DAILY REAL ESTATE NEWS | THURSDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2011 - For the 59th month in a row, Nevada continues to have the highest foreclosure rate in the country — despite a new law that took effect in October that changed the state’s foreclosure process and was expected to curtail foreclosures there.
Although foreclosures were down 43 percent year-over-year in Nevada, its foreclosure rate still remained higher than any other state.
The following are the top 10 states with the highest foreclosure rates in the country in November, according to RealtyTrac data.
1. Nevada: 1 in every 175 home received a foreclosure filing in November
2. California: 1 in every 211 homes
3. Arizona: 1 in every 256 homes
4. Utah: 1 in every 290 (This state saw a 74 percent increase in November from October in foreclosure activity.)
5. Georgia: 1 in every 330 homes
6. Michigan: 1 in every 330 homes
7. Florida: 1 in every 358 homes
8. Illinois: 1 in every 427 homes
9. Ohio: 1 in every 500 homes
10. South Carolina: 1 in every 517 (This is the first time South Carolina has made it into the top 10 for foreclosure activity since RealtyTrac began tracking in 2005.)
DAILY REAL ESTATE NEWS | MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2011 - In facing large inventories of foreclosures, Bank of America is considering a program that would allow investors to buy a foreclosed home and then rent it back to the former home owner, HousingWire reports.
Bank of America is looking for ideas on how to handle the large inventories of foreclosures in some areas where demand hasn’t picked up.
"We are looking at programs where you can capture somebody before the REO process and offer a deed-for-lease," Ron Sturzenegger, who leads the bank's legacy asset servicing division, explained to HousingWire. "We would go to the customer and say, 'We'll do a short sale. Will you be interested in leasing your property back? We're still going to sell the property. You will no longer be the owner. But you can be a tenant now in that same property and save you from moving on.'"
The program is still in very early stages and more details need to be worked out, Sturzenegger noted.
November 2011 property transactions in the Sarasota real estate market totaled 602, up 12.7 percent over last November. The total also exceeded the October 2011 sales figure of 577. The market has remained strong and stable as the winter season gets into full swing, reflecting continued confidence in Sarasota as a destination location.
In fact, the Today Show’s real estate report from Barbara Corcoran in late November noted that Sarasota was one of the top recovering markets in the nation. Corcoran said Sarasota is a “beautiful beachfront community” that offers residents and visitors “a sophisticated, urban cultural experience” that is propelling sales and prices in 2011.
Florida Realtor reports (JUPITER, Fla. – Dec. 6, 2011) with real estate prices low, many people are considering buying an investment property and becoming a landlord.
It might sound simple, but real estate pros warn that there’s a lot to know. The landlord who doesn’t follow such basic guidelines as conducting a thorough background check can get stuck with a nightmare tenant. It takes both business sense and common sense.
“Most of my tenants, 98 percent, are terrific,” said Jupiter real estate broker and investor Carl Presto, who owns 60 properties. “The problem is that 2 percent.”
The down economy that has resulted in real estate bargains also means it’s more difficult to find a tenant who can afford to pay first and last month’s rent and a security deposit upfront. Landlords report they have to go through 30 to 40 applicants before finding a qualified tenant.
Landlords also find they are competing with foreclosed houses, which some people rent below market, forcing rents lower.
Although picking up a cheap condominium unit might be tempting, David Dweck, founder and president of the Boca Real Estate Investment Club and a real estate broker and investor, advises avoiding them. Instead, buy a duplex, triplex, small apartment building... ...read full post
WASHINGTON – Dec. 2, 2011 – Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac announced yesterday that they would suspend evictions of foreclosed single family and 2-4 unit properties from Dec. 19, 2011, through Jan. 2, 2012. While lenders will continue completing legal and administrative paperwork, no families will be thrown onto the street over the holidays.
“The holidays are meant for families to spend time together, especially if they’ve gone through the stress of financial challenges and foreclosure,” said Terry Edwards, Fannie Mae’s executive vice president of credit portfolio management. “No family should have to give up their home during this holiday season. Fannie Mae is committed to helping borrowers avoid foreclosure whenever possible and we encourage any homeowner who is having difficulty making their payment to reach out for help.”
While Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac back roughly half the mortgages in the U.S., some lenders also promised to place a moratorium on evictions over the holidays. Bank of America and Wells Fargo, for example, told CNNMoney that they had no plans to evict troubled homeowners before 2012.
Beyond altruism, the mortgage industry hopes to avoid bad publicity at a time of year when news stories focus on charity and kindness.
Some housing markets are still battling high numbers of foreclosures that are continuing to put downward pressure on overall housing prices. Many of the cities facing the highest spikes in foreclosure are facing high unemployment rates, underwater borrowers, and low median family income.
24/7 Wall St., using data from RealtyTrac, found that the following cities saw the biggest increases in foreclosures by 30 percent or more between the second and third quarters of 2011:
Financial analysis firm 24/7 Wall St. has identified the housing markets expected to offer some of the biggest discounts for home buyers. Many of these markets have been plagued with large gluts of foreclosures that have dragged down prices. In fact, six of the 10 markets on the list have had median home prices fall to less than half what they were five years ago, according to 24/7 Wall St.
The following housing markets offer home buyers some of the biggest discounts:
North Port-Bradenton-Sarasota, Fla.
Median home price: $170,000
Home value decline from peak: -51.4%
Predicted change in home value through 2Q 2012: -6.5%
Property sales for October 2011 in the Sarasota real estate market outpaced last October, with 577 this year compared to only 487 at the same time last year. This represents an 18.4 percent increase, and could be a harbinger for a busy season.
There was also a small increase in transactions compared to September 2011, when 570 sales were recorded. Overall, sales in 2011 are on pace to exceed last year, a remarkable fact considering that 2010 sales were at the highest level since 2005.
The inventory of available properties for sale in Sarasota, after dropping precipitously over the course of 2011, was again up slightly in October to 4,525 from last month’s 4,430 level. The inventory sunk to a 10-year low of 4,408 in August 2011.
The October 2011 median sale price for single family homes dropped to $149,838 from last month’s figure of $165,000. But the amount was higher than last October, when it was $147,500. The condo figure has been fluctuating for several months, and rose slightly in October 2011 to $143,000 from last month’s figure of $140,000. Last year at this time, the figure stood at $158,525. The year-to-date median sale price was $155,000 for single family homes and... ...read full post
LOS ANGELES (AP) – Nov. 11, 2011 – More U.S. homes entered the foreclosure process in October than in the previous month, with Florida, Pennsylvania and Indiana registering among the largest monthly increases, new data show.
Some 77,733 properties received an initial default notice last month, up 10 percent from September, foreclosure listing firm RealtyTrac Inc. said Thursday.
The number of homes scheduled to be auctioned or repossessed by lenders also posted monthly increases.
All told, notices of default, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions – warnings that can eventually lead to a home being lost to foreclosure – hit a seven-month high in October.
The numbers are further evidence foreclosure activity is picking up.
Peter Crowley of the Re/Max Aliiance Group published the following market analysis in his weekly blog:
Two important indicators point to a market in recovery:
1) listing inventory is continuing to decrease
2) pending activity is significantly stronger than last year.
The decrease in listing inventory from last year is due in part to increased sales activity coupled with the continued decrease in REO inventory. This drop in inventory has led to a six-month supply of homes, which traditionally signals a market in equilibrium.
Absent a resurgence of REO inventory, the increased demand from our upcoming season will shift the market to a seller’s market. REO specialists and other industry experts still predict an increase in the number of REOs entering the market in the coming months, which would counter this trend.
The significantly stronger pending sales compared to last year indicate a strong buying season ahead. The 2010-2011 buying season was the first healthy activity this market had seen in years, and the upcoming 2011-2012 season appears positioned to surpass that performance. The lower inventory and strong pending activity indicates prices should remain stable if not rise slightly in the short term. The main influence to counter that trend would be the addition of additional REO... ...read full post
Today the Sarasota Board of Realtors reported that September 2011 property sales in the Sarasota real estate market were ahead of last September, with 570 this year compared to only 547 at the same time last year. This represents a small drop in transactions compared to August 2011, when 601 sales were recorded. But historically, the early fall is one of the slower sales seasons.
A recent article in Realtor® Magazine Daily News noted that of the top 15 U.S. cities showing signs of year-over-year increases in list prices, ten are in Florida, and the Sarasota-Bradenton area came in 6th, with list prices up 15.9 percent. Listing price increases generally reflect optimism among sellers that a market is ready to head upwards.
The inventory of available properties for sale in Sarasota has been dropping for the past nine months, and was up only slightly in September to 4,430 after hitting a 10-year low of 4,408 the previous month.
The latest monthly figures in September showed a median price of $165,000 for single family homes, the same as August, and $140,000 for condos. The condo figure has been fluctuating for several months, hitting $185,000 in June, then dropping to $145,000 in July before climbing back... ...read full post
Florida Realtor Magazine reports FICO announced that it has agreements with four of the nation’s top 10 U.S. mortgage servicers to try to identify the borrowers most likely to attempt a strategic default.
In a strategic default, borrowers who can afford to make their mortgage payments choose instead to stop paying and go through foreclosure, generally because they’ve determined that the hit to their credit score is preferable to the cost of keeping the home. Roughly 35 percent of mortgage defaults are strategic, according to the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. FICO estimates the cost at more than $20 billion annually.
FICO uses an algorithm to analyze a lender’s pool of mortgage holders, and while it looks at a number of traits, it focuses largely on the six million U.S. homeowners with current-loan-to-value ratios of 120 or higher – a group considered twice a likely to consider a mortgage default.
A foreclosure or short sale does not always relieve the homeowner of a debt obligation, and lenders might not forgive an outstanding debt. While each lender handles strategic defaults in its own way, banks could use the new FICO information to take a hardline stance on owners who chose a strategic... ...read full post
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- As the foreclosure backlog continues to build up, delinquent borrowers are spending even more time in their homes without making mortgage payments.
Once borrowers start missing payments, they spend an average of a year and nine months, or 611 days, in foreclosure before banks repossess their homes, according to LPS Mortgage Monitor. That's more than twice as long as three years ago, when the average was 251 days. Earlier his year, the average was 523 days.
"The number of defaults in the pipeline has been huge and we had more problem loans than ever before," said Herb Belcher, who supervises analytics for Lender Processing Services (LPS), which provides mortgage industry information and analytics to big banks.
With so many bad loans, servicers have had to prioritize which ones they can deal with and which ones to push aside.
DAILY REAL ESTATE NEWS | FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2011....Prices are rising in Florida: Florida cities have had the largest year-over-year increases in average list prices, according to the latest real estate data from Realtor.com. Florida cities make up 9 of the top 10 places for highest year-over-year list price spikes, based off of August data of 2.2 million listings in 146 markets.
Nationwide, the average list price is $320,325, up 2.36 percent year-over-year.
Here are the top 15 cities boasting the highest percentage of year-over-year increases in average list prices.... ...read full post
Sept. 23, 20111 - Condominium sales in the region climbed about 8 percent during August, but prices -- as they did with single-family homes -- sank last month.
Sarasota-Bradenton experienced a 7 percent increase in sales, from 240 units a year ago to 256 last month. Charlotte County-North Port's small base of sales saw an 18 percent increase, from 34 to 40.
Prices, however, in the market fell universally.
The median sales price in Sarasota-Bradenton was $123,300 last month, down 10 percent from a year ago and about 2 percent from July.
In Charlotte County-North Port, the $76,000 median was a 5 percent drop from a year ago and a 15.5 percent decline from July.
Foreclosures and other distressed sales continue to dominate the region, especially in Charlotte County, and accounted for much of the drop, experts said.
Statewide, 7,098 condos changed hands during August, an increase of 17 percent from a year ago.
The median sales price of $91,100 was a 12 percent increase from a year ago and was up a fraction from July.
This week MortgageLoan.com reported that financially distressed homeowners with Freddie Mac mortgages will have a new option for loan modifications beginning next month.
The new option, called a Standard Modification, is designed for borrowers who are ineligible for a Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) loan modification or have previously defaulted on a HAMP or other loan mod. For those who are approved, the program reduces a borrower's mortgage principle and monthly payment by at least 10 percent each, thereby making the payments more affordable.
To qualify, homeowners must be at least 60 days past due on their mortgage, that is, having missed at least two monthly payments. Those who are not at least 60 days past due can qualify by proving they are in imminent danger of default, through demonstrating an eligible hardship and providing verification of income.
REALTORMagazine reports delinquent home owners are living in their homes longer, rent-free. Home owners with a loan in foreclosure haven’t made a payment, on average, for 20 months or 599 days--a new record, according to new data by Lender Processing Services Inc.
Of nearly 1.9 million loans that are 90 or more days delinquent--but not yet in foreclosure--42 percent of the home owners have not made a payment in more than a year, with an average delinquency of 397 days--another record, LPS reports.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Foreclosures made up roughly one-third of all home sales this spring. While that's a smaller share of sales from the previous quarter, it's six times the percentage of foreclosures in a healthy housing market.
Foreclosure sales, which include homes purchased after they received a notice of default or that were repossessed by lenders, accounted for 31 percent of the market in the April-June quarter, foreclosure listing firm RealtyTrac Inc. said Thursday.
The share of the market would likely have been larger this spring if not for a state and federal investigation into faulty paperwork by banks and servicers. The probe has led many banks to delay foreclosure sales. Once that is complete, foreclosures will likely surge later this year.
As a slice of all home purchases, foreclosure sales peak two years ago at 37.4 percent. In the second quarter, they declined from 36 percent in the January-March period.
Great NW Bradenton location. Conveniently located to schools, shopping and beautiful Anna Maria beaches. Home situated on .27 acre home site in well established area. Public records show home as 3 bedrooms, 1 bath but is actually 2 bedrooms, 2baths. Bonus room could be 3rd bedroom. Living room features wood burning fireplace and family room overlooks large backyard. Property being sold as is with right to inspect.
Marie Selby Botanical Gardens presents a night to celebrate freedom commencing at 6:00 p.m. until the fireworks end. The Gardens' breathtaking Bayfront location and live music by "Impulse" will ignite the Monday evening celebration. Impulse's musical style ranges from Reggae to Soca to R&B classics with a few surprises along the way.
Children's activities and lawn games for the entire family will take place on the Great Lawn. An all American BBQ and Cook-out as well as beer, wine, soda, and other beverages will be available for purchase. Bring your blankets or chairs to appreciate the spectacular community fireworks along the Bayfront.
Tickets are $20 for adults; $17 for members; $17 for member guests; children 11 and under enter free. Make reservations online now or at the Welcome Center from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at 900 South Palm Avenue. All Pre-sale ticket buying ends at 3:00pm on July 4th. Tickets will then be available at the Welcome Center at 6:00pm on July 4th. Please no reciprocals or guest passes, as this is a fundraising event. There are no refunds or exchanges. If the fireworks display is cancelled, all purchased tickets can be exchanged for a one-day Regular Garden Admission Pass valid... ...read full post
LONGBOAT KEY, FL– Andrew Bers with RE/MAX Alliance Group has been awarded the Accredited Buyer’s Representation (ABR®) designation by the Real Estate Buyer’s Agent Council. (REBAC) of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (NAR).
Andrew joins more than 30,000 real estate professionals in North America who have earned the ABR® designation. All were required to successfully complete a comprehensive course in buyer representation and an elective course focusing on a buyer representation specialty, both in addition to submitting documentation verifying professional experience.
REBAC, founded in 1988, is the world's largest association of real estate professionals focusing specifically on representing the real estate buyer. There are more than 40,000 active members of the organization world-wide. THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®, "The Voice for Real Estate," is the world's largest professional association, representing over 1,000,000 members involved in all aspects of the real estate industry.
In addition to the ABR designation, Bers has received numerous industry awards. His web site, mixed media campaigns, direct mail and property brochures have received ADDY Awards for advertising excellence. His web site was chosen Top 10 by the Florida Association of REALTORS Magazine. Bers has been ranked as a top REALTOR® worldwide and has been awarded the Five Star /... ...read full post
The Wall Street Journal this week reported that although we are hearing a lot of good stories about home prices being low and money cheap to borrow but some are saying that with inventory nationwide at an all time low, perhaps it is the seller right now who has the upper hand.
Many buyers are looking for discounts because they lack confidence that prices have reached a bottom, and sellers won't have much pricing power as long as buyers such as Mr. Hammack and Ms. Hunter are in no hurry. "It may take some time, but I'm willing to wait," Ms. Hunter says.
The Wall Street Journal's quarterly survey of housing-market conditions in 28 major metro areas shows inventories of unsold homes remain high but fell during the first quarter. Listings were down by nearly 25% from one year ago in Miami and Orlando, and by 12% in Phoenix and Portland, Ore., according to figures compiled by John Burns Real Estate Consulting.
If you have any questions or would like to consider now the time to list your home, please give me a call. I'm here to help you with all your real... ...read full post
The RE/MAX Collection page on remax.com has been redesigned and restocked with new resources. The page includes a carousel of luxury listing photos and a geo-location feature. See what we can offer here in Sarasota or Longboat Key Florida or anywhere the US. Visit it here.
When looking for the finest in luxury property, look for The RE/MAX Collection®.
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