Archive for August, 2010

Nearly Half of the Homes on the Market in July 2010 Had Prices Cut

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This is not a local article but shows why proper pricing is so important.  In the Reno/Sparks real estate market for house that cost less the $200,000.00 and are priced correctly will sale in timely manner.

RISMEDIA, August 16, 2010—The number of price-reduced homes on the market increased 5.3% in July 2010 as compared to June, according to a monthly review of MLS-listed properties within 26 of the country’s largest housing markets conducted by the national online real estate brokerage ZipRealty.

Although the number of price-reduced homes increased in July, the median price reduction across the 4,500 cities and communities in 26 markets surveyed slightly declined from June, to $18,949.

“Home buyers this summer have been on the sidelines, waiting to find deals and bargains; so we’re seeing more sellers slashing their list prices to entice these home shoppers to make an offer,” said Leslie Tyler, vice president of marketing for ZipRealty.

Highlights of ZipRealty’s July survey include:

-More than 45% of “for sale” homes included at least one price reduction—an increase of 2.67% compared to June

-”For sale” prices dropped 2.04%—down to a median of $254,987 across the 26 markets surveyed

-In six major metros, more than one out of two home sellers reduced their list price—Jacksonville, Phoenix, Minneapolis, Orlando, Austin and Chicago

-The metro with the highest percentage of price-reduced “for sale” homes continues to be Jacksonville, Fla., where 54% of all July listings had at least one price reduction

-Denver had the lowest percentage of price-reduced homes on the market in July with 32.5%

-Sellers in California housing markets continue to hold steady with prices, compared to other parts of the country; Los Angeles County (39.4%) and the San Francisco Bay Area (40.9%) had the second and third lowest percentage of reduced listings out of all markets surveyed in July

-Buyers in the San Francisco Bay Area again enjoyed the biggest home price discount in absolute dollars, with a median price reduction of $38,000 in July

-Buyers in Houston, Dallas and Raleigh-Durham found the smallest price reductions, with a median price cut of only $10,000 in each of the three markets

-Markets with the largest median price reduction in absolute dollars were: San Francisco ($38,000), Orange County California ($31,000), San Diego ($31,000), Los Angeles ($29,000), Miami/Ft. Lauderdale/Palm Beach ($27,000).

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.  You can email me @  chance at ballard-company.com or http://www.myspace.com/chancegates

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Additional Support for Targeted Foreclosure-Prevention Programs to Help Homeowners Struggling with Unemployment

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Home For A Moment
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RISMEDIA, August 13, 2010—Through the existing Housing Finance Agency (HFA) Innovation Fund for the Hardest Hit Housing Markets (the Hardest Hit Fund), the U.S. Department of the Treasury will make $2 billion of additional assistance available for HFA programs for homeowners struggling to make their mortgage payments due to unemployment. Additionally, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) will soon launch a complementary $1 billion Emergency Homeowners Loan Program to provide assistance—for up to 24 months—to homeowners who are at risk of foreclosure and have experienced a substantial reduction in income due to involuntary unemployment, underemployment, or a medical condition.

“We remain committed to helping struggling homeowners, and this program will provide additional assistance to states hit hardest by unemployment,” said Assistant Secretary for Financial Stability Herb Allison. “This is part of the Administration’s comprehensive housing policy that has helped to stabilize a fragile housing market and allows responsible homeowners the chance to reduce their monthly mortgage payments to affordable levels.”

“HUD’s new Emergency Homeowner Loan Program will build on Treasury’s Hardest Hit initiative by targeting assistance to struggling unemployed homeowners in other hard hit areas to help them avoid preventable foreclosures,” said Bill Apgar, HUD senior advisor for Mortgage Finance. “Together, these initiatives represent a combined $3 billion investment that will ultimately impact a broad group of struggling borrowers across the country and in doing so further contribute to the Administration’s efforts to stabilize housing markets and communities across the country.”

Hardest Hit Fund
President Obama first announced the Hardest Hit Fund in February 2010 to allow states hit hard by the economic downturn flexibility in determining how to design and implement programs to meet the local challenges homeowners in their state are facing.

Under the additional assistance, states eligible to receive support have all experienced an unemployment rate at or above the national average over the past 12 months. Each state will use the funds for targeted unemployment programs that provide temporary assistance to eligible homeowners to help them pay their mortgage while they seek re-employment, additional employment or undertake job training.

States that have already benefited from previously announced assistance under the Hardest Hit Fund may use these additional resources to support the unemployment programs previously approved by Treasury or they may opt to implement a new unemployment program. States that do not currently have Hardest Hit Fund unemployment programs must submit proposals to Treasury by September 1, 2010 that, within established guidelines, meet the distinct needs of their state.

The states eligible to receive funds through this additional assistance, along with allocations based on their population sizes include:

Alabama – $60,672,471
California – $476,257,070
Florida – $238,864,755
Georgia – $126,650,987
Illinois – $166,352,726
Indiana – $82,762,859
Kentucky – $55,588,050
Michigan – $128,461,559
Mississippi – $38,036,950
Nevada – $34,056,581
New Jersey – $112,200,638
North Carolina – $120,874,221
Ohio – $148,728,864
Oregon – $49,294,215
Rhode Island – $13,570,770
South Carolina – $58,772,347
Tennessee – $81,128,260
Washington, D.C. – $7,726,678

HUD Emergency Homeowners Loan Program
This new program will complement Treasury’s Hardest Hit Fund by providing assistance to homeowners in hard hit local areas that may not be included in the hardest hit target states. These areas are still being determined.

The program will work through a variety of state and non-profit entities and will offer a declining balance, deferred payment “bridge loan” (zero percent interest, non-recourse, subordinate loan) for up to $50,000 to assist eligible borrowers with payments on their mortgage principal, interest, mortgage insurance, taxes and hazard insurance for up to 24 months.

Under the program, eligible borrowers must:

1. Be at least three months delinquent in their payments and have a reasonable likelihood of being able to resume repayment of their mortgage payments and related housing expenses within two years;

2. Have a mortgage property that is the principal residence of the borrower, and eligible borrowers may not own a second home;

3. Demonstrate a good payment record prior to the event that produced the reduction of income.

HUD will announce additional details, including the targeted communities and other program specifics when the program is officially launched in the coming weeks.

For more information, visit www.hud.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.  You can email me @  chance at ballard-company.com or http://www.myspace.com/chancegates

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June 2010 Reno Real Estate Summarybook.com

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Summary
– “As anticipated, we saw an increase in the volume of closed sales during the month of June, many by buyers who were
attempting to get in under the June 30 deadline to close deals in order to qualify for the tax credit. It wasn’t until the midnight
hour that Congress extended the deadline to those buyers who, through no fault of their own, were unable to meet the
deadline. As a result of that extension, buyers who qualified for the tax credit and were under contract by April 30th, now have
until September 30, 2010 to close the transaction,” said Ken Amundson, 2010 president of Reno/Sparks Association of
REALTORS “Although we are remaining
cautiously optimistic about the number of transactions in the pipeline and some price stabilization, we need to continue to
closely watch the year-over-year numbers and see continuing trends in leveling median sales prices before we can truly say
we have reached the bottom.”
 Median Sales Price
– June 2010 median price was down 3% to $170,000 compared to $175,308 in May 2010.
– The median sales price continues to “trade in a narrow range” to borrow a term from the stock market.
– Median price is defined as the mid-point, half of the sales for the time frame are below and half are above.
 Number of Units Sold
– June ended the month with 581 sold transactions up 29.7% from the prior month.
– This is a new high since the market peaked in the summer of 2005.
– Sales were up 8.4% over the same period last year.
– This can be primarily attributed to the volume of buyers who came into the market to take advantage of the tax credit and met
the initial deadline of June 30 set by Congress. That deadline was subsequently extended to September 30, 2010.
 Average Days on Market
– The average days on market increased by 6.3% from the prior month to 146 days.
 Sold-to-asking-price Ratio
– June reported sales received an average of 98.1% of the seller’s asking price.
 Conclusions
– June median is holding year over year. The median price has remained stable for the past thirteen months.
– Unit sales level remains strong with some softening in the numbers expected as buyers adjust to a non-incentivized home
buying world.
– The fact that Congress granted an extension for those transactions that were in contract by April 30, but that were unable to
close by June 30th , should help sustain the number of closed transactions through the new deadline of September 30.

Data obtain from the Reno/Sparks Association of Realtors for Area 100, Greater Reno/Sparks

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.  You can email me @  chance at ballard-company.com or http://www.myspace.com/chancegates

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Wednesday’s Quote Jackie Chan

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American stuntmen are smart – they think about safety. When they do a jump in a car, they calculate everything: the speed, the distance… But in Hong Kong, we don’t know how to count. Everything we do is a guess. If you’ve got the guts, you do it. All of my stuntmen have gotten hurt.

Do not let circumstances control you. You change your circumstances.

Don’t try to be like Jackie. There is only one Jackie. Study computers instead.

I hate violence, yes I do. It’s kind of a dilemma, huh?.

I just want people to remember me like I remember Buster Keaton. When they talk about Buster Keaton or Gene Kelly, people say, ‘Ah yes, they good.’ Maybe one day, they remember Jackie Chan that way.

I’m crazy, but I’m not stupid.

Since the child knew his parents would give in, he tried the same trick again and again.

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.  You can email me @  chance at ballard-company.com or http://www.myspace.com/chancegates

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How Important Changes to Mortgage Underwriting May Affect Many Buyers

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By Jim Dinkel and Ken Trepeta

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RISMEDIA, August 9, 2010—The real estate industry and especially the mortgage industry have been overwhelmed with changes, regulations and consolidations recently. In the last couple of months, many transactions nationally have experienced delayed closings or worse as a result of the application of new guidelines affecting APR, Good Faith Estimates (GFE), Truth in Lending (TILA) and condo project approvals to name a few.

There is one more issue that is critical for real estate agents, loan officers, and anyone else who deals with consumers purchasing a home or obtaining a refinance. Effective with applications on or after June 1, 2010, Fannie Mae has issued new lender mandates (FNMA LL-2010-03 Loan Quality Initiative) on a national basis that, if not understood properly, could have devastating consequences for many buyers and sellers. We want to be certain that everyone understands the implications of the new rules and ensure that all interested parties know what they need to know to minimize negative repercussions.

The intent of this initiative is to assure that all applicant information is disclosed and is honest and accurate as of the moment of closing. Lenders will now be required to re-pull credit report information just prior to closing, re-verify employment, validate Social Security numbers, verify intent to occupy and verify that all parties to the transaction have been checked against the national “excluded party” list, which is managed by HUD and by the General Services Administration. Changes in any of these factors are likely to result in a re-underwrite, the need for additional documentation, or suspension of loan closing.

The most onerous of these is the credit re-pull. It is important that this is done as a “soft pull” so it does not show as an inquiry, which could potentially change the borrower’s credit score. Firms will, however, have to match the outstanding debts and inquiries with the report used to approve the loan. Additional credit or increased balances that change the debt-to-income ratio more than 2% (or less if it now exceeds guidelines) will require the loan to be suspended and re-submitted to underwriting.

Any additional delinquencies will result in a new, full credit re-pull and re-underwriting, utilizing the new credit. Any and all inquiries from other lenders or credit suppliers must be verified by the credit bureau and certified that new debt did not occur. If new credit has been extended, the new debt must be included in the borrower’s debt-to-income ratio and the loan must be re-underwritten.

Other considerations are W-2 employees that may own more than 25% of a business, mandating business returns and cash flow analysis and full disclosure of child support and alimony. Changes could render the applicant unqualified or could delay the closing. As a result of TILA, GFE and risk-based pricing changes, additional debt could result in re-pricing the loan due to a change in credit score, which even if approvable, would delay the closing three business days as re-disclosure would be required.

So How Do We Manage the New Process?
Real estate agents and lenders must impress upon the applicants the need for full and honest disclosure at the time of application, during the loan process and at closing. Buyers must be cautioned against applying for new credit during the process, changing jobs (30-day pay stub requirements are being enforced), and charging to their credit cards. It is imperative that they notify the lender if anything changes from application to closing.

We must all be aware that an applicant that signs an erroneous initial or final closing application could be committing fraud. Lenders choosing to approve loans without the proper loan quality processes and documentation are only endangering the buyer. Any lender or real estate agent that encourages someone to falsify information could be equally responsible. It is noteworthy to mention that many loans go through an immediate quality control audit post closing, so this could affect highly qualified applicants as well. Identified fraud of this nature could be investigated by the FBI.

While this new policy was implemented first by Fannie Mae, it is already a mandate of all national lenders and, based on experience, will soon be required on every loan. It is important to keep this in mind on every deal, not just ones that may involve Fannie Mae.

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.  You can email me @  chance at ballard-company.com or http://www.myspace.com/chancegates

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Celebrity Dinner to Benefit Reno Aces Foundation

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Aces players to act as celebrity servers

For Immediate Release July 27, 2010

RENO, Nev.- Manager Brett Butler and select Reno Aces players will act as celebrity servers for a special dinner at Bugsy’s Sports Bar and Grill on Aug. 11, with all proceeds to benefit the Reno Aces Foundation, the organization announced today.

Following the Aces’ 1:05 p.m. game on Aug. 11, the ballclub will host a private dinner in the Freight House District beginning at 5 p.m. Butler and several members of the team will serve dinner to participating patrons, in hopes of raising money for the Reno Aces Foundation. Beloved mascot Archie, as well as Aces Ballpark on-field MCs Austin & Tina, will join in on the festivities.

Admission into this special dinner will be just $65. For the price of admission, fans will receive dinner, drinks and a ticket to that day’s game against the Memphis Redbirds.

Dinner will consist of one-half slab of ribs, a plate of nachos, the choice of one of four premium entrees and dessert. All beer and wine will be included in the price of admission, courtesy of New West Distributing and Southern Wine and Spirits.

The event serves as the first major benefit for the newly-launched Reno Aces Foundation. All proceeds-including tips for the Aces celebrity servers-will go to the foundation, which supports youth and family initiatives throughout Northern Nevada.

Fans can RSVP beginning at 10 a.m. on Wednesday by contacting Amanda at (775) 334-7002. Space is limited, and spots are expected to fill-up very quickly.

For more information, visit www.RenoAces.com or call (775) 334-7002.

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.  You can email me @  chance at ballard-company.com or http://www.myspace.com/chancegates

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Homeowners Continue to Chase the ‘American Dream

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FlickrRISMEDIA, August 6, 2010—(MCT)—Bruce Baldwin is well past the “extreme excitement” he felt when he became a first-time homeowner three years ago. In fact, the cabinetmaker has now joined thousands of homeowners who face foreclosure. He says he feels so snake-bit by homeownership that he doubts he’ll ever buy again. “It was the American Dream. Now I could care less if I ever deal with a bank again,” said Baldwin, who lives in Ocoee, Fla., not far from Orlando. “What I went through was an absolute nightmare.”

Values for residential property have dropped nationwide. In the Orlando area, half of all mortgaged homes are worth less than their mortgage debt. What was once seen as an opportunity to build wealth has, in some cases, turned into dead weight.

It’s unclear whether residents’ appetite to own homes can survive the record real estate downturns.

“For 30 months, this has been nothing but a financial anchor,” said Baldwin, who was unable to refinance or permanently modify his $204,000, 12% adjustable rate mortgage after the housing-construction slowdown killed his cabinetry business.

The push to get buyers to purchase homes has played such a central role in the state’s economy that, as recently as 2008, Florida and Hawaii were more reliant on construction and real estate services than any other state in the nation, according to U.S. Department of Commerce data. That economic infusion makes few people willing to publicly question the longtime pursuit of the American Dream.

Few organizations, for instance, have seen the frontlines of foreclosure outfall like Consumer Credit Counseling Service of Central Florida, which recently added CredAbility to its name. Despite seeing families’ finances undone by the mortgage meltdown, CredAbility interim director Richard Schram said homeownership remains essential in the U.S.

“I don’t know if it should be reconsidered,” said Schram, who advocates counseling as part of the home purchase process. “One of the things that has been the hallmark of the American economic system is pride in homeownership. It still drives the economy.”

While the federal government has pushed tax credits to boost home buying during the past 18 months, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development now measures its successes based more on home affordability than ownership.

HUD’s Housing Scorecard released in July touted that “home affordability in the U.S. remains near the most attractive levels in 10 years.”

During the Clinton and Bush administrations, HUD pushed ownership, particularly for minorities. Federal data shows that, at the peak of the market in 2007, Hispanic home buyers in Central Florida got a disproportionately high number of subprime loans and they were more likely than other borrowers to get the highest interest rates on adjustable-rate mortgages.

Sanz said Hispanic buyers who were saddled with those onerous loan terms have been especially hard hit by foreclosures.

At a conference of real estate journalists in Austin in June, Clinton-era HUD Secretary Henry Cisneros said his agency pushed specifically for minorities to purchase homes because “homeownership is the key to middle class. When they own a house with equity, that constitutes wealth.” But, he added, “clearly some people should have never been purchasing homes.” The problem became unscrupulous lenders who sold mortgages to buyers who could not afford them, he added.

Rollins College political-science professor Richard Fogelsong noted that HUD’s push for minority homeownership continued during the Bush era.

Fogelsong is finishing a book about former U.S. Sen. Mel Martinez, whose Cuban immigrant story helped launch his ascension from the Orange County Commission to HUD secretary and then the U.S. Senate.

Titled Immigrant Prince: Mel Martinez and the American Dream, the book refers to Martinez’s drive to push minority homeownership at HUD with initiatives that included a traveling bus called American Dream Express. Martinez declined to comment for this story.

“The sad story from the Bush era was that there was a significant increase in homeownership among minorities, but those were the first people to lose their homes,” Fogelsong said.

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.  You can email me @  chance at ballard-company.com or http://www.myspace.com/chancegates

(c) 2010, The Orlando Sentinel (Fla.).

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Reducing the Risk Factor – Home Warranties Play Critical Role in Today’s Unsettled Market

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RISMEDIA, June 18, 2010—E & O insurance is certainly nothing new for Madison, Wisconsin-based HSA Home Warranty. In fact, with its own in-house insurance division since 1986, HSA Insurance Services, risk management and liability insurance is built right into HSA’s corporate structure.

“Back in the day, when we first started offering E & O insurance 25 years ago, it was something of an unknown entity,” says HSA Chief Corporate Development Officer, Gary Lombardo. “We sold home warranties on the basis of it being part of a risk management program. If the warranty didn’t do an adequate job of deflecting lawsuits, you had the safety net of E & O insurance.”

While risk and E & O insurance may have been downplayed during the market boom of the early 2000s, in today’s tumultuous market, risk is at the center of the conversation.

“Today, there’s more risk than there has been in the past 10 years,” according to Lombardo. “In the era of short sales and REOs, there are a lot more activities that create more liability than there’s been in the past. Since HSA has an insurance agency, we have the ability to consult our clients through these more turbulent times when agents and agencies need to protect themselves that much more. We are better poised to address these issues than most of our competitors because we are only one of two companies that has its own insurance agency. At HSA, this has always been a part of our corporate structure.”

At the helm of HSA’s in-house insurance operation is James Candler, president of HSA Insurance Services. With 21 years’ experience in professional liability insurance and real estate liability insurance, Candler is quite familiar with the impact of today’s market and its implications for insurance. In the current real estate climate, says Candler, insurance carriers have become more stringent.

“Carriers perceive more risk in the market building up because of the financial crisis, largely, and are becoming more conservative,” he explains. “Not only do we write insurance for real estate agents, but also for property managers, appraisers and mortgage brokers. Things have been especially tough [for those professionals]. On the real estate side, if it’s a company that’s got some blemishes, carriers are often not willing to give the best pricing…if [they are willing to insure those companies] at all.”

That said, the need for real estate professionals to have effective liability coverage is essential in the current, litigious real estate environment. According to Lombardo, in today’s market, brokers and agents need to review their insurance coverage in great detail to ensure they are prepared.

“It became clear to us how many clients were unaware of the risks their policies didn’t cover,” he explains. “Our industry is under siege right now. We are trying to refocus agents on the big-picture role that warranty and E & O insurance plays in their lives and their careers and how this should be more important to them than the small fee they get for selling the warranty. In recent years, in many of the agent’s minds, the value of the home warranty was measured by the per-transactional remuneration. Chances are, though, they would spend more money on a lawsuit than they receive as an administrative fee. It’s the only over-riding risk management tool they have to shield them from post-litigation liability.”

According to Candler and Lombardo, the risk climate of today’s market is presenting unique insurance issues in terms of short sales and bank-owned properties.

“Many banks are requiring our clients to affiliate with the bank in order to sell these types of properties,” explains Candler. “Banks are requiring real estate firms to carry higher limits and they are trying to get these firms to name the bank as an additional insured on their policy. But agents need to know that when they name an additional insured on their policy, they are then sharing that policy value with the bank. While banks are looking to protect their interests, they really don’t need to be on the agent’s policy, because if the agent makes a mistake, the bank could bring suit against the agent or the real estate firm. If they’re on the agent’s policy, then they become a co-insured, and one co-insured cannot sue another.”

While Candler advises real estate agents to never add a bank to their liability insurance, he does strongly recommend that all real estate professionals make sure they have an adequate amount of quality insurance, despite the financial strain they may be feeling in today’s troubled economic environment.

“Many are focusing more on the money than on the value of protecting themselves from post-transaction litigation,” Lombardo explains. “When you look at the big picture, the cost is such a small percentage compared to the liability reduction we create for people. It’s hard to measure the costs of a lawsuit you prevented. And, more often than not at the brokerage level, if home warranties are being endorsed, they’ll reduce the E & O premium.”

While many agents and brokers are tempted to be led by price alone when buying insurance, Candler stresses that how the insurance company performs is more important. “We have the ability, through our strong relationships with our insurance carriers that if we have a claims issue, we can get to the right people immediately and resolve the problems for our customers.”

Candler recommends firms never buy a policy worth anything less than half a million dollars. “You need to purchase a limit that is realistic for your area,” he adds. “That is the biggest message we’re trying to get across. Money is sensitive, but you don’t want to skimp on what you’re buying.”

According to Lombardo, in today’s real estate climate, seller’s E & O insurance is also gaining popularity. “We are in a cycle now where seller’s E & O insurance is making a resurgence,” he explains. “This provides the seller coverage in the event they are sued.”

In addition to promoting effective liability coverage, Candler stresses the importance of taking the proper risk-reduction steps throughout the real estate transaction.

“From a risk management standpoint, E & O is always going to be there as an umbrella, but real estate agents need to educate themselves to make sure they are providing the proper disclosure and making inspections and warranties available, and communicating all the information they can to buyers,” says Candler. “There are so many properties out there being sold as-is—agents need to disclose what they know about the property’s condition but also should disclose the homeowner’s financial condition and whether the lender has approved the short sale. All of these steps are necessary to keep themselves out of litigation.”

For more information, visit www.onlinehsa.com.

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.  You can email me @  chance at ballard-company.com or http://www.myspace.com/chancegates

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Barry Bonds Featured in Wednesday’s Quotes

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SAN FRANCISCO - JUNE 03:  Pitcher Barry Zito #...

I like to be against the odds.

I never stop looking for things to try and make myself better.

I think everyone needs to be a role model, period.

I’d like to help educate kids about the Major Leagues – what to anticipate, what to expect, what they’ll need to do to prepare themselves.

I’m not afraid to be lonely at the top.

It’s not the name that makes the player. It’s the player.

There is nothing better than walking out and hitting a home run.

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.  You can email me @  chance at ballard-company.com or http://www.myspace.com/chancegates

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Top Seven Reasons Banks are Denying Home Loan Requests

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RISMEDIA, August 2, 2010—The lending landscape has changed quite drastically over the past several years. Practices, approvals and standards that were once widely accepted have either vanished or transformed beyond the point of recognition. Many banks, which were once extremely careless with their loan underwriting techniques and approvals, have dug themselves into a significant hole that will take many years to climb out of. Promotions such as “100% Financing” and “No Doc Loans” were both major contributors to the financial crisis banks and consumers are facing today.

Today, banks are making sure they don’t make the same mistakes again, so loan underwriting standards have become more stringent than ever before.

According to a recent Federal Reserve survey, it was found that about 75% of the banks surveyed indicated they had tightened their lending standards for prime, subprime and commercial mortgages. That was up from about 60% in the previous survey. With this sharp increase in lending standards, borrowers are being turned down for real estate loans at an alarming rate.

Here are the top seven reasons banks are denying home loan requests:
1. Poor credit:
The borrower may have a heavy down payment or excellent equity built-up in their house, but if their credit score is under a certain threshold, obtaining a new loan or refinance from a traditional bank is challenging. Even FHA (Federal Housing Administration) loans, which have traditionally catered to borrowers with lower FICO scores, have an average borrower credit score of 693, according to CNN Money, which is above the national average.

2. Insufficient liquidity: If the borrower doesn’t have a heavy down payment (20%-30% for most banks) and strong excess liquidity, banks don’t want to take the risk on funding their loan.

3. Lack of income: The borrower doesn’t have consistent proof of income for the last two to five years. Regardless of how good their credit score is or how much equity they have in their home, if they can’t show the bank proof of income, loan approval will be tough. This can be a big hurdle in the loan process, particularly for retired borrowers.

4. Lying on the application: Banks have learned their lesson and are no longer putting up with borrowers stretching the truth on their applications.

5. Debt: Borrower has excessive debt and their debt-to-income ratio exceeds the bank’s guidelines.

6. Unemployment: Most lenders will like to see at least two years of stable work to issue loan approval.

7. Self employment: Lenders are looking at self-employed applicants with a lot more scrutiny these days, making it very tough for these borrowers to get approved.

Obviously some of these newly structured standards are for the betterment of the industry, and our overall economy, but at the same time, home buyers across the country are realizing quickly that reputable credit and stable income aren’t always enough in qualifying for a loan through a traditional bank.

This predicament is not only affecting potential home buyers, but also the real estate professionals who represent them. Real estate professionals nationwide have expressed that this has become a challenging part of the transaction.

According to Monique Bryher (http://www.californiarealestatefraudreport.com/), a broker associate at Keller Williams Realty, “Home buyers are definitely having a harder time in being qualified. Several of the loan officers with whom I work have complained that loans that would have been approved 6 months ago are being denied now. What’s interesting is that loan applications in terms of volume are up, lenders are busy processing them, but it’s harder to get them approved and it’s taking longer to close even simple, straight-forward transactions.”

Once the traditional lending route has been exhausted, both Realtors and potential buyers are often times at a loss of what to do as a backup plan. Private lending has been around for many years, but most borrowers and brokers have no idea that it’s even an option.

“With the strict underwriting guidelines banks are governed by these days, private lending is the wave of the future for getting real estate loans funded,” explains Eric Wohl, president of NoteFlo, an online private lending marketplace launching today. NoteFlo’s unique service allows borrowers to post loan funding requests for free, which will be broadcast out to thousands of private lenders that will bid for the opportunity to fund their loan. “Our goal is to make sure borrowers know that they have plenty of other options if their loan application is denied by a traditional bank,” says Wohl.

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.  You can email me @  chance at ballard-company.com or http://www.myspace.com/chancegates

For more information, visit www.noteflo.com.

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