January 20, 2010
One of the great things about Bergen County is that we have several independent banks and savings and loan institutions as outstanding options for a home buyer or a homeowner who wants to refinance their mortgage. Hudson City Savings is one of the best.
Hudson City Savings does business the old fashioned way – traditional banking with a superior degree of personalized service. As a result my buyers experience a more efficient process with lower costs.
I’ve worked with Carol Yang who has done an excellent job for my home buyers. Carol emailed me these mortgage rates today and I thought you’d like to look at them:
Here is our new rates for this week (as of 01/20/10) -all quotes below are 0 points :
For loan amount up to $417,000:
10 yrs fixed 4.625%
15 yrs fixed 4.75%
20 yrs fixed 4.875%
30 yrs fixed 5.25%
For loan amount above $417,000 and below $1,000,000:
10 yrs fixed 5.0%
15 yrs fixed 5.125%
20 yrs fixed 5.25%
30 yrs fixed 5.625% (up to $729,000)
30 yrs fixed 5.875% ($729,100 to $1,000,000)
For loan amounts up to $1,000,000
3/1 4.25%
5/1 4.5%
7/1 4.75%
10/1 5.0%
*For self-employee, please add 0.25% to the above rates for stated-income programs. For No-Income-Verify, please add 0.375% to the above rates.
*Rates are subject to change without notification. Please call Carol for any questions.
Carol Yang
Hudson City Savings Bank
West 80 Century Road
Paramus, NJ, 07652
(973) 984-7705
Tags: bank, interest rates, loan, mortgage, rates, refinance, savings • • •
December 9, 2009
My projection for Bergen County real estate is right on target - our housing market is improving. New Jersey MLS data, bank appraisers and housing reports all say the same thing: We have clearly bottomed out and are in a period of stabilization.
Today’s ratio of homes for sale to under contract is 4 to 1; early in the year it was in double digits. Last spring Bergen County was classified by the mortgage industry as an “area in decline” meaning that values were falling. Appraisers were deducting 1% per month of value; if a home appraised at $200,000 and was closing 2 months later, the appraisal was fixed at $196,000. Bergen County’s housing market is no longer classified as “in decline” and a Valley National Bank appraiser on Monday told me that price depreciation has ended.
Jeff Otteau in his latest real estate newsletter termed the NJ real estate market’s performance “remarkable” and forecast continued improvement. The monthly Credit Suisse agent survey said that for the first time in a long time a majority of agents reported positive home buyer traffic and houses selling quicker.
With all time low interest rates, prices no longer dropping and falling inventory levels, there should be no surprise to find stability in the Bergen County real estate market.
Tags: appraiser, bank, bank appraiser, Bergen County, Bergen County Real Estate, Bergen County Real Estate Market, Credit Suisse, home, homes, house, houses, housing, housing market, interest rate, interest rates, inventory, Jeff Otteau, mls, mortgage, mortgage rates, New Jersey MLS, NJMLS, real estate, real estate market, stability, Tenafly, Tenafly Homes, Valley National Bank • • •
November 11, 2009
JP Morgan Chase announced this week that they will be hiring 1,200 new mortgage loan officers by the end of 2010. This means that Chase will increase their loan officer numbers by 60% which is huge because the bank is one of the major players in mortgage loans in the US.
JP Morgan Chase said that the bank sees early signs of stabilization in the US real estate market and believes that the housing market has bottomed out . Expecting the real estate market to recover after next year, JP Morgan is hiring new loan officers to put themselves in the best competitive position by making sure it has the best market share coverage for home loans.
CNN’s article on this is at http://tinyurl.com/New-Chase-Loan-Officers
Tags: bank, Chase, housing, housing market, JP Morgan, JP Morgan Chase, loan officer, mortgage, mortgage bank, mortgage banker, mortgage loan, mortgage loan officer, real estate, real estate market, US • • •
July 19, 2009
When the Home Valuation Code of Conduct went into effect by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac on May 1st, appraisal protocols for mortgage loans changed. To protect consumers, loan officers, mortgage brokers and real estate agents can no longer choose appraisers.
Why is this so important? Because the mortgage bank and the home buyer rely on an appraiser’s determination of value; a lot of abuse and fraud has been uncovered. If, for example, an appraiser sets a home value to fit the sales price, that’s obviously wrong.
I just had a short sale listing close; the bank took nearly a 50% loss on a $1.8 million loan. The homeowner had been building a new home for himself. When he gave me his loan amount, I was stunned. There was no way to justify that mortgage loan and yet it happened.
To comply, banks no longer have their own appraisers; they use real estate appraisal services with pools of appraisers from which appraisers are randomly selected. This creates an added expense for the mortgage process and increasingly results in appraisers valuing homes who’ve never been to the area before and aren’t members of the local MLS. Recently my office experienced this.
An office listing had an appraisal that was ridiculously low. Both buyer and seller knew this but the bank, which had to use the appraisal, could no longer justify the mortgage. The appraiser had never been to the area before and used the wrong MLS. Bergen County homes are listed in the New Jersey MLS; the appraiser used the Garden State MLS which has only a few Bergen County listings. Without expert knowledge of the local inventory and no access to all the data, he wasn’t able to do a correct valuation.
Eventually things will straighten out but until it does, there will be higher costs to obtaining a mortgage for home buyers and for both buyers and sellers, there will be appraisals that unfairly cancel mortgages.
Tags: appraisal, appraiser, appraisers, bank, bank appraisal, bank appraiser, Bergen County, Bergen County Homes, Bergen County Real Estate, Bergen County short sale, buyer, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, home buyer, Home Valuation Code of Conduct, home value, homeowner, loan, mortgage, mortgage bank, mortgage loan, mortgage loan appraiser, seller, short sale, short sales, valuation, value • • •
May 3, 2009
There is a new thief who preys upon homeowners who must put their home on the market as a short sale. Simply put, a short sale occurs when a homeowner can no longer pay his mortgage, has no other assets and the loan amount is greater than the home is worth. As a result there is a shortage between what’s owed on the home and it’s market value. The only way a homeowner can sell his home is by getting the bank to accept this shortage, thus the term “short sale.”
These new thieves market themselves as having all the solutions to your problems because they have a “special” ability to negotiate a short sale with the bank. Nothing could be farther from the truth. What really happens is that a desperate homeowner is taken advantage of by these horrible people because the truth is that they are completely unnecessary.
Realtors do short sales all the time. If you must put your home on the market as a short sale, your listing agent can do the work and negotiate with the bank on your behalf. You can also ask your attorney to do this for you and many people do. What you don’t need is to encumber yourself with an unnecessary expense by hiring one of these charlatans. They are today’s version of the proverbial “snake oil salesman.”
I have worked on short sale transactions successfully. It is a tremendous amount of work and takes a long while. Everyone involved needs a lot of patience but eventually things do work out. Buying a home that is a short sale means a long wait for the buyer. Sometimes a buyer will cancel his contract out of frustration – it takes months and months to see if the mortgage bank will accept the buyer’s offer. But, hiring one of these thieves will not help you – it only wastes your money on these frauds. Every bank has it’s own unique process and no one can make a bank move any faster.
Don’t allow a predator to hurt you – if you have any questions, email me and if I don’t know the answer, I’ll find someone who does.
Tags: bank, Bergen County, Bergen County Homes, Bergen County Real Estate, Bergen County Real Estate Market, buyer, home buyer, homeowner, homeowners, loan, mortgage, mortgage bank, short sale, short sales • • •
March 7, 2009
Simply put, a short sale occurs when a home that is sold is worth less than the mortgage amount and the homeowner cannot make up the difference. For example, you sell a home for $75,000 but the mortgage is $100,000; you’re short $25,000. The bank enables the homeowner to sell the house by forgiving the $25,000 difference. So while the bank doesn’t own the house, the owner can’t sell it without the bank’s cooperation. Of course, in an actual short sale, the bank would be forgiving the mortgage amount, any other liens and the closing costs.
If you are interested in pursuing a short sale in Bergen County, please contact an attorney who specializes in real estate before you do anything. It is always best if you begin by being fully informed.
To get the bank to allow a short sale, a homeowner completes a “workout package” for the bank’s approval including a ”hardship letter” in which the circumstances of the homeowner’s difficulties must be explained along with supporting documentation (pay stubs, account statements, etc).
Why would a bank do this? Because the other alternative is a foreclosure which will cost the bank much more in time and money.
Why would a homeowner do this? A short sale erases the debt – most of the time the bank forgives everything; infrequently it may insist on a promissory note for part of the loss but that’s still much better than a foreclosure. In a foreclosure, the debt is still owed so creditors can take your vehicles, garnish your wages, clean out your checking account etc. This can last for years until the debt is paid off. A foreclosure ruins your credit for about 10 years – this is a disaster like the Titanic. You can recover your credit in a few years with a short sale plus the IRS does not consider the forgiven debt as income.
In Bergen County we have 3,703 single family homes for sale according to the New Jersey MLS today; 346 are short sales. That’s 9.3% of all homes for sale. Real estate can be negatively impacted by foreclosures; it’s not nice to drive down your street and see a boarded up house with a “Sheriff’s Sale” sign on it so there are many reasons why a short sale is a better idea; it helps the bank, the homeowner and real estate in Bergen County.
Tags: attorney, bank, Bergen County, Bergen County Real Estate, closing costs, creditor, creditors, debt, forgiven debt, hardship letter, home, homeowner, homes for sale, house, IRS, lien, liens, mls, mortgage, mortgage amount, promissory note, real estate, sheriff's sale, short sale, short sales, workout package • • •
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