Bob Bendat
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  • November19th

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  • November15th

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    San Diego, November 15, 2009

    Not all buyers are suited for a short sale. This was one of the messages delivered at “Short Sales from the Buyer’s Perspective” during the 2009 REALTORS® Conference & Expo today.

    According to the latest Realtors® Confidence Index, one out of 10 recent buyers purchased a home through a short sale. The survey also showed that Realtors® are concerned about the hurdles buyers face in short sales.

    “As short sales become more commonplace, both buyers and sellers need the help of seasoned, experienced professionals to help them navigate the complexities of a short sale transaction,” said National Association of Realtors® President Charles McMillan. “As the first, best source for real estate information, Realtors® provide valuable insights and experience that can help buyers realize their homeownership goals, whether through a short sale or other means.”

    During the session, Realtor® Lynn Madison, who co-authored NAR’s new Short Sales and Foreclosure Resource (SFR) Certification Program, detailed the primary reasons that short sales fail, including an incomplete short sale package, an offer that is too low, and inaccurate appraisals. According to Madison, buyers who are good candidates for short sales are very patient – it can take some lenders four months or longer to approve a short sale – have their financing in order, and don’t have any contingencies in their purchase offer.

    “Short sale buyers need to have the time to be able to wait for the lender’s approval; some lenders get several hundred contacts every day,” said Madison. “Buyers must also be willing to make an offer that has a reasonable chance of closing and take guidance from their agent. If the offered price is too low, there is a good chance the lender won’t approve the contract.”

    To help Realtors® address the evolving short sales market, NAR launched the SFR Certification Program earlier this year. Offered by the Real Estate Buyer’s Agent Council of NAR, the program includes training on how to manage short-sale, foreclosure, and real-estate owned transactions, and provides resources to help Realtors® stay current on national and state-specific information. More than 250 Realtors® have earned the SFR certification since the program was first offered in September. For more information, visit www.realtorsfr.org.

    The National Association of Realtors®, “The Voice for Real Estate,” is America’s largest trade association, representing 1.2 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries.

  • November15th

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    Home sales will increase 15 percent to about 5.7 million units and REALTOR®income will be up 20 percent in 2010, NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun told a packed room of REALTORS® today in a residential economic update at the 2009 NAR Conference & Expo.

    Yun credited the home buyer tax credit with unleashing sales on the lower-end of the housing market this year, bringing up to 400,000 first-time buyers into the market who wouldn’t have bought otherwise. That influx tightened inventories of starter homes, shored up prices, and helped reduce households’ fear over continuing price drops.

    This virtuous cycle will continue now that the federal government has extended the credit to mid-2010 and expanded it to make a smaller credit available to repeat buyers and to households with higher incomes. “The key is stabilizing prices and preserving household wealth,” he says.

    Yun predicts the supply of homes to stabilize at the historic norm of six to seven months. Homes above $500,000 will remain elevated in the near-term, but that weakness will be offset by a hefty drop in starter-home inventories, which are running at about a five months supply.

    The tightening inventory at all price points will help improve market performance by bringing supply into better balance with demand, but the added sales, particularly on the higher end, will also increase the number and quality of the market comparables used by appraisers to assign valuations. Once appraisals improve, foreclosures will ease, blunting their drag on the market and making it less likely that Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and even FHA will need help from the taxpayer.

    “Then we’ll be set for a durable economic expansion,” he said.

    New-home sales, which comprise about 10 percent of the market, will continue at suppressed levels–about 550,000 units, down from more than a million during the boom–mainly because builders have scaled projects way back, in part because financing isn’t available.

    “Weakness in new-home sales shouldn’t be viewed as tepid demand,” he said.

    Even under the most positive economic scenario, unemployment will remain elevated through 2010. Yun is predicting unemployment to stay near double-digits going into 2011, qualifying this recession, as some economists have, as the “Great Recession.”

    For the longer term, the huge deficit run up by the federal government to shore up the economy remains the big question mark. Although the deficit is expected to improve each of the next three years, it will remain at historic highs. Unless the federal government releases a credible plan for shrinking it, investors will start to balk and interest rates will need to rise to bring them back. Should inflation be the result, the housing recovery will be set back.

    Source: Robert Freedman, REALTOR® magazine

  • November13th

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  • November13th

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    • Industry estimates find that half of all homeowners who lose their homes to foreclosure have
    no contact with their loan servicers. Homeowners at risk of default or those who already are
    behind on mortgage payments are advised to contact their servicer at the first sign of trouble.
    Consumers should request to speak with someone in the home retention dept., and expect a
    long wait time.
    • When working on a loan modification, short-sale, or repayment plan, servicers likely will ask
    the homeowner to explain the reasons they can no longer make their mortgage payments.
    Borrowers should be honest and realistic. The servicer also will need to verify the borrower’s
    current income, unemployment benefits (if any), household expenses, tax returns, property
    taxes, hazard and flood insurance premiums, and condo or HOA dues