshua Groesbeck at 208-353-7131

FHA Short Sale Rules

Mortgagee Letter 2008-43 contains the new FHA short sale [a/k/a FHA Pre-Foreclosure Sale (PFS)] program guidelines.  It’s definitely an improvement for anyone involved in shorting an FHA loan.  Here’s some of what you need to know about the FHA PFS:

* They removed the calculation that required the property to appraise for at least 63% of the indebtedness (this is helpful because many properties have dropped below 37% of the mortgage balance).
* HUD used to accept 82% of the appraised value as their net – now it is 88% if it sells within 30-days marketing time, 86% if it sells in 60-days, and 84% after 60 days.
* Prior to ML 2008-43, HUD would pay zero buyer closing costs on an FHA short sale, now they will pay 1% of buyer’s closing costs if the new buyer is obtaining FHA financing.
* They’ve increased the amount allowable to discharge junior liens up to $2,500.
* FHA allows the seller to walk away with up to a $1,000 check at closing

With the increase we’ve had in FHA loan originations, everyone should expect more and more FHA short sales moving forward.  And I’ll conclude with one final comforting comment from our friends at HUD regarding deficiency judgments and FHA foreclosures:

“A PFS sale must be an outright sale of the property.  If a foreclosure occurs after the mortgagor unsuccessfully participated in the PFS process in good faith, neither the mortgagee nor HUD will pursue the mortgagor for a deficiency judgment.

FHA/PFS is becoming a kinder more gentle model.

Idaho Short Sale Application

Your confidential short sale application is now available by clicking here

http://www.homeswithjosh.com/home/short-sale-application/

Strategic Defaults In Idaho

This is an interesting article about the strategic default of homes. Take  a minute and cruise through this as it has some very interesting points that are made and will make sense to a lot of home owners here in Idaho. Should home owners think like a big business?

Nearly a year after the Obama administration unveiled its ambitious housing rescue program, foreclosure tallies continue to break records. Foreclosure filings were reported on more than 2.8 million properties in 2009, up 21 percent from the previous year and 120 percent from 2007, according to RealtyTrac. With nearly 10 percent of mortgages now delinquent–which is also a new record–even more homeowners appear headed for foreclosure this year. “A massive supply of delinquent loans continues to loom over the housing market,” RealtyTrac CEO James J. Saccacio said in a statement. “Many of those delinquencies will end up in the foreclosure process in 2010 and beyond.”

[See Tips for Selling a Home in the Off-Season.]

Homeowners have found themselves in foreclosure for a number of reasons. Some purchased properties they could never really afford. Others lost their jobs–the national unemployment rate remains in the double digits–and had no way to make mortgage payments. But as the crisis rumbles forward, an additional driver of home foreclosures has become clear: Many borrowers have the means to keep paying the mortgage but are simply walking away because they believe it’s best for their finances.

The number of so called “strategic defaults” more than doubled, to 588,000, from 2007 to 2008, according to a study by Experian and Oliver Wyman. A separate 2009 survey found that more than a quarter of all existing defaults were strategic. Meanwhile, a growing number of academics are touting the financial benefits of walking away. “Homeowners should be walking away in droves,” Brent T. White, a University of Arizona law school professor, said in a recent paper. “The financial costs of foreclosure, while not insignificant, are minimal compared to the financial benefit of strategic default.”

[See Obama's Loan Modification Plan: 7 Things You Need to Know]

The case for strategically defaulting is linked to negative equity, or owing more on your home than it is worth. With home prices at the national level having dropped roughly 30 percent from their 2006 peaks–and a great deal more in certain bubble markets–a considerable chunk of property owners are now in this fix. Nearly 1 in 4 borrowers currently have negative equity, according to First American CoreLogic. And rather than continuing to make payments on an investment that’s now worth significantly less than what they paid for it, many borrowers are throwing in the towel.

White uses the following example to demonstrate how many borrowers are better off defaulting: A young professional couple with two children pays $585,000 for a three-bedroom, Salinas, Calif.-home in January 2006. At $4,300, monthly payments on their no-money-down, 30-year fixed mortgage with an interest rate of 6.5 percent represent a tad less than 31 percent of their gross monthly income. Toss in taxes, student loans, health care, food, and other essentials, and finances quickly get tight.

After the historic housing bust, their home is now worth $187,000, but they still owe $560,000. Other homes in their neighborhood, of course, have plummeted in value as well. And if the couple was to purchase a similar, nearby house listed at $179,000, their monthly payments would be less than $1,200. That’s a huge savings over their current $4,300 monthly mortgage bill. But since a foreclosure on their credit report is likely to prevent them from buying a home in the near-term, they may have to rent. And about $1,000 a month gets them a comparable rental property in their neighborhood.

“Assuming they intend to stay in their home ten years, [the homeowners] would save approximately $340,000 by walking away, including a monthly savings of at least $1,700 on rent verses mortgage payments, even after factoring in the mortgage interest tax reduction,” White writes. “If they stay in their home, on the other hand, it will take [the homeowners] over 60 years just to recover their equity–assuming, of course, that they live that long.”

The argument against strategically defaulting is much more straightforward: You promised to repay the loan when you took out the mortgage, and it’s your responsibility to do everything possible to honor that commitment. Avoiding the guilt and shame that can accompany a foreclosure is one of the top reasons struggling homeowners don’t strategically default, White writes. On top of that, a foreclosure significantly damages one’s credit–making it difficult, if not impossible, to obtain a mortgage for years afterward.

But in a recent white paper, Alex Edmans, an assistant professor of finance The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, argues that many homeowners are ignoring these consequences to do what they believe is in their best financial interest. “Defaulting on their loan is a rational decision: While they forfeit their home, they rid themselves of a mortgage liability of even greater value,” Edmans writes. “The source of the problem is the homeowner’s balance sheet: since he has negative equity in his home, it is not worth keeping it by paying the mortgage.”

The issue of negative equity triggering strategic defaults represents a nasty headache for the Obama administration. The $75 billion mortgage housing rescue the administration unveiled last February is designed to keep people in their homes by reducing their monthly mortgage payments down to more manageable levels. The plan does not, however, require lenders or servicers to reduce borrowers’ mortgage principal–meaning underwater borrowers still have this incentive to walk away from their home loan.

Laurie Goodman, a senior managing director at Amherst Securities Group, considers negative equity to be the housing market’s greatest challenge and believes current housing rescue efforts are insufficient. “The current modification program does not address negative equity, and is therefore destined to fail,” Goodman said in written testimony before a Congressional committee in December. “It must be amended to explicitly address this problem.”

Although Uncle Sam has reduced mortgage payments for more than 850,000 borrowers so far–for a median savings of more than $500–the government will remain under pressure to take more aggressive action as long as the foreclosure epidemic keeps churning. Mark Zandi, the chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com, believes the government may take steps to tackle the issue of negative equity head-on this year by incorporating principal write downs–which reduce a borrower’s negative equity position–into the housing rescue program.

source:US News