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In a article published by The Arizona Republic on July 27, 2012 @ 4:30 pm written by Catherine Reagor it's alleging that Fannie Mae is purchasing their own REOs through a LLC that Fannie created. To read the article yourself, follow this link, http://www.azcentral.com/business/realestate/articles/20120727mystery-buyer-snaps-up-foreclosure-homes.html

 

I reached out to the REOPro community to verify this article and it's accuracy and I recevied some interesting information. From a confidential informant, I got a copy of the Arizona Corporation Commission vi State of Arizona Public Acess System...see below...

File Number: R-1776305-1

Check Corporate Status

Corp. Name: SFR 2012-1 U.S. WEST LLC

Domestic Address

2338 W ROYAL PALM RD STE J

PHOENIX, AZ 85021

Foreign Address

2711 CENTERVILLE RD #400

WILMINGTON, DE 19808

Statutory Agent Information

Agent Name:


CORPORATION SERVICE COMPANY

Agent Mailing/Physical Address:

2338 W ROYAL PALM RD STE J

PHOENIX, AZ 85021

Agent Status:

APPOINTED 07/18/2012

Agent Last Updated:

07/23/2012

Additional Corporate Information

Corporation Type:

FOREIGN L.L.C. Business Type:

Incorporation Date:

07/18/2012 Corporate Life Period:

Domicile:

DELAWARE County: MARICOPA

Approval Date:

07/23/2012 Original Publish Date:

Manager/Member Information

FANNIE MAE

MEMBER

3900 WISCONSIN AVE NW

MAIL STOP 11H-734

WASHINGTON,DC 20016

Date of Taking Office:

07/18/2012

Last Updated:

07/23/2012

DELAWARE County: MARICOPA

Approval Date:

07/23/2012 Original Publish Date:

Manager/Member Information

FANNIE MAE

MEMBER

 

Of course, we all will have our own opinoins on if this is a good or bad idea but, I got an even more intersesting article sent to me that said, "

The address that Fannie Mae used in "creating" this LLC is in the same building as East West Bank, a subsidiary of East West Bancorp, which is a Chinese-owned bank. Yes, this is the same East West Bank that received $306.5 Million in TARP money. So, not only were buyers in our market robbed of the opportunity to purchase 275 homes, but it appears that they were sold to a Chinese Bank. Thus, the reason they are trying to hide it from the American people."

Now, once again, I can't verify any of this but, if anyone can independently verify this information I would greatly apreciative.

 

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The group this week hit a milestone I wanted to welcome all the new members and thank the first members for their posting of comments and keeping the group active and growing.

 

 

This group is to discuss Fannie Mae properties with Fannie Mae and to share solutions to getting more business with Fannie Mae or getting in the door with Fannie Mae and to stay up to date on their requirements.

Website: http://reopro.ning.com/group/fanniemae Members:317

 

 

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The group this week hit a milestone I wanted to welcome all the new members and thank the first members for their posting of comments and keeping the group active and growing.

This group is to discuss Fannie Mae properties with Fannie Mae and to share solutions to getting more business with Fannie Mae or getting in the door with Fannie Mae and to stay up to date on their requirements.

Website: http://reopro.ning.com/group/fanniemae Members: 271

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Fannie Mae sales downturn

I was reading the story today that Housingwire published Fannie Mae sees light at the end of housing tunnel and I was wondering if anyone was looking into the numbers with Fannie Mae and the timing of the topic of Fannie Mae pulling back on the assets going to outsource management companies they have been using.
 
I have received no new assets for a couple months from the outsourcers that were handling everything for Fannie Mae and at the same time I have received confirmation from a majority of REO Realtors and Brokers that they have also seen a slow down in new inventory from Fannie Mae outsourcers. They have seen them going through the Fannie Mae direct side. 
 
I would be interested to read any articles on this topic of Asset Management companies vs Fannie Mae direct with the numbers on sales dropping and the timing I feel that could be a part of what is going on with Fannie Mae. If anyone has anything on this please comment on this post and share them with everyone.
 
Fannie Mae has relied for sometime on the asset management companies to evaluate and train all these agents through the outsource asset management companies and they seem to have now moved away from that model.
 
  Fannie Mae downturn

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Below Is part of an email I received this week I am wondering if anyone here on REO PRO has had a track record with this program with other outsourcers that may have tried this before. If you have ran into this already how easy was the conversion any problems to look out for?

 

 

One or more of the properties assigned to you has/have been selected for Fannie Mae's Utility Management Pilot. As part of the pilot, Fannie Mae has authorized a third party vendor to take over the management and payment of electric utilities on selected properties. 

 

Please read the linked FAQs and make a note of the properties listed below which have been selected for the pilot. A utility management company will contact your AMP within a week to request utility documentation. We ask that you work with your AMP to ensure they have the most up to date utility bill. Please Note: If you also work with Fannie Mae directly, it is important that you submit 571 reimbursements on AMP properties to your AMP rather than to Fannie Mae. 

 

Pilot Details

This pilot only affects the electric bills on the list of properties shown below unless the property has joint utility billing. If the property receives one bill for multiple utilities, then those properties will also be included in the Utility Management Pilot. All other bills and properties remain unchanged and you are required to continue to pay them as outlined in the Fannie Mae REO Sales Guide. If you have any assigned properties that are not selected for this pilot, it is your responsibility to continue to pay the electric bills of those properties. In addition, there are no changes to how you submit for reimbursement. Continue to submit to your AMP for reimbursement for all bills which you have paid.

 

The electric bills for the properties below will be transferred to a third party vendor and will no longer be sent to you. In order to facilitate a smooth transfer, you must activate service. If you do not activate service, the transfer cannot take place. Once the transfer takes place, a representative from the third party vendor will notify you and your AMP of the exact date service is transferred.

 

Important

If you have not recently submitted an electric bill to your AMP for reimbursement, one of our third party vendors may contact you for a current copy of the bill. The third party vendor will provide you with a Letter of Authorization from Fannie Mae allowing them to procure utilities on our behalf. We ask that you cooperate and promptly provide the assigned vendor with a copy of the most recent electric bill for the property requested. 

 

Please be mindful of the following points during the utility transfer to the third party vendor (utility management company).

  • Do not turn off the electricity on the selected properties. If electricity is activated, we are simply moving the billing to the utility management company. 
  • If any of the properties selected are occupied by a tenant, immediately notify your AMP so the property can be removed from the pilot.
  • The Utility Management Pilot is for electric bills only. However, if any of the properties selected have the electricity and gas combined under one utility company, the utility management company will still work to transfer billing of both services on these properties only.
  • If any of the properties selected do not have electricity turned on due to safety issues or concerns, immediately notify your AMP so the properties can be removed from the pilot.
  • If any of the properties selected are scheduled for closing in the next two weeks, and they have not transferred to the utility management company, please notify your AMP so the properties can be removed from the pilot.
  • After the transfer has occurred, the utility management company will contact you with the details of the effective transfer date, and let you know to expect a final bill. At that time, please pay that final bill, and submit it to your AMP for processing.

  

Thank you for your assistance with this initiative

 

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The group this week hit a milestone I wanted to welcome all the new members and thank the first members for their posting of comments and keeping the group active and growing.

 

 

This group is to discuss Fannie Mae properties with Fannie Mae and to share solutions to getting more business with Fannie Mae or getting in the door with Fannie Mae and to stay up to date on their requirements.

Website: http://reopro.ning.com/group/fanniemae
Members: 100

 

 

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Fannie Mae Raises Borrowers Costs

Costs Will Increase For Buyers Regardless Of Credit Worthiness


Beginning April 1, 2011 Fannie Mae will implement a higher interest rate to borrowers even if they have a perfect credit score for all loans term over 15 years. Freddie Mac will change its fee structure changes on of March 1st.

Loan Level Price Adjustment
Borrowers will be charged either a higher interest rate derived from the size of the down payment or how much equity is in their home for refis.

Banks Get Conservative
Risk vs. Reward

New home buyers shopping for mortgages will face these fee increases

  1. Someone buying a home with credit OVER 740 with 25% or lower down payment will now pay approx .125% more in rate.
  2. A borrower with a credit score over 740 refinancing to 80% of the value of their home and taking out additional cash can expect to pay an additional .25% higher in rate.
  3. Anyone buying or refinancing a condominium (excluding detached condos) with less than 25% down payment (or equity) can expect an increase in rate of almost .5%
  4. Borrowers without larger down payments will see slightly higher rates.
  5. Buyers with lower credit scores, they can expect much higher rates.


Fannie and Freddie have learned their lesson. The politics of housing has changed from a congressional mandate to make home ownership more accessable, even to the unquaalified, to a rational and more profitable system. They/we lost a bundle and they are looking at another bad year with foreclosures expected to rise again in 2011.

Related Articles
The Politics of Housing
FHA Reforms Shift The Game
A Recent Survey: Is It Time To Buy Rental Property

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Fannie Mae recently launched WaysHome, an interactive video to educate homeowners about their options to avoid foreclosure, motivate them to make the right decisions, and encourage them to seek help. WaysHome is part of Fannie Mae's Know Your Options initiative to help today's struggling homeowners. Check it out at: www.KnowYourOptions.com.

Overview
WaysHome, a unique and innovative learning tool, allows homeowners to put themselves in real-life situations facing today's borrowers, make decisions, and see the consequences of their actions. Through WaysHome, homeowners can:      

  • Participate in an interactive video simulation.      
  • Select a character and go through the simulation "playing" that character.
  • Follow characters as they encounter financial hardships and challenges that affect their ability to pay their mortgage.      
  • Choose different paths based on real-life situations.
  • Experience the positive outcomes or negative consequences of their choices, i.e., if they avoid taking action, foreclosure may be their only option.      
  • Learn about options that may be available to help.      
  • Discover the right paths to avoid foreclosure, know their options, and find their way home.


Agent benefits:
Our research shows that many homeowners still don't know about or understand their options to avoid foreclosure, and many homeowners who are seriously delinquent or in foreclosure have little to no contact with their mortgage company. WaysHome is designed to encourage homeowners to take action before it's too late.  

If you or your clients have questions or would like to order free copies of the WaysHome DVD, email ways_home@fanniemae.com.  

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Has this happened to you?!?

Lately I have had clients make offers on Freddie Mac REOs with the local Freddie Mac REO listing companies. In Boise, as in many communities around the country, local brokerages have a virtual monopoly on listing properties for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

The overwhelming number of REOs dumped onto our market has completely overwhelmed these listing agents. Of course, some of these REO agents are really great. Others agents though.... Just try getting a response from them within a week or two! We have one offer in on a Freddie Mac property and have not had a response from the listing agent for over three weeks! Turns out they recently received approximately 50 new Freddie Mac REO listings. Seems to me that this will merely reduce their poor service and slow responsiveness to non-existent!

It stands to reason that if Fannie and Freddie really do want to liquidate their massive inventory, then they need to spread these listings out over many more agents so that no one individual is overwhelmed. If you have had similar frustrations please comment so we can raise awareness of this issue and help facilitate positive changes in this industry!

I found the following graphic at REOInsider.com

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How Does The Foreclosure Freeze Impact Housing


The Optimists

Bank of America, JP Morgan Chase, Ally Financials GMAC mortgage division and PNC Financial, have all suspended home seizures in all 23 states where courts oversee foreclosures. Bank of America is halting foreclosures in all 50 states to examine its process. Past sales will stand, and if you are not already out of the house.

Eviction: you could be evicted unless the buyer was the bank, they will not evict during the freeze

Helps families: The foreclosure freeze may buy time for some families and allow them to catch up and stay in their homes which could help some families try to get back on their feet and catch up with payments.

Reduces housing supply: In the short term, the lack of new foreclosed properties coming on the market could help the housing industry by keeping supply off the market.

Better mortgage mods: If the banks cannot willy nilly foreclose on properties, they will be forced to lend a stronger hand to mortgage modifications benefiting many more people.

Writedowns: banks may finally realize that foreclosure is damaging and that loan writedowns could be taken more seriously as a less complicated option to getting inventory off the books and repairing balance sheets by making these assets whole

Short Sales: Banks may be more willing to accept a short-sale offer. If the foreclosure route is messy or even unavailable for some period,the banks may become more open to a short sale as an alternative to holding inventory.

The Pessimists

The moratoriums can be incredibly destructive to the fragile recovery of the housing and housing finance markets. Consumers looking to get back into housing are even more put off than before.

Inventory: Those freezes could delay the housing market's recovery and a moratorium would add time to the necessary process of washing out all that surplus inventory.

Price stability: It will be difficult for prices to stabilize as long as a large number of homes remain in the foreclosure pipeline. They are likely to hold off to see whether more supply would lower prices even more, leading to further house price declines.

Crime and disrepair: if some properties are not taken off the market and are allowed to be abandoned they can It will also create more crime since communities will have vacant homes sitting empty for longer periods of time

A freeze in sales: The title insurance protects the bank that issuing a new mortgage. Title insurance searches for problems with title and assures or insures that the propertry is free and clear and can be sold. No title insurance, no new mortgage and no foreclosure sale. Title Insurance payouts could be enormous.

The banks will pull it: Fannie & Freddie stand to lose billions and will take the banks to court to recoup.

Sales slow significantly: If title insurance companies start to shy away from insuring foreclosed properties because of unexpected claims, the housing market could take another hit. Sales could be hampered by difficulty in getting title insurance, at or by higher fees associated with higher risk assessment.

Related Articles
Deficiency Judgments: Did You Know?
Fannie Mae: First Look Gives Home Buyers An Edge
Banks to allow local groups to buy foreclosures

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First Look Program
Fannie levels the field

What Is It
Individuals and public entities are given a period of time, generally 15 days after a property is listed at HomePath.com. Homepath is the listing site for about 190,000 properties held by the GSEs. Individuals and public entities (read non profits) have a lead time over ionvestors to inspect and submit an offer to purchase. After 15 days, the listing is open to all potential buyers.

The idea is to offer first to those who would live in the home and become stakeholders, adding stability to the community and to avoid too quickly putting property back into a supply laden market. By offering a sneak preview to owners first, Fannie hopes to encourage home ownership without the edge professionals may have and avoid the pressures of bidding against professional investors.

Why Should I Care
Levels the playing field and its working.

Fannie has moved more than 29,000 homes out of its owned real estate portfolio of properties acquired by the through foreclosure to owner occupants. Some 800 non profits have also bought an additional 5000 properties through First Look.

New Incentives
Fannie Mae markets its REO through its HomePath Properties. Under the new incentive program, owner occupants and public entities that buy a HomePath Property between now and December 31, can receive up to 3.5% of the purchase price in closing cost assistance. The sale must close within 60 days of acceptance of the offer and no later than December 31, 2010. The incentive must be requested in the initial offer.

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Related Articles
Fannie Launches the First look Program
Renters Who Lose Homes to Foreclosures

Ten Important Questions to Ask Your Home Inspector
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Fannie Mae Announces New Incentives for HomePath® Properties


Up to 3.5 Percent Seller Assistance; Selling Agent Receives $1,500 Bonus

Fannie Mae (FNMA/OTC) today announced a seller assistance incentive on Fannie Mae-owned properties listed on the company's REO website, www.HomePath.com, and expands the initiative to offer an incentive to real estate agents and brokers. Qualified homebuyers who will be owner-occupants can receive up to 3.5 percent of the final sales price that can be used toward closing cost assistance, including a home warranty, if desired and available. In addition, selling agents representing owner-occupants will receive a $1,500 bonus. Eligible offers must be submitted on or after September 23, 2010, and must close by December 31, 2010. The sale must close within 60 days of the offer being accepted.

"More than eighty-seven thousand families have purchased HomePath® properties in the first half of 2010 - nearly double the number of Fannie Mae foreclosed properties sold in the first half of 2009," said Terry Edwards, Executive Vice President of Fannie Mae's Credit Portfolio Management. "We continue to look for ways to stabilize neighborhoods and offer incentives to qualified buyers who will occupy these properties over the long-term and help support their communities."

HomePath properties are owned by Fannie Mae and include a wide selection of homes, including single-family homes, condominiums, and town houses. HomePath properties may also be eligible for special HomePath Mortgage and HomePath Renovation Mortgage financing.

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Uh-oh.....some Fannie Mae Direct and Outsourced agents have been very bad, are you one?

I got an email, like many Fannie Mae Listing Agents did that said......

"In January, Fannie Mae initiated a “secret shopper” pilot designed to collect accurate data on the knowledge, responsiveness, follow-up, professionalism and effectiveness of brokers and agents listing Fannie Mae-owned properties. Over a four and a half month period, our secret shopping vendor reviewed several hundred listing brokers/agents on a broad range of measures."

I just got one thing to say, IT'S ABOUT TIME!

Well, here is what they found.....

  • "60% of direct Fannie Mae brokers and 57% of outsourced listing agents did not respond to requests for information within 24 hours. 35% of the time, the agent/broker did not respond at all after multiple attempts to make contact.
  • For those that did respond to an e-mail, 36% of the outsourced agents and 50% of the direct brokers did not respond with the information requested.
  • When asked for more information on HomePath Renovation Mortgage, 21% of the outsourced agents and 23% of Fannie Mae direct brokers could not provide information in a clear, competent manner.
  • When contacted, 59% of outsourced agents and 71% of direct brokers did not ask the caller about their specific needs."

Now, the email had some other details but, this is what they said they were going to do......

"Over the next few months, we will be reviewing and updating our processes for including brokers in the Fannie Mae network and our measures for how brokers are evaluated. Expected changes include measurement of brokers’ responsiveness and professionalism as well as the more traditional performance metrics.

A newly revised and very comprehensive REO Sales Guide (formerly known as the NPDC Listing Broker Guidelines) is due to be released shortly. In the meantime, for a refresher on some of our policies and initiatives, take some of the short training sessions available at the link below."

Now, with all that being said, if you are a Fannie Mae listing agent, outsourced or direct, you better get on the ball and stay on it because, you could end up loosing your inventory to me...........seriously!

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Good news for people who lost their home because of financial problems, or did a short sale to avoid foreclosure. Typically, Fannie requires a five year wait period before owners can re qualify. Now you may not have to wait the typical four or five years to re-qualify for financing for another home, it could be as little as two years. Fannie Mae is relaxing rules that prevented loan applicants who did a short sales or a deed in lieu of foreclosure from obtaining a new mortgage for up to five years.

To qualify in the relaxed, minimum two years period borrowers will need to come up with down payments of at least 20 percent. If 10 percent is all you got the wait to qualify after losing your home reverts to the four year minimum.

But Theres a Catch

Borrowers can demonstrate that their mortgage problems were directly related to circumstances having to do with the excesses of this great recession...such as job loss, medical expenses or a divorce. It might might be able to qualify for new loans with minimum down payments of 10 percent in just two years. We will need to see how this plays out after the new rules take effect July 1.

For those of us who lost houses to foreclosure because of financial mismanagement or speculation, the mandatory five year waiting period stands. To qualify for a new mortgage, Fannie expects borrowers to reestablish credit sufficiently enough to pass the companys automated underwriting system.

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Fannie Mae REO Properties on HomePath.com

For those of you who might be unaware, Fannie Mae has been releasing their REO inventory. Whatever your opinions are on Fannie, Freddie or the government programs in general, they have released more REO than most other financial institutions and we have to work with them. Embrace it, especially if you're a buyers agent... this is a good thing for buyers. Check out their website, they list their Active listings as well as listings that are coming soon. Use it to your advantage, and your buyers: www.homepath.com

Ok, I blew my Fannie horn for the day :) Have a good weekend!

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More times than not it seems as if Fannie Mae REO’s are priced extremely high in CA, compared to list prices of other REO properties. Sometimes understanding why something is done is half the battle, and it helps ease the frustration of completing a excellent BPO only to have the client list the property 20K higher than suggested list price.

A few months ago, I had the opportunity to sit in on a conference call with Fannie Mae representatives and it all became clear as to why their properties in CA are listed so high.

The current mission of Fannie Mae is to bring about neighborhood stabilization, and preserve neighborhoods. In conjunction they want to lessen losses; however one cannot be accomplished without the other. So what does this have to do with overpricing homes in California?

First and foremost, California is considered to be a premium state to Fannie Mae. (What this means, I don't know ,your guess is as good as mine, but my assumption is this: California leads most other states when it comes to appreciation and migration of a state to live. Maybe it dates back to the Gold Rush Days. LOL

With Fannie being the leader in owning mortgages, chance are that for every one Bank Owned home or Foreclose on a street, they own 10-12 others on the same street. So it is of benefit to both Fannie Mae and the neighborhood for the REO home to be priced higher. The hope is to be less of a shock factor for those other ten - twelve performing notes on the block, so that they keep performing and paying their mortgages. (This is a must to bring about stabilization.) I'm going to go out on a limb here and predict that in the near future you will see less homes go on the market, meaning there will be FC's of DIL’s you don't even know about and previous owners will remain in homes as renters until they can buy back the homes .

Fellow agents now that you understand, don't get frustrated, keep doing your BPO's and just remember, the comps don't lie, and true market value is what a ready, willing buyer, is willing to pay for a home. I have been quite surprised by my last two list prices, as they have been rather aggressive. I’ll keep you posted.

Let me leave you with these word of wisdom. What’s good for Fannie, may not be good for Saxon, or Aurora, and ultimately not good for you. Stay tuned for my next blog and I'll explain.

Remember this, “ If your going to thrive in any market, knowing where it is going, and how to position yourself will be key for your success”

Very Truly Yours,

Jonathan Burgess

Coed 3 Real Estate

Broker/CEO

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RISMEDIA, January 21, 2010—(MCT)—In hopes of reviving one of the nation’s hardest-hit condominium markets, the giant mortgage backer Fannie Mae is making it easier for people to buy Florida condos that may not have met previous lending standards.Fannie Mae has started giving certain condo complexes in the state “special approval” designations, a sort of stamp of approval, even when the properties don’t meet one or more of the established rules relating to delinquent fees, financial reserves and percentage of owner-occupied units.Florida is the only state getting the special reviews, which are a first for Fannie Mae, officials with the government-backed corporation recently said.Teams are already reviewing complexes and granting the special approvals—which are a green light for mortgage lenders—in cases where the projects are considered stable even though they might violate a Fannie Mae lending standard. For example, under current rules, a project doesn’t qualify for Fannie Mae-backed mortgages if more than 15% of the unit owners are behind on their association fees—but a review team might decide to waive that rule, opening that complex to a much larger pool or prospective buyers.“This new initiative is geared toward providing maximum support for Florida’s distressed condo market as we continue to provide liquidity to the housing market more broadly,” said Karen Pallotta, executive vice president for the secondary-mortgage giant.The new reviews were prompted by the fact that home buyers, lenders and real-estate agents have been avoiding condos because many of the complexes do not meet existing lending criteria. With little or no financing available, condo prices have crashed, with units attracting mostly cash buyers. Fannie Mae had already been granting exceptions to its condominium guidelines, but only on a case-by-case basis, when requested by lenders.Even though Miami’s condo prices have not fallen as sharply as those in Orlando, condo complexes in South Florida appear to be getting most of the new program’s early attention. Fannie Mae has given its approval stamp for mortgages on more than 50 condo complexes, all of them in the Miami area. Miami real estate agent Maurice Veissi, first vice president of the National Association of Realtors, said that the real estate organization was key in educating Fannie Mae about Florida’s collapsing condo prices. “Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac recognize that south Florida, and southeast Florida in particular, have been uniquely hit,” Veissi said. “Any time you get some relaxation of what were some stringent rules and regulations, that will affect the market to some extent.”Condo prices have fallen more in Orlando than in most U.S. metro areas. The median price for a unit in the four-county Orlando area in November 2009 was $55,000, down 21% from a year earlier. In comparison, Miami’s median condo price was $149,000, down 14%.Fannie Mae officials said they will be adding more complexes to their list of approved projects, which can viewed at www.efanniemae.com under “frequently searched pages,” as six employees review properties across the state. They will be taking into consideration the quality of each project’s construction and maintenance as well as the financial health of the owners association.Whether loosening lending criteria for condominiums is the right thing to do now is a valid question, said Craig E. Polejes, president of Florida Bank of Commerce. “The question is: If they’re looking to make exceptions on a case-by-case basis, what are the parameters of the exceptions?” Polejes asked. He said he was skeptical of any move to finance mortgages for condo units in complexes that had been converted from apartments. The overriding issues, Polejes added, should be the quality of the building and the creditworthiness of the buyer.A board member of one Winter Park, Fla.-area condominium project that converted from apartments several years ago said only one-fourth of the residents were paying their fees, forcing the owners association to increase the fees to make mandatory insurance payments. The board member, who spoke only on condition of anonymity because of a pending foreclosure action, said he hoped something could be done to help revive the local condo market.Polejes said qualified buyers should not continue to be precluded from purchasing units in viable condominium complexes simply because the property doesn’t meet every single standard to allow financing. But he added: “If they start relaxing down payments, incomes, credit scores—that’s problematic.”Story by Mary Shanklin(c) 2010, The Orlando Sentinel (Fla.).Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
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FANNIE MAE ADOPTS NEW REO POLICY

From DS News- Author: Brittany DunnFannie Mae Adopts New REO Policy01/06/2010 By: Brittany DunnIn an effort to expedite REO sales, Fannie Mae has adopted a new policy. As part of this policy, Fannie Mae may accept offers to purchase homes it has repossessed withoutnotifying loan servicers, and loan servicers may be required to reimburse Fannie Mae for a loss if it turns out the original mortgage on the home did not meet its eligibility or underwriting requirements, Inman News said Wednesday.Previously, if there was a question over whether a mortgage on a repossessed property met Fannie Mae’s requirements, servicers were given 15 days to turn over loan files for review. Rather than reimburse Fannie Mae for an incurred loss, loan servicers had the opportunity to try and find a better offer for the property or buy it themselves.The rules have changed, though. In a recent announcement to loan servicers, Fannie Mae said it has implemented a change regarding assurance reviews. When the company is notified that a property has beenacquired, it will begin the disposition process by obtaining opinions on the market value of a repossessed home and list it with a real estate broker.“When Fannie Mae receives an offer to purchase a property that is also subject to an underwriting or servicing review, Fannie Mae may accept the purchase offer without first notifying the servicer, whether or not a final decision has been reached with respect to the review,” Fannie Mae said in its announcement. “If, after completion of the review, Fannie Mae determines that the mortgage loan did not meet its eligibility or underwriting requirements and Fannie Mae has incurred a loss by selling the property, the lender will be required to fully reimburse Fannie Mae for its loss.”These changes come after recent reports from Fannie Mae showing an increase in the acquisition of foreclosed properties and an escalating rate of seriously delinquent single-family home loans.According to its most recent quarterly report, Fannie Mae acquired 98,428 homes through foreclosure during the first nine months of last year and sold 89,691 REO properties during the same period. However, at the end of September Fannie Mae still had 72,275 REO properties on its books, marking a 7 percent increase year-over-year.Furthermore, Fannie Mae’s monthly summary for November showed notable growth in seriously delinquent single-family home loans held or guaranteed by the company. Up from 1.89 percent in November 2008, loans three or more months behind in payments or in the foreclosure process soared to 4.98 percent in November 2009.
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Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac propose New Rule Changes

Because of ongoing weakness in the real estate sector, the institutions that have filled the vacuum left by lenders, have run into trouble... they need to change the rules.In order to assure that mortgage originations continue, its become necessary for FHA and Fannie Mae to reduce risk. The FHA proposes to increase the net worth requirements of FHA-approved lenders, strengthen lender approval criteria, and make lenders liable for the practices of their correspondent mortgage brokers.Lender Approval1.FHA-approved Mortgagees must assume liability for all the loans they originate and/or underwrite2. Mortgage brokers will no longer receive independent approval for origination eligibility. The FHA-approved mortgagee will have to assume responsibility and liability for the FHA-insured loan underwritten and closed by the approved mortgagee.3. FHA has required approved mortgagees have a minimum net worth of $250,000. To assure financial vialbility in the future, the proposed rule would require mortgagees maintain a minimum net worth of $1 million in the first year and at least $2.5 million within three years.New Credit Policy Rule Changes1. Mortgagees will be required to submit audited annual financial statements to the FHA.2. Proposed rules to establish new requirements for seasoning, payment history, income verification, and demonstration of net tangible benefit to the borrower3. A cap maximum on LTV at 125 percent.Appraisals Rules May Change Too1. An appraisal will be required in all cases where a borrower wants to add closing costs to the transaction.2. Mortgage brokers and commission based lender staff are prohibited from ordering appraisals.Fannie Mae Also Changes The Rulesloans for those who can afford it and prove they can keep itData now shows that buyers with lower FICO scores/excessive debt defaulted at rates nine times higher than those with solid FICO scores and more manageable debt load. So beginning Dec. 12, Fannie Mae will reject borrowers who have at least a 20% down payment but a credit score below 620.Whats it Mean For Buyers and Sellers.1. Many buyers that were pre qualified may now find they no longer qualify for the price range they had been shopping.2. Tighter financial requirements may mean they have to settle for less house.3. Buyers expectations may have to adjust downward, given stricter financing rules.4. Seller pricing strategies will adjust, buyers will have more trouble meeting new debt-to-income requirements.5. We should see more private equity come into the market to fill the vacuum and possibly more seller financing.6. The higher end may suffer as buyers that could have stretched into more home, no longer can.7. It will hurt the younger person with 20% down, but no credit history.* Some of these rules may be applied at this writing. The FHA and Fannie Mae web site will have updates and changes to proposals.*Photo thanks to Queens University CanadaThanks for Readingwww.yourpropertypath.comRelated ArticlesFHA Losses: What it MeansMortgage Bankers Weekly Update: Loan Apps DeclineNAR: Existing Home Sales ReportShould You Stop Paying Your Mortgage
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