Saturday, March 27, 2010

Will You Owe Once Your Home is Foreclosed On?

It is extremely important to work with a Real Estate Professional in today's real estate market. Don't be left hanging off the cliff without help. I am here with hand extended and ready to assist in your real estate needs. Many homeowners facing foreclosure or perhaps negotiating on a short sale must know what the true ramifications of the default or short sale will be and what responsibility lies on their shoulders once the process is complete.

I was reading on one of my real estate informational sites and came across an interesting article in Rismedia. Please read and call me with your questions, I am here to assist you.

Home owners defaulting on mortgages today may be surprised to learn years from now that they still owe thousands of dollars—and a collection agency is coming after them to get it.
That’s because lenders have been quietly selling second mortgages and home equity lines left unpaid after foreclosures and short sales. The buyers: collection agencies, which in some states have years to make a claim. If they win court judgments, these collectors could have years to pursue borrowers with repayment plans, and even garnish their wages, said Scott CoBen, a Sacramento bankruptcy attorney.

“The only relief a consumer will have is entering into a debt negotiating plan or filing for bankruptcy,” said Sylvia Alayon, a vice president with the New York-based Consumer Mortgage Audit Center. The firm provides mortgage analysis to lenders, advocacy groups and attorneys.
The phenomenon suggests an ominous, looming echo of today’s real estate meltdown. As debt collectors surely seek at least partial repayment of millions of dollars in unpaid home loans, some say renewed financial stresses on tens of thousands of local consumers could dampen economic recovery.

“I think there will be a lot of unhappy people when it hits,” said CoBen. “We saw this in the ’90s. This is not really new. Just when you think you’re back on your feet, you’re making money and the economy’s good, they hit you with this.”

Alayon said most people are so stressed out and exhausted by trying to save their homes today that they are unaware they could face another hit later. And many who are losing homes don’t get the advice necessary to prevent future fallout, say nonprofit loan counselors.
“You’ve got tens of thousands of people in California who have this hanging over their heads who don’t even know it,” said Scott Thompson, principal at for-profit Mortgage Resolution Services in Carmichael, Calif. He fears a new wave of bankruptcies might flatten people just starting to recover from losing their homes.
“So many of these are people with 750 or 800 credit scores who made a bad decision,” said Thompson. “Or they’re people who suffered income cuts. These are people, in terms of the economy, whom we need to participate.”

But an entire industry is gearing up to buy their debt at deep discounts and collect what they can, Alayon said. “It’s a big business and investors are coming out of the woodwork. It’s a very lucrative business,” she said. Real estate insiders and financial players know it as “scratch and dent.”

Regionally, no one knows for sure how much unpaid debt is on the line. CoBen said people who used their borrowings for a traditional loan on a house in which they lived generally have little to worry about. But borrowers may be vulnerable in years ahead—generally, those who defaulted not only on their first mortgage but also on a home equity loan or second mortgage.
In California, banks can’t collect from borrowers for primary, so-called “first-lien,” loans that go unpaid. When a house is foreclosed or sold through a short sale, the lender of the first loan gets the house back or the proceeds from another buyer. But banks also made thousands of “second-lien” loans, including those used to finance 20% down payments during the housing boom. A separate category of “seconds” includes home equity loans and home equity lines of credit. Nationally, about 3.4% of those loans are currently delinquent, according to Foresight.

Owners are generally, but not always, on the hook for the second loans left over from a foreclosure or short sale. Most investor mortgages, too, leave the borrower liable for potential unpaid debt. In many short sales, experienced real estate agents or attorneys can negotiate away debt obligations for the second-lien loan. But many inexperienced borrowers don’t know that, and sign final-hour agreements giving lenders the right to pursue them later.

“Seek advice,” counseled Doug Robinson, spokesman for national nonprofit mortgage counselor NeighborWorks America. He said nonprofit counselors can help. “Often when you work with a real estate agent, they’re not really equipped to handle the repercussions. They’re set up to make the sale,” he said.

Government forces are already moving to limit potential damage to millions now struggling with home loans. A new Obama administration short sale program aims to prevent banks that hold second-lien loans from pursuing collections from homeowners after the short sale. It goes into effect April 5, 2010 and works this way: Sellers will receive notice that their servicer has steered part of the sales proceeds to secondary lien holders “in exchange for release and full satisfaction of their liens.” This release would apply only to short sales done through the administration’s Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives program.

In California, Democratic state Sen. Ellen Corbett recently introduced SB 1178, which would expand California’s protections for some people who refinance and take on a second mortgage.
People who refinance, but use the funds to improve their homes or to stay in their homes with a better interest rate, would be protected. Lenders could not seek court judgments to collect from these borrowers in the event of foreclosure or short sales.

“If you refinance a property and aren’t using the money for personal reasons, you shouldn’t lose your personal protections,” said California Association of Realtors lobbyist Alex Creel. He said the idea has been around for years but has become more urgent as thousands lose income and fall into mortgage trouble. The bill would apply to all foreclosures or short sales that occur after it becomes law. It doesn’t matter when the loan was made, Creel said. SB 1178 is still in the early stages of consideration. It must clear both houses of the Legislature and be signed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger by Sept. 30 in order to take effect.

****** This is good information, but I will reiterate that a professional realtor can help. You must look to a EXPERIENCED LICENSED REALTOR, ask the questions about their experience and their capabilities in this volatile market.


Feel free to call me toll free @ 888-949-2890






RISMEDIA, March 27, 2010

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Those Who Wait Will Pay Thousands More This Spring

Waiting a few extra days or weeks to purchase a home this spring could cost buyers thousands of extra dollars as the office of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) implements several changes for loans guaranteed by the Federal Housing Authority (FHA).Coming just weeks before the April 30 deadline for the Home Buyer Tax Credit and just days after the March 31 expiration of the Federal Reserve Board's mortgage backed securities purchase program (which has kept home loan rates artificially low for over a year), these FHA changes make it even more important to act now to save big. Here are a few reasons why: On April 5th, the cost of required up-front mortgage insurance for loans guaranteed by the FHA will increase from 1.75% to 2.25%. For a borrower purchasing a $200,000 home with a $7,000 down payment, the up-front mortgage insurance will increase by $965. Up-front mortgage insurance is typically financed in the final loan amount so the impact to a monthly payment will be minimal but overall, the increase is still borne by the borrower both upfront and monthly. It is important to note that in order to be eligible for the lower cost up-front mortgage insurance, a lender has to order a case number from the FHA before April 5th. A case number can only be generated for loan applications where a property is involved and a fully executed purchase contract exists. Home buyers who have been pre-approved but are not under contract will not be eligible for the reduced premium effective April 5th. Later this spring, the amount of money that a seller can return to the buyer from their sale proceeds will be reduced from 6% to 3%. The reduction in these "seller concessions" can increase the amount of cash a buyer will be required to pay at closing by $6,000 for a home purchase of $200,000. There is only one way to avoid being affected by all of these costly changes that lie ahead – submit all FHA mortgage applications by the last week of March.
If I can answer any questions you may have about how these changes could impact you, call me.

Kim Duclos @ (702) 521-3939 or toll free @ (888) 949-2890




Sunday, March 21, 2010

Deadline Looming on Current Tax Credit - Act Now


Tax Credit in General

For first time homebuyers, there is a refundable credit equal to 10 percent of the purchase price up to a maximum of $8,000 ($4,000 if married filing separately). A first-time homebuyer is an individual who, with his or her spouse if married, has not owned any other principal residence for three years prior to the date of purchase of the new principal residence for which the credit is being claimed.

1. There are several situations in which a taxpayer cannot claim the credit:
2. The taxpayer is a nonresident alien;
3. The taxpayer purchases a home located outside the United States;
4. The taxpayer sells the home or if it stops being the taxpayer’s principal residence in the
year the taxpayer purchased the home;
5. The taxpayer receives the home, or any portion of the home, as a gift or as an inheritance;
and The taxpayer exceeds the income limits.

The Worker, Homeownership, and Business Assistance Act of 2009 extended and expanded the tax credit for first time homebuyers that had been created in 2008. The new law extends the deadline for qualifying home purchases from Nov. 30, 2009, to April 30, 2010. If a buyer enters into a binding contract by April 30, 2010, the buyer has until June 30, 2010, to settle on the purchase.

Members of the Armed Forces and certain federal employees serving outside the U.S. have an extra year to buy a principal residence in the U.S. and still qualify for the credit. An eligible taxpayer must buy or enter into a binding contract to buy a home by April 30, 2011, and settle on the purchase by June 30, 2011.

ACT NOW! Call me and I can facilitate a home purchase or sale here in the Las Vegas Vally.

(702) 521-3939 direct (888) 949-2890 toll free http://www.callkim.net/
Kim Duclos
Coldwell Banker Wardley

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

St. Patrick's Day Feast


I still like to make corn beef and cabbage every year on St. Patricks Day. I don't drink....so green beer is out of the question, but the corn beef is still a hit. I always search for interesting articles and recipes and I came across this article and recipe on the internet. Darina Allen offers a little insight on the history and also a delicious dish!

Enjoy the article below.
"Americans still think we live on corned beef and cabbage over here," says Irish cookbook author and teacher Darina Allen. In fact, the dish that's synonymous with St. Patrick's Day and all things Irish in the U.S. is so rarely eaten in Ireland—for the holiday or otherwise—that some people wonder if it's actually Irish. In Irish Country Cooking, Malachi McCormick says he likes corned beef, but then adds: "But our national dish? No, it's a New World dish!" Furthermore, thanks to the many awful versions served in bars in the U.S.—and washed down with plastic cups of green beer—this one-pot meal is often reviled by Irish Americans and Irish-for-a-Day Americans or, at the very least, relegated to a sloshy once-a-year tradition. So let's set a few things straight:

First, corned beef and cabbage is most definitely Irish.
Second, when properly made it's "delicious," says Allen—recent taste tests here at Epicurious confirm that the corned beef and cabbage recipe from Allen's cookbook Irish Traditional Cooking is indeed fantastic.
Third, with the current multicontinent trend of chefs looking to the past for inspiration coupled with a craze among food-lovers for all things cured, this briny classic is poised for a comeback. Although corned beef is "almost a forgotten flavor in Ireland," according to Allen it was once an extremely popular and important food for all classes. To "corn" something is simply to preserve it in a salty brine (the term corn refers to the coarse grains of salt used for curing). In the days before refrigeration, corning was essential for storing meat, especially from large animals like cows. Historically, beef that was slaughtered and corned before the winter was served with the first fresh spring cabbage to break the Lenten fast on Easter. Corned beef has always been associated with Cork City, because, Allen explains, "that was the provisioning port for boats before they crossed the Atlantic." In fact, between the 1680s and 1825, corning beef was Cork City's most important industry. The meat was exported to Britain, continental Europe, and as far away as Newfoundland and the West Indies. These days in Ireland, corned beef is still most associated with County Cork, where Allen's Ballymaloe Cookery School and the Ballymaloe House and restaurant started by Allen's mother-in-law, Myrtle Allen, are based. Corned beef is sold at the English Market, a huge covered market in Cork City, and is also available at the Farmgate CafĂ© within the market—Allen says Ballymaloe House also serves it occasionally for lunch. "So there are people who eat it all the time."But even in Cork, Allen says, corned beef "seems to be a flavor that a lot of older people enjoy more than younger people." Why, then, has corned beef dwindled in popularity? "The Irish economy is very, very strong, and with that comes changes in people's diets," she says. Yet for Irish immigrants, many of whom fled their famine-stricken homeland during the heyday of corned beef, the dish remained important. "The immigrants brought it with them and it became sort of like a cult food," says Allen. "I think what happens sometimes when people immigrate is life stands still. Their memories of a country, and of the traditions, stay as it was when they left. "But with so many chefs looking to the past for inspiration, corned beef could be poised for a comeback in its country of origin. "[Irish] chefs are serving a lot of peasant foods and highlighting them again," says Allen. D.I.Y. fever could also play a role in corned beef's return to the Irish table. "Over here, just as over on your side [of the Atlantic], a lot of younger people are getting involved in curing their own bacons and hams and things again, making sausages and salamis," says Allen, who runs a series of "forgotten skills" courses at Ballymaloe Cookery School, teaching students how to keep chickens, make homemade sausages, build a smokehouse, and so forth.

Now here is the recipe for your pleasure:

Servings: Makes 6 to 8 servings


Ingredients

4 lb corned brisket of beef

3 large carrots, cut into large chunks

6 to 8 small onions

1 teaspoon dry English mustard

large sprig fresh thyme and some parsley stalks, tied together

1 cabbage
salt and freshly ground pepper
Preparation
Put the brisket into a saucepan with the carrots, onions, mustard and the herbs.
Cover with cold water, and bring gently to a boil. Simmer, covered, for 2 hours. Discard the outer leaves of the cabbage, cut in quarters and add to the pot. Cook for a further 1 to 2 hours or until the meat and vegetables are soft and tender. Serve the corned beef in slices, surrounded by the vegetables and cooking liquid. Serve with lots of floury potatoes and freshly made mustard.
I was at Albertson's today and they have Corn Beef on sale for 97 cents a pound; An easy and inexpensive holiday meal - have a wonderful St. Patrick's Day!

May we share peace in the world in 2010!

Kim Duclos
Coldwell Banker Wardley

Monday, March 8, 2010

Southern Nevada Sons of Erin St. Patrick's Day Parade


I came across an event calendar with the happenings around the Las Vegas area and they were talking about the St. Patrick's Day Celebration in Henderson. It really sounds like a wonderful weekend of events. I did a little research on line and came up with their schedule...it's free too.
Bring your friends and family and enjoy some fun in Southern Nevada. Just a few miles down the 95 headed south, you will find a wonderful event in celebration of St. Patrick's Day... beginning on March 11, and lasting until the 14th of 2010.

March 11-14, 2010
Henderson Events Plaza, 200 Water Street FREE ADMISSION

Schedule of Events

Thursday, March 11--5 p.m. to 10 p.m. Carnival
Henderson Events Plaza

Friday, March 12 5 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Carnival/Festival/Live Entertainment
Henderson Events Plaza

Saturday, March 13 10 a.m. to 12 p.m.
Parade - Water Street District

Saturday, March 13 12 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Carnival/Festival/Live Entertainment
Henderson Events Plaza


Saturday, March 13 12 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Car Show Henderson Events Plaza


Sunday, March 14 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Festival/Live Entertainment Henderson Events Plaza


Sunday, March 1410 a.m. to 8 p.m. Carnival
Henderson Events Plaza


Admission to the carnival, festival and live entertainment is FREE.
Carnival rides do require a ticket.
Ticket prices are as follows:
1 Ticket - $12 4 Tickets - $18 40 Tickets - $30
All Day Arm Band (Thursday or Friday) - $22
All Day Arm Band (Saturday or Sunday) - $25

Entertainment Schedule Friday, March 12
5 p.m.-Music/Announcements 5:15 p.m.-Show Biz Kids 6 p.m.-Genevieve 6:15 p.m.-Life Long Dream 6:45 p.m.-Killians Angels 7:30 p.m.-Pat Kaanoi 8 p.m.-Dona Brown Dance

Instructor/Dance Lessons 9 p.m.-Phil Flowers Show


Main Stage Saturday, March 13 12 p.m.-National Anthem
12:15 p.m.-Phil Flowers
12:30 p.m.-Johnny Cash Tribute
1:15 p.m.-Top Notch Cheerleaders
1:30 p.m.-Awards & Raffles
1:45 p.m.-Show Biz Kids
2:30 p.m.-Raffles
2:45 p.m.-Pat Kaanoi
3:15 p.m.-Killians Angels
4 p.m.-Will Roya Magic
4:30 p.m.-Elegant Diversity
5 p.m.-Car Show Awards Presentation
5:30 p.m.-Air Force Band
6:30 p.m.-Desert Star Belly Dancers
7 p.m.-Johnny Cash Tribute
8 p.m.-Sharon Lynn's Irish Dancers
8:15 p.m.-Irish Dancers
9 p.m.-Phil Flowers Show

Main Stage Saturday, March 13
12:15 p.m.-Air Force Band
1 p.m.-Life Long Dreams
2 p.m.-Singularity
3 p.m.-Genevieve
3:30 p.m.-Air Force Band
4:15 p.m.-Dona Brown Dance Instructor/Dance Lessons
4:45 p.m.-Eddy B & The Boys
5:30 p.m.-Killians Angels
6:15 p.m.-Elegant Diversity
6:45 p.m.-Pat Kannoi
8 p.m.-Walter Waiters Blues Review
9 p.m.-CD Music

Lawn Stage Sunday, March 14
10 a.m.-CD Music
11 a.m.-Sharon Lynn's Irish Dancers
12:15 p.m.-Aftermath Dance Troupe
1 p.m.-Mike Love 1:30 p.m.-Killians Angles
2 p.m.-Show Biz Kids
3 p.m.-Johnny Cash Tribute
4 p.m.-Phil Flowers Show

Main Stage Sunday, March 14
10 a.m.-CD Music
11 a.m.-Walter Waiters Blues Review
12:15 p.m.-Eddy B & The Boys
1 p.m.-Aftermath Dance Troupe
1:30 p.m.-Dona Brown Dance Instructor/Dance Lessons
2 p.m.-Life Long Dreams
3 p.m.-Genevieve
3:45 p.m.-Elegant Diversity
4 p.m.-CD Music
Lawn Stage
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