Thursday, January 31, 2008

And now a Finance word from FIRST INVESTORS (Belmont, MA)

This from Jim Brown of First Investors Mortgage in Belmont (MA)617-484-8383 or
email: jimbrown@firstinvestorsmortgage.net

Although the news and media keep reporting on the Fed lowering the discount rate, 50 basis points yesterday, mortgage rates have actually moved upward a slight bit.

I am sure over the month they should slide back but in any event they are excellent.

Also there is rumor that the conforming limits will soon be increased to help ease the burden on the larger loans. (lets hope so !!!). In general rates should help spur the purchase market a bit.

There are some Community homebuyer programs that have come back in play which provide for lower downpayment and easier loan qualifications. We have a program for:

1 Unit 100% LTV
2 Unit 97% LTV
3 Unit 95% LTV
4 Unit 90% LTV

The max combined income is $108,000.00. This is a great program
for first time homebuyers.

CONFORMING
30 YEAR FIXED

5.625% 0 Points
5.125% 2 Points

15 YEAR FIXED
5.125% 0 Points
4.500% 2 Points
JUMBO
30 YEAR FIXED
6.125% 0 Points


7/1 YEAR ARM
5.625% 0 Points
5.125% 1 Point

Give them a call with questions, scenerios, or pre-approvals
First Investors Mortgage Inc.
MB0063
24 Trapelo Road
Belmont, Ma. 02478
Work # 617-484-8383
Fax# 617-489-4976
Email: jimbrown@firstinvestorsmortgage.net

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Declining Markets

Once again, if you need to know if a town is in a "Declining Market", email me at al.gutterman@commonmoves.com.


If you want to vent, one way or the other, feel free to post a comment down below.

If you are looking to buy or sell a home in my area, call me 617.470.8085.

And by the way...I am never to busy for your referrals.

Monday, January 28, 2008

The "Grass" is ever greener...

It is, whether I am representing a seller or a buyer, my firm belief that I present each property in its best light. Your know, the features to make it sell, or the features that will most likely work to the benefit of a buyer I represent.

Yesterday, in the snow, and the rain and the slush, I escort my buyer to a home of rather little charm.

Not ready for showing, clothes strewn about, cereal in the sink -- 2 bedrooms that are not up to code (I supposed one could sleep in a garage and call it a bedroom). I surely had nothing to say, yet the buyer persisted in the tour and went upstairs to said non code bedrooms. As we entered the one on the left, the eyes of the buyer met mine -- both our noses twitched and, "Wow, said the buyer, "Bill Clinton must have slept here."

"Or," I replied, "at least he did NOT inhale here!"

"Good stuff," my buyer editorialized, "I wonder where the kid hides it."

We made no attempt to find the, uhh, shall we say "potpourri". Rather we exited the home and went our way. There are better homes in the town, you know...the greener grass thing -- especially because in this house, the grass gets smoked.

Saturday, January 26, 2008

Zoom-Baah, the Magic Bus

email me at al.gutterman@commonmoves.com or call me at 617.470.8085 if you need to know if your town is in a Fannie Mae defined Declining Market. And now back to our show...

This from:
Steve Yeater / Los Angeles Times

A STOP ON THE TOUR: Real estate agent Cesar Dias’ Repo Home Tour buses take prospective buyers to foreclosed homes they might want to scoop up. One real estate data firm has pegged Stockton as the U.S. city with the highest rate of foreclosure filings.
STOCKTON - In this city that traces its roots to California's Gold Rush, real estate agent Cesar Dias believes there are fortunes still to be made.

That's why he leads the weekly Repo Home Tour, filling two 18-seat buses with prospective buyers eager to view foreclosed houses that can be snapped up at - what he says - are bargain prices.

Dias, a Stockton native, said that when he started the free tour in September, some residents criticized it as a tasteless marketing gimmick. But as headlines announce record foreclosures and weeds sprout in the yards of abandoned homes, their tune has changed.

"We're bringing in homeowners to get the grass green again," he said.

As the brightly colored buses recently rolled through a subdivision dotted with "For sale" signs, a couple who were stringing up Christmas lights waved. The bargain hunters aboard waved back. Dias, who said his business was booming, offered a friendly beep.

"At this point, I wish the foreclosures would dry up. We could use an end to the free fall," Dias said, adding that the rate-freeze plan President Bush recently announced would help, even if it reached only a fraction of struggling homeowners.

Dias' home tour is just one more high-profile sign of the mortgage crisis that has hit the Stockton area particularly hard. RealtyTrac, a real estate data firm, has pegged Stockton as the U.S. city with the highest rate of foreclosure filings, edging out even such troubled metropolitan areas as Detroit.

Other experts question the significance of such conclusions, pointing out that the company counts delinquency notices for late payments as well as actual foreclosures. Even so, nobody doubts that Stockton and the rest of the Central Valley have been severely jolted. By October, foreclosures in Stockton's San Joaquin County were more than eight times last year's levels, outpacing the state's increase by 41 percent, according to DataQuick, a La Jolla-based information service.

At the waterfront Stockton Arena on Dec. 1, about 500 anxious residents lined up at a foreclosure workshop to see loan counselors from government agencies and nonprofits. Clutching bank documents, they wanted to know how to short-circuit the foreclosures they saw looming, how to negotiate for freezes in their adjustable interest rates, how to buy some time.

Some recounted loan officers having urged them to inflate their incomes to qualify for bigger loans. Others said they had snagged 100-percent loans but had unwittingly agreed to double-digit interest rates and pre-payment penalties as high as $10,000.

Pete Ponce de Leon, a 50-year-old machinist, said he and his wife were barely keeping up with their monthly mortgage payments, which shot up from $1,700 a year ago to $2,500 now. He said he cashed in two IRAs, sold his tools, sold a truck and was bracing for another rate increase this month. Along the way, he lost his job, and his lender refused to cut him a break.

"Why don't they just screw us all at once instead of a little at a time?" said Ponce de Leon, who has found another job and hopes to renegotiate his mortgage.

Like homes almost everywhere else in California, the Ponce de Leons' lost value and their interest rate kept going up.

As more homes entered foreclosure, more neighborhoods were riddled with problem properties - some in disrepair because of their owners' financial problems, a few boarded up to deter squatters.

Median home prices in the county tumbled from a high of $425,000 in July 2006 to $319,000 in October. Last summer, San Joaquin County officials sent out crews to dump chemicals and larvae-eating fish into the stagnant water of abandoned swimming pools, where mosquitoes were breeding.

"The mortgage crisis was, in a way, becoming a public health crisis," said Rep. Dennis Cardoza, D-Merced, who co-sponsored the foreclosure workshop. "It's one more symptom of a sick situation."

In some ways, the Stockton area's mortgage crisis has played out much like that in Southern California's "Inland Empire." In both places, commuters from big metropolitan areas were finding homes they could afford - if barely - in vast, recently built tracts that could be more than a two-hour drive from their jobs. Little wonder: Although San Joaquin County home prices in recent years soared from the 2000 median of $133,000, they still drew thousands of people squeezed out of the Bay Area, where a median-priced home now goes for more than $810,000, according to the California Association of Realtors.

Friday, January 25, 2008

Puppy Love

First off, if you need to know if your home, or the home in which you may be interested is in a designated "DECLINING MARKET", email me al.gutterman@commonmoves.com, or call me at 617.470.8085.

Now let us move on, shall we?

I am supposed to show the home at 11:30. I get to the home. The owner, a shy sort who seems not to want to be noticed, is still there.

Pray be, I ask her, why have you not gone for a stroll some other fashion of repast (as is your wont) while I am here to show the home? Well, actually, those were not my exact words, but I have been reading some Jane Austen, these days, and the impact lingers.

"Well," she replies, I could not just leave you alone with them. I mean, they are coming right now."

"I know," I say, "I think they are good buyers and..."

"No no no, " she interjects, rather forcefully, "Not them, I mean THEM," and she points to the kitchen.

Readers, mind you, I have oft said I've "seen everything" and I suspected she was referring to ghosts, but in this case, I must admit, I've seen something NEW...never seen before.

"Four of them already," she said, "More coming by the looks of her. Come."

Readers, have you guessed? Her dog, it seems, no longer "virgo intacta" was delivering her issue on a pile of newspapers in a box in the kitchen. As the kidney bean lumps of skin emerged and slipped about, I thought about the buyers coming in a few minutes, sensed the oozes and odors of "Mutt-making" and ruminated...

Yes -- my game plan -- well lived in house, full of life, a free puppy with every offer...

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Declining Markets and Fannie Mae

I am being swarmed with this up top. Email me if you want to know if your property is in a declining market in Massachusetts. I WILL get back to you the same day, but be patient. For an explanation of decling markets, see the post of January 16 or read below.
Al.
al.gutterman@commonmoves.com


Maximum Financing in Declining Markets:
Fannie Mae Announcement 07-22

Marianne E. Sullivan, Sr. VP of Fannie Mae's Single-Family Credit Polity and Risk Management division, issued a Selling Guide Announcement 07-22 on December 5, 2007.

"Current home price trends indicate that home values continue to decline in many markets across the country. As a result, and based on our continued monitoring of loan performance, Fannie Mae is reinstating a policy to restrict the maximum loan-to- value (LTV) ratio and combined loan-to-value (CLTV) ratio for properties located within a declining market to five percentage points less than the maximum permitted for the selected mortgage product."
Effective November 12, 2007 for new loans, when a property is identified as being located in a declining market, a 5% LTV/CLTV reduction is required from the maximum financing allowed per the applicable loan program. In addition, the appraiser must provide three comparable sales that have closed within the last six months to support the property value. This policy update is applicable to all conventional conforming and jumbo loans, including Home Equity Lines of Credit and Closed End Seconds only. FHA and VA products are excluded from this new policy.
Many Massachusetts communities have been included
in this policy effective 1-11- 2008

Example for how LTV may be impacted:

Example 1 - Purchase transaction of a primary residence at a 100% LTV/CLTV, which is also at the maximum allowable LTV for the selected product. If the subject property is identified as being located in a declining market, the maximum financing would be restricted to a 95% LTV/CLTV.

Example 2 - Purchase transaction of an investment property at a 72% LTV and selected product allows for a maximum LTV/CLTV of 75%. If the subject property is identified as being located in a declining market, the maximum financing would be restricted to a 70% LTV/CLTV.
The subject property will be identified as being located in a declining market if any of the following criteria apply:
· The Appraiser identifies the property as being located in a declining market.
· The automated underwriting system identifies the property as being located in an area of declining home values.
· The property is identified as being located in a declining market via the Declining Market Indicator tool internally at Century 21 Mortgage.
CALL ME FOR INFORMATION ON ANY PARTICULAR TOWN 617.470.8085 or email me al.gutterman@commonmoves.com

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Some Things You Do Not Need to Know About...

...Somerville. Redux, as in we've done this before but just have to do it again.

Bette Davis lived the first decade of her life in Somerville. Katherine Hepburn's grandfather was from Somerville.

The smallest national park in the United States is in Somerville...on Winter Hill. It has nothing to do with James "Whitey" Bulger, rather it marks the spot where Paul Revere evaded capture during his "one if by land" gig. Speaking of that gig, the Brits took thier first hostile action against the emerging revolutionaries when they struck the old Mollet Grist Mill in Somerville in 1774. They confsicated 212 barrels of gunpowder and angered thousands of musket toting farmers.

The Ford plant in Somerville turned out 75,000 cars in 1948. In 1957, after building just 400 Edsels, the plant was ignominiously closed for good.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

DECLINING MARKETs AND FANNIE MAE

Call me at 617.470.8085 to see if YOU are in a decling market

A NEW YEAR AND A NEW MARKET
Maximum Financing in Declining Markets:
Fannie Mae Announcement 07-22

Marianne E. Sullivan, Sr. VP of Fannie Mae's Single-Family Credit Polity and Risk Management division, issued a Selling Guide Announcement 07-22 on December 5, 2007.

"Current home price trends indicate that home values continue to decline in many markets across the country. As a result, and based on our continued monitoring of loan performance, Fannie Mae is reinstating a policy to restrict the maximum loan-to- value (LTV) ratio and combined loan-to-value (CLTV) ratio for properties located within a declining market to five percentage points less than the maximum permitted for the selected mortgage product."
Effective November 12, 2007 for new loans, when a property is identified as being located in a declining market, a 5% LTV/CLTV reduction is required from the maximum financing allowed per the applicable loan program. In addition, the appraiser must provide three comparable sales that have closed within the last six months to support the property value. This policy update is applicable to all conventional conforming and jumbo loans, including Home Equity Lines of Credit and Closed End Seconds only. FHA and VA products are excluded from this new policy.
Many Massachusetts communities have been included
in this policy effective 1-11- 2008

Example for how LTV may be impacted:

Example 1 - Purchase transaction of a primary residence at a 100% LTV/CLTV, which is also at the maximum allowable LTV for the selected product. If the subject property is identified as being located in a declining market, the maximum financing would be restricted to a 95% LTV/CLTV.

Example 2 - Purchase transaction of an investment property at a 72% LTV and selected product allows for a maximum LTV/CLTV of 75%. If the subject property is identified as being located in a declining market, the maximum financing would be restricted to a 70% LTV/CLTV.
The subject property will be identified as being located in a declining market if any of the following criteria apply:
· The Appraiser identifies the property as being located in a declining market.
· The automated underwriting system identifies the property as being located in an area of declining home values.
· The property is identified as being located in a declining market via the Declining Market Indicator tool internally at Century 21 Mortgage.
CALL ME FOR INFORMATION ON ANY PARTICULAR TOWN 617.470.8085 or email me al.gutterman@commonmoves.com

Monday, January 14, 2008

Snow Job

Now I consider myself a pretty good marketer, and Real Estate is all about marketing oneself. You get your name out there so much that folks take it for granted that you will sell their home. Today's storm here in my corner of the world (snow -- quite a lot -- for my Arizona readers who love to gloat over their wonder weather) has brought to my attention a marketer excellante!...read that as "without shame."

I get a call from a client one streets over. He says, "What a great idea, why didn't you think of it."

"Pray tell, what?" I say.

"The snow blower. The broker. Some broker has a guy with a snow blower going up and down the streets clearing the sidewalks for everybody!"

"Wow," I say dumbfounded, "but how do you know it is a broker?"

"Business cards being dropped off in the mailboxes. On the back is a handwritten note that says,'Isn't winter wonderful, especially when you don't have to shovel? All the best, Mike'."

Mind you, I am a skeptical sort, and when I, too, got the Snow Job, I made a point to saunter out and see who was actually doing the "blowing". Turns out, it's my neighbor, the good one who coaches every kid team, is on the town committees, a real Suzy Creamcheese.

So I ask him, "Why are you working with that guy?"

"I'm not working with 'that guy' or any other guy. I'm just using my new blower, just like the last storm."

So I him the card and the Good Neighbor says, "What THE @#%& is this $*&%!!! Who the @#&% is this guy?!?"

The good neighbor pulls out the Cell and gets "Mike the broker"on the blower. And they talk...and talk.

Neighbor relates that "Mike's been follwoing me around dropping off these little notes,...writing them up and dumping them about five houses behind me! Got the idea when he saw me doing the sidewalks it in the last storm! He tells me -- quote -- 'I never said I was doing the blowing, or for that matter I never said I had ANYTHING to do with the blowing. I just made a comment...a winter comment' Do you believe this guy?" the Good Neighbor rants, "That is disgusting!"

No, that is for some people sadly, marketing.

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

Interest Rate Update from FIRST INVESTORS in Belmont (MA)

The mortgage rates continue to stay low and JUMBO RATES have made it back to being competitive.
CONFORMING 30 YEAR FIXED 5.75% NO POINTS
5.25% 2 POINTS
We have found new investors offering Jumbo rates at very competitive pricing:
JUMBO 30 YEAR FIXED 6.125% NO POINTS
Our title insurance companies are offering 10% off on all first time homebuyers.

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

NO JOKE -- New Real Estate Laws and Issues

On Thursday, December 20th, President Bush signed into law a bill passed by Congress: HR 3648 –Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007.
The three major points are:
· Elimination of the “phantom tax” on foreclosures, short sales or other discharges of debt on a primary residence. Consider this scenario: A property is worth $250,000, and the mortgage balance is $300,000. Under the old rules, if a lender forgave the $50k difference as part of a foreclosure, short sale, refinance or loan modification, the borrower had to claim the $50k as income and pay federal income taxes on that amount. The new law eliminates this “phantom tax”, and the forgiven debt is no longer treated as taxable income to the borrower as long as certain requirements are met, such as the discharged mortgage balance must be on the taxpayer’s principal residence.
· The tax deduction for mortgage insurance premiums is now extended until December 31, 2010 instead of expiring at the end of 2007. The same rules apply as before in terms of the income limitations etc.
Those with adjusted gross incomes up to $100,000 receive the full break, but the deduction reduces 10% for every $1,000 over $100,000 until it reaches zero at an adjusted gross income of $110,000.
· The capital gains exclusion is now $500,000 instead of $250,000 for an unmarried individual who sells their primary residence within 2 years of the time their spouse has died. This new guideline applies to sales after December 31, 2007, and provides relief for widows and widowers by giving them a 2 year window from the time their spouse has died to sell their home and receive the $500,000 exclusion. Of course, the same rules apply as before, where the individual(s) need to have lived in the home as their primary residence for 2 out of the last 5 years.
Yet to be determined…
On October 17, 2007 the Office of the Attorney General amended 940 CMR 8.00
et. seq., the regulation under the Consumer Protection Act that identifies unfair and
deceptive acts or practices in connection with mortgage brokering and mortgage lending.
The new amended regulations were issued following an extensive comment period and
after four hearings were held statewide between September 18 and 21, 2007. The new
regulations will take effect on January 2, 2008.
Massachusetts’ Attorney General Martha Coakley’s new mortgage regulations have forced national lenders like Wells Fargo to drastically adjust their business practices in the Bay State — which includes no longer paying yield spread premium to its brokers. Who else is dismissing YSP and which lender is pulling the plug on business in the state altogether?
Massachusetts prohibits certain activities and requires that all mortgage loans be in the borrower's best interests. Furthermore, a mortgage loan broker's interest cannot conflict with the borrower's best interest.