Saturday, November 24, 2012
Friday, August 24, 2012
Short Sale Guidelines Enhanced: FHFA Announces Streamlined Guidelines
On August 21, the Federal
Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) stepped in and announced that Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac are consolidating existing
short sale programs into one standard short sale program. The goal of streamlining the programs will
eventually enable lenders and servicers to quickly qualify borrowers for a
short sale, and expedite assistance to borrowers.
Key points in this newly
released guidelines are the following:
- Permission to do a short sale even if a homeowner is still current on mortgage payments, as long as hardship is evident;
- Job relocation of 50 miles for a job is permissible for a short sale without any additional approval from the GSEs.
Other guidelines include:
- Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will waive the right to pursue a deficiency judgment in exchange for financial contribution from the homeowner, given that the assets and income documentation show ability to contribute, on the part of the borrower; borrower can also sign promissory notes;
- Offer special treatment for military personnel with Permanent Change of Station ( PCS) orders;
- Provide clarity for servicers and borrowers on the short sale process when there is pending foreclosure sale already slated against the property;
- Offer up to $ 6,000 to any second lienholder for the release of the lien and expedite the short sale.
Currently, Fannie Mae has a
proprietary program and a HAFA short sale program, and Freddie Mac has its own
version, too. The HAFA short sale
program of both GSEs are mirrored after
the U.S. Department of Treasury’s Home Affordable Foreclosures Alternative
(HAFA) program. With this new guidance
from the FHFA, all these programs will be consolidated, making it easy for
servicers to render a qualifying decision for borrowers seeking a short sale.
With this news from the FHFA,
I am greatly looking forward to November 1, 2012 – the date implantation of the
guidelines will commence. As a realtor
who negotiates short sales everyday, simplification and stream lining is needed to provide an
enhanced customer service for eligible borrowers. Short sales can be frustrating not only
buyers, but more importantly to sellers, who repeatedly submit financial docs
time and again, as documents expire when a short sale is not processed on a
timely manner. If the new guideline will
indeed make the process more efficient and cut back processing times, then
everybody benefits – the lender, the homeowner, the buyer, the entire
community. A short sale concludes a
foreclosure scare- the homeowner
recovers and is able to get back up and rebuild his credit.
Standard Short Sale/HAFA II,
the name designation for this consolidated program, will pave the way for more Americans
who were previously denied for a short sale, because they are still currently
paying their mortgage, to be able to qualify this time. One can be current and still be eligible. Borrowers can avoid foreclosure and its negative
impact, stay in their homes until the
successful conclusion of a short sale & keep their homes occupied and
maintained.
The benefits of the Standard Short Sale/HAFA II are positive
looking.
Fore more information, visit:
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Bank of America's Enhanced Relocation Assistance- Short Sale & Receive Up to $30K!
Bank of America is revving up its Relocation Assistance
Program to qualified homeowners. Depending
on the investor involved, a homeowner could receive $5,000 to $30,000 relocation
assistance and owe no more on their mortgage, on a preapproved Price Short
Sale. A preapproved Price Short Sale is
one that is initiated without an offer.
Short sales initiated at the time an offer is received do not qualify
for this program.
A homeowner must be
qualified for a HAFA (Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives) Short Sale, or
the Cooperative Short Sale Program and must participate in any of the two
programs. If a homeowner does not meet
eligibility requirements for the enhanced relocation assistance, a homeowner
may still receive $ 2,500 to $ 3,000 from government and bank sponsored
relocation assistance programs. HAFA is
a government sponsored relocation assistance program while the Coop Short Sale
is Bank of America’s version of HAFA. If
a borrower does not meet HAFA eligibility, Bank of America offers the Coop
Short Sale, which mirrors the benefits accorded by HAFA.
Bank of America’s enhanced relocation assistance program is
available not only for owner occupied properties but as well as for non-owner
occupied properties. Second homes, investment homes and rentals can qualify, too.
If you want to find out your eligibility for this program contact me for a free consultation. This is a limited time offer only, and the short sale must close by September 26, 2013. Act now and act fast!
For more details, click here.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)