Wednesday, April 25, 2012


Fannie and Freddie Set Timeline Requirements for Short Sales

Beginning June 15, real estate agents working with distressed homeowners whose loans are backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac should expect to receive a decision on a short sale offer within 30-60 days.

The GSEs issued new guidelines Tuesday that fall under the Servicing Alignment Initiative rolled out last fall and aim to bring greater transparency to the short sale process and expedite decisions related to these pre-foreclosure sales.

This is GREAT NEWS for everyone and should help with the properties that are in foreclosure. Read the full article here and let us know how we can help you.


Friday, April 20, 2012


Take advantage of record housing affordability

-April 20, 2012, Clifton Journal
You've likely heard it before: Low interest rates and attractive home prices make it a good time to purchase a home. What you may not know is that despite several years of favorable housing conditions, affordability has arrived at an entirely new level. The National Association of Realtors (NAR) recently reported that its Housing Affordability Index reached a record high of 206.1 in January. This was the first month since the index began in 1970 that it has hit or surpassed 200.

"This means that houses are more affordable now than at any point in the last 42 years," said Jim Weichert, president and founder of Weichert, Realtors. "To put it in perspective, let's look at NAR's methodology. A Housing Affordability Index of 100 represents a median-income-earning family's ability to exactly afford a median-priced, existing single-family home. With the index at 200, that means a family earning the median family income has 200 percent – or twice – the income necessary to qualify for a conventional loan covering 80 percent of a median-priced existing single-family home."

Read the rest of the article here and please let us know how we can help protect you!


Thursday, April 12, 2012

Friday, April 6, 2012

The END of the Housing Crisis!

This is great news for everyone - the end of the housing crisis is near:




Housing Crisis to End in 2012 as Banks Loosen Credit Standards - DSNews


Capital Economics expects the housing crisis to end this year, according to a report released Tuesday. One of the reasons: loosening credit.
The analytics firm notes the average credit score required to attain a mortgage loan is 700. While this is higher than scores required prior to the crisis, it is constant with requirements one year ago.
Additionally, a Fed Senior Loan Officer Survey found credit requirements in the fourth quarter were consistent with the past three quarters.
However, other market indicators point not just to a stabilization of mortgage lending standards, but also a loosening of credit availability.
Banks are now lending amounts up to 3.5 times borrower earnings. This is up from a low during the crisis of 3.2 times borrower earnings.
Banks are also loosening loan-to-value ratios (LTV), which Capital Economics denotes “the clearest sign yet of an improvement in mortgage credit conditions.”
In contrast to a low of 74 percent reached in mid-2010, banks are now lending at 82 percent LTV.
While credit conditions may have loosened slightly, some potential homebuyers are still struggling with credit requirements. In fact, Capital Economics points out that in November 8 percent of contract cancellations were the result of a potential buyer not qualifying for a loan.
Additionally, Capital Economics says “any improvement in credit conditions won’t be significant enough to generate actual house price gains,” and potential ramifications from the euro-zone pose a threat to future credit availability. The full article is located here.


Tuesday, March 27, 2012

New Jersey Housing Market Improving

What a great time for all buyers or anyone THINKING about buying. The New Jersey housing market is picking up, according to the Record:


N.J. housing market recovering, appraiser says

MONDAY MARCH 26, 2012, 4:40 PM

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

More than 22% of Mortgages are Underwater


This article was on Housing Wire:

 Nearly 11 million properties, roughly 22.5% of all U.S. homes, were worth less than the underlying mortgage in the second quarter, according to CoreLogic.
The percentage of properties in negative equity declined slightly from 22.7% the previous quarter and down from 24% one year ago. Another 2.4 million borrowers held less than 5% equity in their home, what analysts call near-negative equity. CoreLogic also showed nearly three-quarters of all underwater borrowers are paying above-market interest on their home loans.
"High negative equity is holding back refinancing and sales activity and is a major impediment to the housing market recovery," said Mark Fleming, CoreLogic chief  economist.
More borrowers could be in danger of falling underwater. JPMorgan Chase analysts expect home prices to drop another 5% by the beginning of 2012, pushing the amount of underwater borrowers to 15 million, according to a research note released earlier in the month. If prices drop more, possibly 10% further, the number of borrowers in negative equity would approach 20 million.
The Obama administration continues working on a proposal to boost refinancings, which many include eliminating some negative equity restrictions on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac loans. Some analysts believe such a program would have only modest impact, but CoreLogic showed nearly 28 million outstanding mortgages hold above-market rates and, in theory, should be able to refinance.
Of these, 8 million borrowers are in negative equity.
Some believe the new plan from the administration will be a revamp of the Home Affordable Refinance Program, which allows Fannie and Freddie borrowers with up to 125% LTV to refinance.
But more than 40% of borrowers with LTVs above that limit are trapped with mortgage rates above 6%. Only 17% of borrowers with positive equity have rates at that level.
Negative equity also affects sales. Traditional home sales in areas with low negative equity numbers dropped 61% since the peak in 2005, compared with an 83% drop in areas with more underwater borrowers.
Roughly 60% if borrowers in Nevada were underwater in the second quarter, the highest percentage of any state but down from 68% one year ago. It was followed by Arizona at 49% and Florida at 45%.
"The hardest hit markets have improved over the last year, primarily as a result of foreclosures. But nationally, the level of mortgage debt remains high relative to home prices," CoreLogic said.


http://www.housingwire.com/2011/09/13/more-than-22-of-mortgages-still-underwater?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+housingwire%2FuOVI+%28HousingWire%29

-Daniel Barli, Esq.
http://www.barlilaw.com
Follow us on Facebook
Connect with us on LinkedIn


Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Top 10 Do's & Don'ts When YOU are Securing a Mortgage


The final 3 tips for what you should, and shot NOT do when getting your loan:

7) DO 
Join a Credit Watch Program

Yyou may check your own credit reports regularly (you won't get dinged for a "hard" inquiry). Plus, if something unexpected does show up, you can address it promptly

8) DO S
tay Current On Existing Accounts

One 30-day late notice can cost you

9) DO Continue Using Your Credit as Normal
Red Flags are raised easily with the scoring system. If it appears that you are changing your pattern, it will raise a red flag and your score could go down.

Please let us know what else you need from us.