From the monthly archives:

June 2008

Due to popular demand (more like dozens of  demanding emails ;) )

We are opening the doors for our Agent REO Secrets class this week.

This is a free event. We have room for about 300 agents for this call.

When you attend this call you will learn:

1) How to form your REO Team.

2) Access to our exclusive top secret list of the banks who are looking for agents to take REO listings.

3) Who to contact at the lenders…names, numbers….we are sharing it all.

4) How to present yourself to the REO departments at the lenders so they choose you over the hundreds of other agents who are looking for REO listings.

5) This is an important one….we will tell you which BPO companies assign REOs and which don’t. Thats right, you may be doing BPOs in anticipation of being assigned an REO listng..but, the company you are doing the BPOs for may not actually assign the REOs.

And loads more must know info.

Almost forgot…we are giving away our new Agent REO Secrets guide book when you go to the link below.

Here is the important link for this Wednesdays call..

AgentREOSecrets.com <—————–Important link. Go here now for the Free Book and Call info.

Get ready to take pages of great notes!

Realtor coaching, real estate coaching, coaching for real estate agents, Realtor coaching classes, Tim and Julie Harris, Harris Real Estate University, Harris Realtor Coaching, Tim and Julie Realtor coaching.

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Next month, Michelle Augustine plans to walk away from her four-bedroom house in a Sacramento, Calif., subdivision and let the property fall into foreclosure. But before doing so, she hopes to lock in the purchase of another home nearby.

“I can find the same exact house as what I live in right now for half the price,” says Ms. Augustine, 44 years old, who runs a child-care service out of her home. She says she soon will be unable to afford her monthly payments, which will jump to $4,000 from $3,300 in August, and she doesn’t want to continue to own a home that is now worth $200,000 less than what she paid for it two years ago.

Have you downloaded your FREE Agent REO Secrets Guidebook Yet? Go Here Now
And Grab Your Copy. www.AgentREOSecrets.com

In markets hit hardest by falling home prices and rising foreclosures, lenders and brokers are discovering a new phenomenon: the “buy and bail,” in which borrowers with good credit buy a new home — often at a much lower price — then bail out of the “upside down” mortgage on their first home.

Homeowners are able to pull off this gambit — which some lenders and real-estate agents call mortgage fraud — by taking advantage of mortgage-lending practices that allow them to buy a new primary residence before their existing residence has been sold. And with the lending industry in disarray as it tries to restructure millions of mortgages, some boast they are able to pull off the strategy with ease.

In some cases, homeowners are coached through the buy-and-bail process by real-estate agents and brokers who see nothing wrong with it. Some blame the phenomenon in part on lenders’ unwillingness to cut deals or restructure loans made when home prices were inflated. “It’s just a business decision,” says Linda Caoili, a Sacramento real-estate agent who is working with Ms. Augustine and others who are considering walking away from their mortgages. “If you’re upside-down $250,000, why would you keep it? It just doesn’t make sense.”

The fact is there IS an option. And it’s the overall best option for the home owners, the lenders and the neighborhood where the home is located. Its called a short sale. Agents who know how to do short sales in this market are the agents who are doing the transactions. Free 7 Part Agent Short Sale Secrets Crash Course. Download Now.

To be sure, walking away from a mortgage, even if legal, has plenty of drawbacks: Borrowers lose the ability to take out unsecured loans, since foreclosures can stay on a credit report for seven years. In some states, lenders can sue for assets, including a new house. Fannie Mae, the government-sponsored mortgage underwriter, recently revised the amount of time borrowers with a foreclosure must wait to receive a home loan to five years from four. Proposed Fannie Mae guidelines, which could take effect later this month, also would require those borrowers to make a 10% down payment and meet a minimum credit score after the five-year period.

While buy-and-bail is on the rise, the practice doesn’t appear to be widespread. Credit is much tighter now than it was during the real-estate boom, and most families with an upside-down mortgage likely will hold on to their homes and hope the market improves in the future — even though many of them could lose their properties.

Still, with home prices falling rapidly in some parts of the country, a growing number of frustrated consumers are willing to take the risk — especially in so-called nondeficiency states such as California and Arizona, where it is more difficult for a lender to sue consumers who walk away from their mortgages. Borrowers who bought or refinanced their home with a personal line of credit, however, instead of a home-purchase loan — a common practice during the housing boom — could be sued by a lender in those states. Borrowers also could be on the hook if lenders can show that homeowners committed fraud by misrepresenting themselves on their loan application.

Yet even in cases in which a lender could attach a lien on the new home, some homeowners simply assume that lenders are too swamped. “So many people are foreclosing, is it cost effective for lenders to go after all of these people?” says Steve Hawks, a Las Vegas real-estate agent who handles lender-owned properties.

That works in the favor of borrowers such as Blair Morrow. Last year, he rented out his Sacramento home when he moved to Houston for a new job, but he lost those renters in February. He quickly arranged to buy a new home in Houston, fearing that his old residence would be foreclosed and he would take a big hit on his credit.

“I had 30 days to make a decision: Live in a rental house the rest of my life or buy a house and walk away from the one in California,” says Mr. Morrow, 56, who works at a car dealership. He wrestled with the decision for a while, but justified it once Countrywide Financial Corp., the lender for his first home, approved the new home loan. “Countrywide didn’t say peep,” he says. Countrywide didn’t return calls seeking comment.

Ms. Augustine, the Sacramento day-care provider, became a first-time homeowner in November 2006 by taking out two loans with nothing down to cover the $426,000 home purchase. With her home valued at about $220,000 now, she is actively looking in nearby communities for another one to buy before the bank forecloses on her current home.

The mortgage industry is starting to wise up to the practice and is scrambling to fight back. Buy-and-bail is “certainly fraudulent and unfortunately on an uptick,” says Gwen Muse-Evans, vice president for credit policy and controls at Fannie Mae. Although she doesn’t have data to quantify the size and scope of the trend, Ms. Muse-Evans says overwhelming anecdotal reports have prompted the agency to draft tougher regulations aimed at closing one big loophole that allows underwater homeowners to qualify for new home loans.

That loophole currently works like this: Homeowners provide a rental agreement showing that they will rent out their first home, and underwriters allow rental income to cover as much as 75% of the mortgage payments on the first home when determining whether the borrower can make payments on two homes. This allows homeowners to secure a second mortgage that they might not otherwise afford.

Under revised Fannie Mae guidelines, which could take effect next week, loan applicants who claim they will rent out their first home will have to produce supporting evidence, including an executed lease agreement. Borrowers also will have to prove that they can pay the mortgage, property taxes and insurance for both residences. The guidelines will make an exception only for borrowers who have at least 30% equity in their current home.

Agents. Learn how to do short sales. New FHA Guidelines will make it some a homeowner can buy a house after 24 months vs a foreclosure the wait time is 5 years. A link to the FHA guide lines are on www.TimandJulieHarris.com.
Download your FREE 7 Part Agent Short Sale Secrets Crash Course Now.

Of course, many individuals still can qualify for that second loan because of a strong credit and cash position. If they “have the intention of fraud, then at the end of the day there’s really little you can do to totally prevent that,” says Ms. Muse-Evans.

Some private lenders aren’t waiting for Fannie’s lead. In April, underwriters handling bank-owned properties at IndyMac Bancorp Inc. told brokers they would require borrowers purchasing new homes while retaining their existing home as a rental to prove that they could make full payments on both homes to qualify for a loan. A memo sent to a Southern California broker said the policy change was prompted by “losses from individuals walking away from properties after the acquisition of a new home.”

An IndyMac spokesman said the bank hadn’t changed its policies and had always “underwritten loans with an eye towards insuring that our borrowers could readily rent out their current property and/or reasonably support both payments.”

Realtors say the new guidelines could put further pressure on sales, but Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors, says the impact of such guidelines on sales would be marginal. He calls Fannie Mae’s response appropriate because any artificial increase in home sales hurts the average consumer.

Meanwhile, Mr. Hawks, the Las Vegas broker, says he receives one to two dozen inquiries every week from individuals inquiring about a buy-and-bail. “People are starting to ask how much their good credit is worth,” particularly when their home is underwater by hundreds of thousands of dollars.

The tactic doesn’t appeal to people such as John Ristuccia, a 48-year-old Buckeye, Ariz., paper-company sales director whose job was moved to Houston in August. He is trying to complete a “short sale” for $425,000 on his five-bedroom, 4,000-square-foot home, which was appraised for $800,000 last year. In a short sale, a lender allows the sale of property for less than the amount due on the outstanding loan and often forgives the remaining debt.

Even though he might be able to qualify for a second home loan, Mr. Ristuccia says he wouldn’t consider sticking his bank with his suburban Phoenix property. “Just personally I’ve got a problem with that,” he says. “I really can’t put it in terms other than it feels wrong.”

Article from WSJ.com

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WOW!

Well, we knew it would happen and it finally has.

New guidelines about short sales that now makes doing a short sale VASTLY better

for the homeowner vs a foreclosure.

Bottom line: If the homeowner sells the home via a shortsale they can’t get a FHA backed mortgage for 2 years.

VS.

Foreclosure: The home owner can’t secure a FHA backed mortgage for 5 years.

Here is the link to the story:

https://www.efanniemae.com/sf/guides/ssg/annltrs/pdf/2008/0816.pdf

Realtor coaching, real estate coaching, coaching for real estate agents, Realtor coaching classes, Tim and Julie Harris, Harris Real Estate University, Harris Realtor Coaching, Tim and Julie Realtor coaching.

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Hello,

Tomorrow is FRIDAY!

Like you, we LOVE Fridays…

Here’s why:

*F-R-E-E* Super Star Interviews.

As you will recall every Friday we interview a real estate Super Star..

But, tomorrow’s interview will simply amaze you. We have arranged an interview

with Best Selling Author and ’serial entrepreneur’…

Wil Schroter.

Wil has started many multi-million dollar companies..only to sell them and do it all over again.The insights he has about doing business in this market will simply blow you away.

(To listen to past Super Star Interviews click  here)

Get ready to take pages of great notes.

Here are all the details that you need for tomorrows call.

EVENT:  Super Star Interview
DATE & TIME: Friday, June 27th at 9:30am Pacific/ 12:30est.
FORMAT: Simulcast! (Attend via Phone or Webcast — it’s your choice)
TO ATTEND THIS EVENT, CLICK THIS LINK NOW…
http://instantTeleseminar.com/?eventid=3364419

P.S. Feel free to let  other agents know about this event….

Realtor coaching, real estate coaching, coaching for real estate agents, Realtor coaching classes, Tim and Julie Harris, Harris Real Estate University, Harris Realtor Coaching, Tim and Julie Realtor coaching.

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Sales of existing homes increased in May, beating analyst expectations, as an increasing volume of distressed real estate sales — including REO and borrower short-sales — helped resales edge up 2 percent to a 4.99 million annual rate, according to statistics released Thursday morning by the National Association of Realtors. The May estimate is still 15.9 percent off from last year’s pace, however, the group said in a press statement.

Median prices fell to $208,600 in May, down 6.3 percent from a year ago when the median was $222,700, an outcome that the NAR said was due in part to mushrooming REO inventory in key housing markets.

“Foreclosures and short sales appear to be a larger part of the market, particularly in California, and are creating a drag on current home prices,” said NAR chief economist Lawrence Yun. Further proof that in this market the listings that are selling are the short sales. There is expected to be a significant increase in demand for agents who are trained in doing short sales.

Have you grabbed your Free 7 Part Agent Short Sale Secrets Crash Course? Free Instant Download Now

While a drag on prices, distressed real estate also appears to be spurring a growing number of sales transactions in a side of the market that has historically been so small relative to so-called “retail sales” that it has rarely, if ever, put a dent into the national housing picture. But the current market is, if anything, unusual.

An earlier story on HW (”A Tale of Two Housing Markets: There’s REO, and Then There’s Everything Else,” June 2) looked at how bank-owned and other distressed asset sales are affecting key housing markets — essentially driving a wedge between more traditional home resales, where prices have remained more stable, and the distressed market, where prices have taken a much sharper downward turn.

WANTED: Realtors to list REOs NOW! Instant Free Download Agent REO Secrets Handbook. Get the information you need now to become an REO Agent. Free instant download.

The as-of-yet unanswered question is whether or how long the rest of the more traditional “retail” housing market in certain key markets can hold out in its desire for higher home prices, relative to the aggressive pricing now being exhibited by institutional sellers.

The NAR, of course, was quick to pop the sales numbers as proof that borrowers are finally “getting off the fence,” citing “greater access to affordable mortgages” — which, if anything, has little to do with the trending in current transaction volume. Most REO is purchased by investors, rather than owner-occupants, for one; secondly, access to mortgages is more constricted now than it has been at any time in recent memory.

In its release of statewide existing home resale data Wednesday, the California Association of Realtors was less sanguine on the sales bump within the state, noting that most of it was of the “distressed sales” variety.

The increased activity, however, brings with it a concomitant positive — some lightening of the inventory overhang looming over key local housing markets. Total housing inventory at the end of May fell 1.4 percent to 4.49 million existing homes available for sale, the NAR said, which represents a 10.8-month supply at the current sales pace, down from a 11.2-month supply in April.

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Home prices in 20 U.S. metropolitan areas fell in April by the most on record, signaling the housing recession is far from over.

The S&P/Case-Shiller home-price index dropped 15.3 percent from a year earlier after a 14.3 percent decline in March. The group began keeping year-over-year records in 2001. A separate report showed consumer confidence slumped this month to the lowest level in 16 years.

Clearly, the greatest opportunity for Realtors in this market are knowing how to work with Sellers who have to sell despite the market conditions. Agents who are Short Sale and REO specialists are having their best years ever. Learn how one normal Joe agent just took 300 REO listings that equals millions in commissions.

Free Agent REO Secrets Book and E-Course. Download Here NOW.

Mortgage defaults and foreclosures are adding to the glut of properties on the market, while stricter loan rules are making it more difficult for prospective buyers to get financing. The prolonged real-estate slump, along with higher fuel prices and a shrinking job market, is taking a toll on consumers and the economy.

Month-Over-Month

Nationally, home prices fell 4.6 percent in April from a year earlier, led by a 15 percent drop in states on the West Coast, the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise also reported today. The monthly house price index is down 4.6 percent from its peak in April 2007, Washington-based Ofheo said.

The Ofheo price index covers the entire nation, while the S&P/Case-Shiller 20-city gauge covers some areas that have shown the greatest fluctuation in values. The Ofheo measure also doesn’t include so-called jumbo mortgages, which are loans that exceed federal limits. The maximum was raised on a temporary basis in February to as much as $729,750 in some areas.

Declines Widespread

All of the 20 cities in the S&P/Case-Shiller index showed a year-over-year decrease in prices for April, led by a 27 percent drop in both Las Vegas and Miami. Charlotte, North Carolina, showed a decline for the first time.

Reports this week may reinforce the dim outlook for housing. Combined sales of new and existing homes in May probably were the third-lowest on record, according to the Bloomberg survey median.

Sales May Fall

New-home sales probably fell, approaching March’s 17-year low, a report from the Commerce Department tomorrow may show. The National Association of Realtors may report the following day that purchases of existing houses, which account for 85 percent of the market, rose last month from a record low.

Rising borrowing costs aren’t helping. Fannie Mae, the largest mortgage buyer, last week cut its forecast for new and existing home sales this year as 30-year fixed mortgage rates jumped to an eight-month high.

Banks repossessed twice as many homes in May as they did a year ago and foreclosure filings rose 48 percent, according to RealtyTrac Inc., a real estate database in Irvine, California.

Homebuilders are reeling. Standard Pacific Corp., an Irvine, California-based homebuilder, last week said new home orders for April and May fell 12 percent from a year earlier, citing “difficult housing conditions” in most of its markets.

Despite the dismal housing news there are still Realtors who are making a fortune in this market. Download your FREE 7 Part Agent REO Secrets crash course now.

Realtor coaching, real estate training, real estate scripts, realtor coaching + training, real estate, Short sale training for realtors, reo listings, how to take reo listings, coaching programs, harris real estate university, free daily motivation for realtors.

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HREU Students…READ NOW.

by Tim Harris on June 24, 2008

Short Sale vs. Foreclosure: Is there a Difference on Your Credit?


The Story

I had a client call me the other day… his story was similar to many we have all heard over the last year and a half. He had been trying to sell his investment property for over two years but was very resistant to dropping the price, which he recognized was necessary to get any offer of purchase. His life savings had been depleted trying to keep current on this property and he had reached the end of the line. He was depressed, frustrated and resigned to losing the property and taking a credit “hit”. The bottom line for him was whether he should he “go to the trouble of trying for a short sale” or just “let it go to foreclosure”. He definitely wanted the easier road, which he thought would be a foreclosure. The consequences would be similar between the two . . . . right?

What do Lenders Say?

I flashed back to about two weeks prior when I was teaching a Short Sale and REO Transaction class for a local lender. The Senior Loan Officer had some material to share with us. First, she showed us actual credit reports of clients who had gone through a Short Sale. There was a “Before” and “After’ credit report for the same borrower. The Short Sale basically dropped this borrower’s credit score by one hundred (100) points. The mortgage also showed as “Paid in full but settled for less than was owed.”…. Okay, this was kind of what we would have anticipated and is certainly consistent with the information we have received from the lending institutions over the last year. Then we see the real show stopper. The Loan Officer hands out the new Fannie Mae underwriting guidelines that go into effect May 31, 2008. Guess what? The rules have changed.

REALITY BITES

The reality for my client on the phone becomes painfully clear. My advice: You better find a good agent who is competent and experienced in handling a Short Sale transaction. Under the new Fannie Mae guidelines the effect of a Foreclosure on a borrowers’ credit worthiness is substantial, devastating and decisive. A Short Sale may reduce your clients’ credit score and will stay with them for about a one year or twelve month period of time. For all our clients who have “let it go to foreclosure”, I have some very, very bad news. Effective May 31, 2008, according to the Fannie Mae guidelines, a client who has filed a foreclosure will be “ineligible” for a period of five years. That is FIVE YEARS (5 years) for a foreclosure compared with a one year “ineligible” for a Short Sale. That difference is significant and will have an immediate effect on our business.

Don’t be Surprised

It should be no surprise to us that the lending guidelines would adjust. We should have all seen this coming, right? Certainly the prior estimates of a 2 year credit hit for a Short Sale as compared to a 3 year hit for a Foreclosure were astonishing and somewhat unbelievable, leaving many of us to wonder if the effect of either outcome made no significant difference to our Seller, then why did it matter which outcome they pursued? The implementation of these new guidelines solidifies the rules and changes the desired outcome for many of our Sellers. As a result, I think we will all become experts on the Short Sale transaction.

This great article is from FARRForum.

Realtor coaching, real estate coaching, coaching for real estate agents, Realtor coaching classes, Tim and Julie Harris, Harris Real Estate University, Harris Realtor Coaching, Tim and Julie Realtor coaching.

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CLICK LINK TO LISTEN TO REPLAY OF TODAY’S CALL. REPLAY NOW AVAILABLE.

Hello,

Tomorrow is FRIDAY!

Like you, we LOVE Fridays…

Here’s why:

F-R-E-E Super Star Interviews.

As you will recall every Friday we interview a real estate Super Star..someone who is doing something exceptional in their real estate business. This teleconference is live.You can ask the tough questions. Really learn how a real estate Super Star thinks, acts and operates in this market.

Be ready to be blown away. Based on your feedback, past interviews (available here) have been amazing.

Tomorrows call will be no exception.

On tomorrows Super Star Interview Julie and I are doing something special..something that we haven’t done is a long time.

You will want to block off the hour and join us tomorrow morning.

Get ready to take pages of great notes.

Here are all the details that you need for tomorrows call. REPLAY NOW AVAILABLE, LISTEN NOW.

EVENT:  Super Star Interview
DATE & TIME: Friday, June 20th at 9:30am Pacific
FORMAT: Simulcast! (Attend via Phone or Webcast — it’s your choice)
TO ATTEND THIS EVENT, CLICK THIS LINK NOW…
http://instantTeleseminar.com/?eventid=3287685

Speak with you soon!

Tim and Julie Harris

P.S. Feel free to forward this to other agents….
Realtor coaching, real estate coaching, coaching for real estate agents, Realtor coaching classes, Tim and Julie Harris, Harris Real Estate University, Harris Realtor Coaching, Tim and Julie Realtor coaching.

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Thanks Kim!

by Tim Harris on June 17, 2008

Realtor coaching, real estate coaching, coaching for real estate agents, Realtor coaching classes, Tim and Julie Harris, Harris Real Estate University, Harris Realtor Coaching, Tim and Julie Realtor coaching.

T & J,

8:00 PM friday night and were diligently working on our blog on ActiveRain then we viewed shifthappens.wikispaces.com. It was a revalation and an affirmation that as were working on our AGENT TECHNOLOGY COACHING homework you send us this fascinating YouTube link.

It’s awesome…since Monday, we went from nothing to #2 and FEATURED AGENTS for our ActiveRain ranking.

HU has changed our lives. We’re thinking different. i.e. more effective presence on the internet…Going “Green” with less paper mailings and more targeted media planning with high placements in Google searches because of our effective blogging.

Our website stats are up 100fold since Monday. We have had a presence on the internet for 4 years and never…never have we had the activity we have had in only our first week in the AGENT TECHNOLOGY COACHING class.

Awesome!

Best,

Kim Darney

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Your New Book Is Now Available….

by Tim Harris on June 17, 2008

Realtor coaching, real estate coaching, coaching for real estate agents, Realtor coaching classes, Tim and Julie Harris, Harris Real Estate University, Harris Realtor Coaching, Tim and Julie Realtor coaching.

It all happened SO FAST!

We released the book last evening at 8:30pm PST. And within moments 51 were gone. That means 51 agents took action and grabbed their opportunity to become our co-authors.

Its now 11:40 am here in Nevada. At the end of the day it appears that another 100 books will be gone. You will recall, this is no ordinary book. This is the book where YOU become our co-authors.

Go Here Now To See Your Book: (turn your speakers up)

The title of the book you will co-author with us is:

Should I Short Sale My Home?

A Homeowners Guide How To Survive The Worst Real Estate Market In History

Why would you want to become our exclusive co-author on our newest book?

Simple, you will instantly become the expert…you will be an Expert Published Author.

Let me be clear, the book is 100% complete. The cover is designed, the chapters are written. When you buy the book you instantly become our co-author. YOUR name goes on the cover. Your personal picture and bio info goes on the back cover…

You instantly will become an Expert Published Author.

Remember, only ONE book per zip code. Once your area is taken, thats it…its gone. The price is only $47 so, take action now.

Now, go here to see the book and take the next steps to becoming an Expert Published Author.

Turn your speakers up on your computer and click on the link above now!

Speak with you soon!

Tim Harris

P.S. If the links don’t open from this email..enter this web address directly into your web browser http://www.TimandJulieHarris.com/ShortSaleBook/ .

P.P.S. I know that many of you will grab more than one zip code. But, to keep everything on a level playing field we are only allowing you to own a total of 10 zip codes. That way you will be the only agent in your entire area of has the rights to the book.

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