Another Satisfied Client

Hi Patrick,

My wife and I want to thank you very much for selling our house so quickly. You sold our house in a matter of 1 week – unbelievable what you did! You also show us (dot points) how to sell quickly, and get the best possible deal during a very sad decline economy. Matter of fact the prices on Homes are still going down – along with everything else. My wife and I are very fortunate (lucky) to have you as our Realtor. Your communication skills, experience and knowledge (between Client & Realtor) was outstanding; your up to date information was very accurate, as well as your your honesty, trust, integrity was also outstanding – which meant a lot to us. Thank you again and it was a pleasure working with you. Take Care and again thanks for everything.  Your the best real estate agent in bradenton.

Sincerely,
Bob & Cristina Ragucci

Short Sales

According to RealtyTrac, a short sale “is literally the sale of a home for less money than is currently owed the lender on the outstanding mortgage being foreclosed on. In other words the home is ‘upside down’ from a financial aspect. Therefore, the catch is that in order to successfully conduct a short sale, the foreclosing lender has to agree to it, essentially agreeing to accept less money than is owed on the loan secured by the house.”

Pros and cons of short sales

Pro: Getting the property for less than what it would cost for the owner to reinstate the mortgage can be a windfall for the buyer.
Con: Short sales can require more work on the part of the buyer who must also qualify for the transaction — and often be able to pay entirely in cash.

Did you know?
– Frankie Orlando, the author of The Pre-Foreclosure Real Estate Handbook, says that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will accept 85 to 90 percent of the fair market values in a short sale, and HUD will accept as low as 82 percent.
– To make a case for the short sale, the buyer needs to compile paperwork to prove to the lender that the homeowner qualifies for a short sale payoff.
– While a first mortgage will be satisfied in a short sale, buyers also need to consider any secondary liens against the property.
– Lenders will more seriously consider short sale offers that are entirely in cash, with a 30-day-or-shorter closing and no contingencies.
– The seller or property owner cannot profit from a short sale.

What goes in a short sale packet?
Since the average layperson is not familiar with the many nuances and legalities of most real estate transactions, including short sales, working with a Realtor® who specializes in this area can save prospective buyers a lot of aggravation, time and money. Whether you go it alone, or seek professional help, Frankie Orlando, author of The Pre-Foreclosure Real Estate Handbook, says you will need to present the following to a lender for any short sale:

– Cover letter
– Purchase agreement
– Low comps list
– List of repairs with quotes for bids
– Photos of problems with the house
– Seller’s hardship letter
– Net sheet (HUD-1)
– Financial information on seller (W-2s, tax returns, etc.)
– Your formal offer, with a time limit for acceptance.

Short Sales Selling and Buying

The real estate market is going through alot of turbulance. Spring Hill Florida is one of the towns that has many short sales on the market place and will continue to get even larger. Short sales are when sellers owe more money than the property is worth to the bank or lender. The seller has a financial hardship and needs to sell the home now for less than owed.  The bank then must allow the seller to sell the property for less than the mortgage amount to satisfy the lein.  This process can be time consuming for all involved.  With out the correct paper work and information, the bank could hold up the process for upto 1 year.  Having an agent who specializes in REO (bank owned property) and distress sales will save you time and frustration.  Submitting a BPO (Broker Price Opinion) with the listing agreement will speed up the process and give you a better chance of a quick acceptance.
Buy Spring Hill Short Sales with us and save time money and hassle.

NAIHP Files Law Suite Against Federal Compensation Rules, BOA Blocks Mortgage News Show From Their Loan Officers

The National Association of Independant Housing Professionals has filed a laws suite against the Federal Reserve Board in Protest Of the Federal Loan Officer Compensation Regulations that go into effect on April 1st, 2011. I have covered this rule before and the inequities it will create in a free market place. Bottom line is, that this rule will not be good for consumers, nor for small business. Check out what the Daily Show Has to say about this. These guys are right on the money, no punn intended.

 

Bank of America Blocks TBWS Daily Show from Loan Officers

New Federal Originator Compensation- Call To Action

This Morning CNNMoney had an article on their website written by staff reporter Catherine Clifford. You can find the article by clicking here. While I enjoyed the article and although it does a very good job of describing the correlation of Treasury Yields as it relates to Mortgage Rates, and Pricing it fails to give the entire picture. In fact a midst the biggest sweeping change in the Mortgage Business in decades, there has been little to no coverage regarding the new Federal Compensation Regulations that has been introduced by the Federal Reserve Board. These new Regulations go into effect on April 1st, and will have serious adverse and unintended consequences to the Consumer, and the housing industry alike. In response to a lack of response, below is a letter that I sent to Catherine Clifford, hoping that some of the new organizations will start to cover this story. I am urging everyone from consumer, to industry professional, to Realtors to please get involved and contact any and all new medias, congress men, Representatives, and any other politician or public group who you think may help. Please take a moment to read below, and formulate your own opinions. Please feel free to re-blog, repost, and reproduce at will. You have my infinate permission to plagerize, and do what ever it is you wish to keep the message going out. As always, feel free to contact me with any questions or opinions. It is an honor and privilege to serve my community, I hope that this will be able to continue going forward as we make our way to an unprecedented change in our industry. 

Steve Fingerman

Steve Fingerman

Branch Manager

E Loans Mortgage Inc

E Loans Mortgage Inc Capital

4117 Mariner Blvd.

Hernando County Florida, 34609

Office 352-688-7949

Cell    727-946-0904

Hernando County Mortgage Lender

Good Morning Catherine,

I enjoyed your article, however that is not really the big story here. The bigger story is that the entire industry is getting ready for new Federal Compensation rules that go into effect beginning on April 1st. The Federal Reserve Board has introduced a set of compensation regulations that will limit Loan Officer, Mortgage Broker, and Originator compensation. That is actually a very understated description of what will be going on after April 1st. The compensation laws prohibit any Originator from receiving compensation that is based on the terms of the loan. Now on the surface that sounds like it’s not so bad, however when you start really looking at what these new regulations say, it essentially will eliminate most if not all of the wholesale lending channel. The way that it is written now, if I am a Broker who employs a Loan Officer, I would only be able to receive compensation from either the lender or the borrower, but not both. Splitting compensation between both has been a tool we have used for decades to price loans more attractively for borrowers who may be cash poor, but still want to have reasonably lower interest rates, with reduced closing costs. For those borrowers closing costs can be offset by slightly increasing the rate, and then reducing the closing cost by a correlating amount. After April 1st this will become illegal. Also, compensation from lenders will be limited as the Fed has not clarified or issed enough guidance for the entire industry to be able to comply. Because of this lack of proper guidance, we have an entire industry that is scratching their head not knowing what to do after April 1st. In addition to this, regardless of how we were to take any compensation it will be illegal to pay a Loan Officer any commission. So effectively any Loan Officer who chooses to remain at the post after April 1stwill have to become an hourly or salary employee. The Loan Officer is a essentially a sales job, we charge them with going out selling loans for a living. We will now have a sales job, which has no means of rewarding sales productions, on the converse side we will also have to way of disseminating poor performance. Under the new rule once compensation is set, it is set for all loans going into the future and is only allowed to change periodically. So you were an LO, and your compensation is set now, it would stay the same going into the future. This holds true regardless of what a lousy job you do.

To further complicate the problem this new regulation also prohibits a Loan Originator from paying for the borrowers closing costs, or giving any credit to the borrower from their compensation. Many times of the last few decades, Loan Officers have used their compensation to give a borrower credit towards closing in order to limit the amount of cash a borrower needed at the time of closing. I myself use this as a crucial tool to get hundreds of First Time Home buyers into the their first home who may be cash poor, but otherwise qualify and are low to moderate credit risks. After April 1st, this will no longer be an option for anyone, regardless of circumstances. That means, that those several hundred people I have helped get into their first home, who incidentally are still performing and paying on their home loans would have never been afforded the opportunity to own their home. This rule does nothing to help protect the consumer, in fact it does the complete opposite. It will simply divert the flow of money from the ground level of Origination to the secondary level of the Big Banks. It actually will have the miss intended consequence of raising the cost to the consumer, limiting consumer choice, and in effect eliminating the competition to the Big 4 Banks. We have an entire industry that is at risk, which has been issued zero compliance guidance and is now unwilling to take on the mitigating risks associated with this new rule. This is the biggest sweeping change to the Mortgage business in decades, and is one of the biggest contributing factors to why the market is pricing itself with higher loan rates, and higher fees. It’s become a big grab for small and large investors, lenders, and banks alike because the future has not only become uncertain it has actually become impossible to predict or plan for. This new rule is scarred with dozens of ill intended consequences and none of them will be good for the consumer, the industry, or free markets. Think about this example; After April 1st, a $70,000 loan amount, closed with a lender paid compensation option will at best now yield only 2% or about $1,400.00 dollars to the Originating Broker, or Mortgage Banker. Sounds pretty good right? Wrong, not when you consider that out of that $1,400.00 the loan officer will have to be paid in some fashion (not sure how, but right now it’s looking like a salary or hourly wage since that is all that will be legal after April 1st) Then pay for the processor, then the lights, then the rent, then the electric, the insurances, the licensing, the phone bill, etc. etc. What will effectively be left is a negative -$286.82. I may not know much, but I do not that no business will survive a -$286.82, it will wipe out thousands of small businesses that are small to mid-cap Mortgage Brokers, Mortgage Bankers, Originators etc. The only ones left will be the Big 4 Banks, and that leaves the consumer having no chance in heck at free choice, of free markets. It also puts the entire country at the mercy of Big Banks, who let’s face it have not exactly been a model of good will for consumers as of late. This story should be headline news across the country, however it has not been covered much if at all by anyone. My guess is probably because of the complexity of the new regulation, not many people in the general populous understand what it really means to them nor the adverse impact it will have on the lending world, the cost to the consumer, and ultimately the entire Real Estate industry. This will do nothing but jeopardize any fragile housing recovery we are seeing, and will limit the availability of credit to consumers going forward after April 1st 2011. I urge you to please do your own research and come to your own conclusions. Interview as many people in the industry as you can, from small Brokers to medium size Mortgage Bankers, the entire industry is at risk, and at a loss of what to do after April 1st. Please feel free to contact me should you have any questions. I urge you to please cover this, and let the public know the true ramifications of this new regulation.

Respectfully,

Steve Fingerman

Branch Manager

E Loans Mortgage Inc Capital

4117 Mariner Blvd.

Hernando County Fl, 34609

352-688-7949 Office

727-946-0904 Cell

352-688-7656 Fax

www.AlliedHome.com/sfingerman

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