Thursday, February 9, 2012

More from the New York Times on the Help for Struggling Homeowners

Centergate Realty, LLC
Jean-Luc McKenzie, Realtor / Property Manager
Mobile: 407-489-4789 Office: 407-731-4522

Central Florida real estate expect with short sale, listings and property presentation including professional staging for quick sale. This is at no cost to the homeowner.

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Folks, again, we need principle reduction to market value.  These lenders took the bailout money and they need to provide some more assistance.  Here is an article from the New York Times.


States Negotiate $26 Billion Agreement for Homeowners

After months of painstaking talks, government authorities and five of the nation’s biggest banks have agreed to a $26 billion settlement that could provide relief to nearly two million current and former American homeowners harmed by the bursting of the housing bubble, state and federal officials said. It is part of a broad national settlement aimed at halting the housing market’s downward slide and holding the banks accountable for foreclosure abuses.
Left, Mario Anzuoni/Reuters; Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times
The attorney general of California, Kamala Harris, left, and New York's attorney general, Eric Schneiderman.

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Despite the billions earmarked in the accord, the aid will help a relatively small portion of the millions of borrowers who are delinquent and facing foreclosure. The success could depend in part on how effectively the program is carried out because earlier efforts by Washington aimed at troubled borrowers helped far fewer than had been expected.
Still, the agreement is the broadest effort yet to help borrowers owing more than their houses are worth, with roughly one million expected to have their mortgage debt reduced by lenders or able to refinance their homes at lower rates. Another 750,000 people who lost their homes to foreclosure from September 2008 to the end of 2011 will receive checks for about $2,000. The aid is to be distributed over three years.
An announcement was scheduled in Washington for Thursday morning. The final details of the pact, including how many states would participate, were expected to be announced then. The two biggest holdouts, California and New York, now plan to sign on, according to the officials with knowledge of the matter who did not want to be identified because the negotiations were not completed.
The deal grew out of an investigation into mortgage servicing by all 50 state attorneys general that was introduced in the fall of 2010 amid an uproar over revelations that banks evicted people with false or incomplete documentation. In the 14 months since then, the scope of the accord has broadened from an examination of foreclosure abuses to a broad effort to lift the housing market out of its biggest slump since the Great Depression. Four million Americans have been foreclosed upon since the beginning of 2007, and the huge overhang of abandoned homes has swamped many regions, like California, Florida and Arizona.
In New York State, more than 46,000 borrowers will receive some form of benefit, with an estimated 21,000 expected to see what they owe reduced through a principal reduction, according to estimates by the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
The five mortgage servicers in the settlement — Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Ally Financial — have largely set aside reserves for the expected cost of the accord and investors are likely to cheer its announcement because it removes one more legal worry for the industry, analysts said.
“I wouldn’t say it’s a panacea for the housing industry but it is good for the banks to get this behind them,” said Jason Goldberg, an analyst with Barclays.
As more and more states signed on this week, the negotiations with the banks became especially intense, said one participant, who wasn’t authorized to speak publicly. Two bank officials, Frank Bisignano of JPMorgan Chase and Mike Heid of Wells Fargo, played a critical role in the talks with Shaun Donovan, the secretary of Housing and Urban Development, and Thomas J. Perrelli, the associate attorney general at the Justice Department. Bank of America, which will make the largest payout as the nation’s biggest mortgage servicer, moved more cautiously, the participant said.
The settlement money will be doled out under a complicated formula that gives banks varying degrees of credit for different kinds of help. As a result, banks are incentivized to help harder-hit borrowers with homes worth far less than what they owe.
While the $26 billion figure is the one being cited in the negotiations, federal officials said they hope the eventual value for homeowners reaches up to $39 billion. However, mortgages owned by the government’s housing finance agencies, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, will not be covered under the deal, excluding about half the nation’s mortgages.
About one in five Americans with mortgages are underwater, which means they owe more than their home is worth. Collectively, their negative equity is almost $700 billion. On average, these homeowners are underwater by $50,000 each.
A recent estimate from the settlement negotiations put the average aid for homeowners at $20,000.
“I just don’t think it’s going to be a life-changing event for borrowers,” said Gus Altuzarra, whose company, the Vertical Capital Markets Group, buys loans from banks at a discount.
Several billion dollars would cover the direct cash payments to foreclosure victims and provide money for states’ attorneys general to services like mortgage counseling and future investigations into mortgage fraud.
Though many economists identify the moribund housing market as the greatest drag on the recovery, it is not clear how much the settlement will help.

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Centergate Realty, LLC
Jean-Luc McKenzie, Realtor / Property Manager
Mobile: 407-489-4789 Office: 407-731-4522
Central Florida real estate expect with short sale, listings and property presentation including professional staging for quick sale. This is at no cost to the homeowner.


More Help for Struggling Homeowners from the Obama Administration

Centergate Realty, LLC
407-731-4522

We need principle reduction to market value.  Okay, lets read and see if that's what been proposed here.


A new initiatives help sinking home owner get above water? Or are they just a boon for banks? Pat Garofalo investigates. Thank you Pat for this information.

Last week, after months of dropping hints and offering assurances that existing programs were doing just fine, the Obama administration finally released a set of initiatives aimed at helping homeowners who are “underwater,” meaning that they owe more on their mortgage than their house is worth. According to the Treasury Department, “these changes will help the Administration meet its goal of stabilizing housing markets by offering a second chance to up to 3 to 4 million struggling homeowners through the end of 2012.
On one level, it’s encouraging that the administration has finally acknowledged that negative home equity is a problem deserving of its own distinct set of policy prescriptions. Almost one in four homeowners in the country (about 11 million borrowers) is underwater on his mortgage, particularly in the parts of the country that were hardest hit by the housing crisis. By June, 5.1 million borrowers are expected to have home values that are below 75 percent of their outstanding mortgage balances, which research suggests is when owners start to seriously consider walking away, even if they have the money available to pay.
Up to this point, the administration’s response to the housing crisis has been, to put it mildly, lackluster. The Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP), which was supposed to keep 3 to 4 million borrowers in their homes via lower monthly mortgage payments, has so far resulted in just 168,000 permanent mortgage modifications. Last week, the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (SIGTARP) issued a scathing report criticizing HAMP as a program “that merely kicks the proverbial foreclosure can down the road.”
The SIGTARP report included the startling statistic that the average borrower in HAMP is underwater, even though HAMP was not designed with underwater homeowners in mind. According to the most optimistic estimates cited, the average HAMP borrower owes $1.14 in mortgage payments for every $1 in home equity. This means that the lower monthly payments which HAMP was designed to facilitate will often end up simply delaying a foreclosure, instead of preventing it.
SIGTARP’s conclusion was that more had to be done to address negative equity, and the “primary method” of doing that is cutting mortgage principal (the total amount owed on the mortgage). And SIGTARP is by no means alone in this assessment. Nobel Laureate and Roosevelt Institute Chief Economist Joseph Stiglitz has said that a government priority should be figuring out how to write down loan principal, while Mark Pearce, North Carolina Chief Deputy Commissioner of Banks, said that those not addressing principal reduction as a means of reducing foreclosures are “close to being in denial.”
Even within the federal government, there have been those advocating for principal reductions. These include Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairman Sheila Bair, who has said that such a move “could help reduce defaults, keep people in their homes, avoid costly foreclosures, and enhance the value of these loans.” Unfortunately, as the Huffington Post’s Shahien Nasiripour pointed out, HAMP was so reliant on reducing monthly payments that it actually discouraged principal reductions, which less than two percent of borrowers in HAMP received.
So at least the administration is finally trying to tackle negative equity with its two new initiatives. The first allows borrowers who are current on their mortgage, but who are underwater, to refinance into a Federal House Administration (FHA) loan for 97 percent of the property’s current value. $14 billion in TARP money will be used to fund this program, and losses on the refinanced FHA loans will be born by the government.
The second program will allow HAMP eligible borrowers to receive a principal cut if that would save them more money than the standard HAMP modification. But like HAMP, under this program, the lender would have to agree to the principal cut for it to move forward, and the lender will receive financial incentives for doing so.
And this is where the new initiatives may run aground. Just like HAMP, the program only works if the lenders agree to principal cuts. If they feel that foreclosing is a better bet for their bottom lines, then they don’t have to play along. HAMP’s fatal flaw was that it relied on carrots for the lenders, but had no sticks if they chose to either string borrowers along for months or simply refuse to pull them into HAMP in the first place.
This program could suffer from the same fate. As John Taylor, the head of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, said, “I’m not optimistic that the incentives will be enough to entice servicers and investors to reduce loan principals. Will they help seven million people who are at risk of foreclosure? I will be pleasantly shocked if investors step up for half a million borrowers.”
There is some evidence that banks are coming to the conclusion that principal cuts may be beneficial to them. Bank of America, for instance, instituted a principal reduction program (with a bit of cajoling from the Massachusetts prosecutor’s office). But at the end of the day, the administration seems to still be hoping that lenders themselves step up and do the right thing, with a little federal money sent along to sweeten the pot. Given the way in which the banking industry has responded to the financial crisis so far, I’m not sure I’ll be holding my breath.

Pat Garofalo is the Economics Researcher/Blogger for WonkRoom.org at the Center for American Progress Action Fund. His work has also appeared in The Nation, The Guardian, the Washington Examiner, and AOL News.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Short Sale Home with Screened in Pool in Apopka, Florida Listed by Jean-Luc McKenzie, Centergate Realty, LLC

Jean-Luc McKenzie Mobile: 407-489-4789
Email: mckenzie4074894789@gmail.com

Short Sale is professionally negotiated by Nishad Khan, attorney at law(Nishad Khan, PL). Visit Nishad's website at www.nishadkhanlaw.com or call Nishad at 407-228-9711


                                   27 Wekiva Pointe Circle, Apopka, FL 32712-4800
Subdivision: Traditions at Wekiva

4bedroom 2 bath screened in pool home with split open floor plan.




















                                       




SHORT SALE; listed by Centergate Realty, LLC

THIS BEAUTIFUL HOME IN A GATED COMMUNITY of TRADITIONS OF WEKIVA, FOR SALE AT ONLY $179,900  Home is nicely laid out with lots of options.  A place for you to entertain, relax after a hard days work and enjoy the tranquil feel of the backyard.  Take a moment to preview the pictures and all what this awesome home have to offer: 
  • Solar heated pool,
  • 3-way split plan.
  • Tile in all wet areas plus family room.
  • 42" cabinetry w/ crown molding.
  • Large kitchen with nook space
  • Built in cabinets over refrigerator
  • Bar top
  • The Master bath features garden tub w/ upgraded tile, separate shower, double sinks and private toilet
  • Sliders from master & family room lead to screened lanai & pool area

The home also features: Mature oak trees in back yard, termite bond, security & sprinkler system.    Community play ground/park!

EXPECT TO BE IMPRESSED!!!

Website address of property is http://www.27wekivapointecircle.nicefamilyhome.com
You may also link to my personal website at www.jeanlucmckenzie.com

Please don't hesitate to contact me for further information on this and other great properties I have for sale. 407-489-4789 or email: mckenzie4074894789@gmail.com



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