Archive for December, 2008

FIRST TIME HOMEBUYER PROGRAM

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The Nevada Housing Division First Time Homebuyer Program offers to low- and moderate- income first time homebuyers fixed interest rate 30-year loans with additional
assistance available for down payment and closing costs.

Qualification Guidelines

  • A first-time homebuyer is someone who has not owned or co-owned their own residence within the past three years. If purchasing in a Targeted Area there are no restrictions on former home ownership.
  • The purchase price of the residence you wish to buy may not exceed the Maximum Purchase Price Limits for the area in which it’s located.
  • Assets, including without limitation, may not exceed 50 percent of the purchase price of the residence being purchased, unless disabled or elderly and such assets are the primary source of income. There is a lower asset test for down-payment loans — maximum $5,000.
  • Income must support the repayment of the loan pursuant to the underwriting criteria applied by FHA, VA, RHS, or Fannie Mae, as applicable.
  • Credit must meet the underwriting criteria applied by FHA, VA, RHS, or Fannie Mae, as applicable.
  • Successfully completes a HUD approved in-person 6 to 8 hour Homebuyer Counseling Course.

As a Reno/Sparks real estate consultant I always welcome any comments or questions on the Reno/Sparks real estate or any of the articles I posted.  You can email me directly at  chance at ballard-company.com

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FHA 203K Home Improvement Loan

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The FHA 203k loan program is the Department’s primary program for the rehabilitation and repair of single family properties. Basically a home improvement loan.
This program can be used to accomplish rehabilitation and/or improvement of an existing one-to-four unit dwelling in one of three ways:
· To purchase a dwelling and the land on which the dwelling is located and rehabilitate it.
· To purchase a dwelling on another site, move it onto a new foundation on the mortgaged property and rehabilitate it.
· To refinance existing indebtedness&rehabilitate a dwelling:

To purchase a dwelling and the land on which the dwelling is located and rehabilitate it, and to refinance existing indebtedness and rehabilitate such a dwelling, the mortgage must be a first lien on the property and the loan proceeds (other than rehabilitation funds) must be available before the rehabilitation begins.

To purchase a dwelling on another site, move it onto a new foundation and rehabilitate it, the mortgage must be a first lien on the property; however, loan proceeds for the moving of the house cannot be made available until the unit is attached to the new foundation

What is the minimum amount of repairs required on a FHA 203k home improvement loan?
There is a minimum $5,000 requirement of eligible home improvement loan projects on the existing structure of the property. Minor or cosmetic repairs may be included after meeting the first $5,000 worth of repairs.
What are some of the repairs that qualify for the first $5,000?
Structural alterations and reconstruction: (Repair or replacement of structural damage, chimney repair, additions to the structure, installation of additional bath(s), skylights, finished attics and/or basements, repair of termite damage and the treatment against termites)
The qualifications requirements are the same as a typical FHA mortgage loan. The only additional item that the borrower needs is either enough cash reserved to paid for materials and labor until they are reimbursed through a draw, or a credit card with an adequate available balance. If there is to be a contractor involved, the contractor may choose to cover these costs.
The interest rate on a typical FHA 203k mortgage loan is a little higher than a standard FHA or conventional 30/15-year fixed-rate loan. The cash requirements are the same as an FHA loan, 3 percent to 5 percent, which is less than a typical conventional loan. There are a couple of additional fees which pertain to the construction aspects of the FHA 203k loan.
In the Reno/Sparks real estate market with all the foreclosed homes, this loan makes it possible to buy a house and fix it.
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Quick Tips On Getting Your Home Ready to Sell

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Ranch style home in North Salinas, California
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In the current Reno/Sparks real estate market it is important to take advantage of everything a seller can.

Your imagination is the most powerful tool you have to improve the value of your property – and it’s free. Here’s how: Step out of your own shoes and step into your potential buyer’s shoes. Then take a good, realistic look at your house and property, and consider: Is it appealing? Can you imagine yourself living there comfortably? Or do you imagine yourself putting in a lot of work to make the house and property acceptable?
Most buyers are interested in three things about a property they’re considering
¨ Visual appeal (landscaping, spaciousness, cleanliness, color, lack of clutter)
¨ Maintenance (everything in working order, nothing to repair or paint)
¨ Safety (locks and deadbolts, burglar/fire alarm systems, busyness of the neighborhood)
If a potential buyer can’t form a good mental picture of living in your house – no sale! With this in mind, you’ll want to give your property a good, hard look from the outside in. You want to create a fabulous first impression so everyone will want to come inside.
What to Look For On the Outside
¨ Roof and gutters: When buyers look at your house from their car, about 30% of what they see is your roof. Be certain it’s in good repair.
¨ Landscaping: A well-manicured yard and a smooth, even driveway reassure potential buyers that you care about your property. A yard free of mud and weeds suggests a good sprinkler system and low maintenance.
¨ Paint and siding: Neutral colors and a clean appearance are important. Consider repainting or power-washing both your house and roof.
¨ Porch or covered patio: Make sure it’s clean and uncluttered.
¨ Fence: Fencing should be in good repair.
What to Look For On the Inside
¨ Kitchen: Regardless of your kitchen size, you can make it feel spacious: Remove appliances and gadgets from your counter tops and store them. Repair broken or cracked counters.
¨ Bathrooms: Replace faucets, medicine cabinet, and towel racks if necessary; be certain the bathrooms are spotless and fresh-smelling.
¨ Master Bedroom: Spaciousness and décor are important. Remove and store nonessential furniture.
¨ Flooring: An investment in new carpeting almost always increases the perceived value of a home. Select a neutral color of medium-grade carpeting and padding. Replace cracked and broken tiles.
¨ Wall covering: A fresh coat of paint can do wonders. Always use neutral or soft, warm colors. Avoid wallpaper.
¨ Personal touches: Eclectic personal touches may distract potential buyers.
Deciding What to Do First
The most important thing to think about first is this: Fix what you can see! Cosmetic changes, regardless of the cost, will make a world of difference when it comes time to sell. Whatever you saw when you put on your potential buyer’s shoes, that’s what you do first, from the outside in.
Keep in mind that you want the best return on your investment. When you make cosmetic changes, you maximize popular appeal. People will see what looks great, and they’ll picture themselves living there. Conversely if your home looks untended, people will imagine how much work they have to do – again, no sale!
The cost of such a project might frighten you; however, think about the cost of not doing it. If it costs $2,000 to repair your roof and gutters and you balk at the price, think again. The same roof repair will probably decrease your asking price by $4,000 when a buyer begins to negotiate. Ask your Realtor for guidance.
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USDA GUARANTEED RURAL HOUSING PROGRAM INCOME LIMITS

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Program 4 Person
Carson City
Low Income 50500
Mod.Inc-Guar.Loan 73050
Reno-Sparks
Low Income 55600
Mod.Inc-Guar.Loan 79950
Churchill County
Low Income 50000
Mod.Inc-Guar.Loan 73050
Lyon County
Low Income 50000
Mod.Inc-Guar.Loan 73050

Provides 100% loan to value financing for existing homes based on appraised value of the real estate.

Available to moderate-income rural households.  Property must be in a rural designated area.

No monthly mortgage insurance required.  One time gaurantee fee at closing, which may be financed above the appraised values.

Benefits:

Provides 100% loan to value financing for existing homes or new construction based on appraised value.

Available to moderate income rural households.  Property must be in a rural designated area.

Less up front cas to close requirements for this program than for  conventionally insured or FHA loans.

No monthly mortgage insurance required.  One time guarantee fee, payable to Rural Development at closing.

Fully amortized 30 year fixed rate loans.

No penalty for pre-payment.

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Nevada Sex offenders website

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Sierra Nevada
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Some find this a useful link.

http://www.nvsexoffenders.gov

As a Reno/Sparks real estate professional, I encourage all questions and comments on the Reno/Sparks real estate market or any of the articles posted in this blog. Please feel free to use my back door to the MLS and search the houses available in the Reno/Sparks and most Northwest Nevada neighborhoods. I can be reached by email @ chance@ballard-company.com or  http://www.myspace.com/chancegates .  You can also follow me at http://www.twitter.com/chancegatesIf you are behind on your house payment and looking for a loan modification, go to making homes affordable to request a modification.  If the modification fails, contact your local real estate professional to help short sale your home.  To make sure there is no deficiency judgment a homeowner might find it necessary to hire an attorney. For a free copy of my blog titled  “5 Steps For Reno/Sparks Homeowners To Prevent Foreclosures” go to my about page http://chancegates.com/about and ask for more information on preventing foreclosures.

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What is a Reverse Offer?

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Ranch style home in North Salinas, California
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Got a house to sell?  Do what many builders already do when they get a qualified non-contingent buyer that comes in their door.  Make THEM an offer!

Buyers already have a record number of listings to choose.  This means that sellers must be creative and even aggressive.  You already have your home priced right (because you have a qualified listing agent and he gave you the right advice) and your home shows great.  Now comes the buyer and their comments are that they like your home and it is between your home and two others.  Instead of sitting and waiting to see if they make the offer, give yourself the advantage and surprise the buyer.

Have your listing agent write up the contract as a one time best offer.  You must be willing to make a good offer to the buyer in order for it to have any substance.  Your agent calls the buyers agent and says “I have a contract for your buyers from my seller.”   Image the shock, but this also makes the buyers agent job easier and even makes them look good to their clients.  They will love you for it.  Key point – You need about a 24 hour timeline for the answer.  Do not allow any further time.  Why?  What if you get another offer the next day?  Also, you need to put some gentle pressure on the buyer to make up their mind.  You will find out fast if you have a serious buyer or not.

This is a selling technique being touted as the new solution to a slow real estate market. The idea is for the seller to make a reverse offer to everyone who has looked at the house. After a showing, the listing agent working for the seller of the property calls up the buyer’s agent and tells them the seller is willing to sell the house to them at a discounted price. This is a reverse offer.

Sound confusing? Well it is, and whether it works or not is open to debate. Following is the major objection to a reverse offer.

So once the seller has a looker and the listing agent calls them up with a discounted price. What the interested buyers hear coming from the listing agent is that the seller is either desperate, struggling, getting divorced, sick, in financial trouble or needs to sell and is willing to negotiate a real bargain of a deal. Not the ideal position to be in for a seller to be starting the negotiation process but a dream scenario for a buyer

Chance Gates does welcome any questions or comments on the Reno/Sparks real estate market or on any articles that may be posted.  Send your  emails  to  chance at ballard-company.com

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HUD Introduces a Contact List For Refinancing Foreclosures

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HUD now has a list of contacts that will help those in foreclosure work to refinance their loans so they can stay in their homes. As new participants in this program enroll, the list will be updated. Here’s the link to the list:
Click the link “Information on HOPE for Homeowners” on your state page:

Nevada

www.hud.gov/nevada

Chance Gates does welcome any questions or comments on the Reno/Sparks real estate market or on any articles that may be posted.  Send your  emails  to  chance at ballard-company.com

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Two Alternatives to Foreclosure

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By EMILY GREEN
July 27, 2008
The housing legislation that is close to becoming law may help as many as 500,000 cash-strapped homeowners avoid foreclosure, by assisting them in refinancing into more-affordable government-backed mortgages.
COUNSELING RESOURCES FOR STRUGGLING HOMEOWNERS
Neighborhood Assistance Corp. of America
naca.com
1-888-302-6222
Homeownership Preservation Foundation
995hope.org
1-888-995-4673
HomeFree-USA
homefreeusa.org
1-866-696-2329
But since many struggling borrowers may not qualify, people facing foreclosure should also familiarize themselves with two other options: “short sales” and “deed in lieu of foreclosure” transactions.
Neither option will keep you from losing your house or avoid severe damage to your credit score. Still, they may be less painful in some ways than foreclosure, the legal process in which the bank repossesses a homeowner’s property because of failure to meet the terms of the mortgage.
In a short sale, the borrower sells the house at a fair market value that is less than the amount owed on the mortgage, and the lender usually agrees to forgive the remainder of the debt.
In the other option, the borrower hands over the property to the lender with the lender’s consent “in lieu of” waiting for foreclosure. The obligation falls on the lender to sell the house; as in a short sale, the lender typically agrees to forgive the amount by which the mortgage balance exceeds the house’s current value.
Put Debt Behind You
A key advantage of both strategies is that most individuals walk away from their house freed of their mortgage debt, a psychological and legal relief, says Vicki Vidal, an associate vice president at the Mortgage Bankers Association.
In contrast, in foreclosure proceedings, lenders can theoretically pursue the differential owed to them, depending on state law. The great majority of lenders don’t pursue this debt, but it has occurred, particularly in cases where the borrower vandalized the property upon departure.
A second benefit of short sales and deeds in lieu of foreclosure is that borrowers will generally face a shorter waiting period before they can obtain another mortgage.
Many lenders primarily make loans that they can sell to big mortgage players Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Starting Aug. 1, Fannie Mae generally will not buy loans made to borrowers involved in a short sale in the past two years. That’s shorter than the four-year wait time if you have a deed in lieu of foreclosure on your record, and the five-year wait time if you have a foreclosure on record. (The current wait time is four years for a foreclosure or a deed in lieu of foreclosure; there is no existing policy for borrowers with a short sale.)
Freddie Mac generally won’t guarantee loans made to borrowers who have had a foreclosure in the past four years, says Freddie Mac spokesman Brad German. (If the foreclosure was due to circumstances beyond the borrower’s control, such as a medical emergency, then Freddie Mac will guarantee the loan in two years’ time). The company considers short sales and deeds in lieu of foreclosure a significant negative but not an “automatic no,” says Mr. German.
A Blow to Credit Scores
What short sales and deeds in lieu of foreclosure don’t do is minimize the impact on a borrower’s credit score. All three proceedings have roughly the same negative impact on an individual’s credit score, says Craig Watts, spokesman for Fair Isaac Corp., which created the widely used FICO score.
Mr. Watts says that to date little analysis has been done distinguishing, for instance, the credit risk of individuals who completed a short sale versus those involved in a foreclosure. For that reason, “the model ends up treating them [a short sale, a deed in lieu of foreclosure, and a foreclosure] all the same.”
If homeowners are interested in pursuing a short sale, they should open discussions with their lender or loan servicer before attempting to sell their house.
For both short sales and deeds in lieu of foreclosure, borrowers will have to present a “hardship letter” to the lender or servicer detailing why they are unable to make their mortgage payments.
Lenders have shown increasing willingness to negotiate short sales and deeds in lieu of foreclosure because of the losses they frequently incur in foreclosures.
Short sales are considered preferable because they save lenders the hassle of selling the house. But a deed in lieu of foreclosure also has its advantages to lenders versus foreclosure: “The earlier they get the home, the better the condition the property is in,” says Ms. Vidal of the Mortgage Bankers Association.
Still, for both short sales and deeds in lieu of foreclosure, the process of negotiating with lenders can quickly become complicated. If a borrower took out second and third mortgages, he or she may need to negotiate with multiple firms.
Whether attempting a short sale or a deed in lieu of foreclosure, borrowers should take a “proactive approach,” says John Snyder, homeowner specialist with the nonprofit NeighborWorks America.
He recommends that borrowers who foresee problems making their mortgage payments contact a nonprofit organization to help them negotiate with their lending institution.

Chance Gates does welcome any questions or comments on the Reno/Sparks real estate market or on any articles that may be posted.  Send your  emails  to  chance at ballard-company.com

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