Real Estate News & Updates from the Monadnock Region
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By Nick Timiraos

Don’t call us, we’ll call you!
That was the message on Wednesday from Bank of America executives who announced the bank’s new effort to modify mortgages by cutting loan balances.

Under the program, Bank of America will reduce certain loans by up to 30% in order to lower monthly payments for borrowers facing foreclosure. While banks have selectively used principal write-downs to modify loans that they own, Bank of America’s approach could represent the beginning of broader efforts by banks to add write-downs as a more common tool in their loan-modification arsenal.

Here’s how it works: only borrowers who had loans from Countrywide Financial, which Bank of America acquired in mid-2008, will be eligible. And only the riskiest loans will qualify: subprime loans, “option adjustable-rate” mortgages that have low initial monthly payments but that can adjust sharply higher, and certain prime loans that have a fixed interest rate for the first two years before starting to adjust annually.

The program is also limited to customers who have missed at least two consecutive payments, who can demonstrate that a financial hardship prevents them from making payments at the current level, and whose loan balance is at least 120% of the estimated home value.

Bank of America will go through its loan book to see which loans might qualify for reductions (while checking property values to see which ones are far enough under water), and then the bank will reach out to those who may be eligible. “Our customers do not need to take any actions at this time,” said Jack Schakett, a credit-loss mitigation executive.

Why all the qualification restrictions?  For starters, banks and policy makers have long worried that they could up end the housing market if they offer principal write-downs too widely. Borrowers who are current but who owe more than their homes are worth, known as being “under water,” might stop paying to get a better deal. So it makes sense to start with a narrow pool of borrowers, particularly one that already has sky-high default rates.

Another reason: Bank of America is offering these modifications as part of a settlement reached Wednesday with the commonwealth of Massachusetts. The settlement is fairly detailed in prescribing what kinds of modifications Bank of America has to take with its Countrywide loans. (In an interview, Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley said she pushed for principal reductions in the settlement because she didn’t want any bank to be “modifying a loan for the sake of modifying it, and finding two months, or six months, or a year later that it’s still going to be foreclosed on without getting to the root of the problem.”)

Bank of America says that around 45,000 borrowers could see their loan balances reduced with an average reduction of more than $62,000.

Bank of America’s approach has an interesting design feature in an attempt to prevent homeowners who are still paying their loans from defaulting and becoming eligible for the program. Loan balances aren’t reduced in one clean strike. Instead, Bank of America is offering what’s called “earned forgiveness.”

The program works like this: for a borrower who owes $300,000 on a home worth $200,000, the bank would reduce up to $100,000 in principal and place it in an interest-free account. For each of five years, the bank would forgive another $20,000 as long as the borrower continued to make payments and until the borrower was returned to a 100% loan-to-value ratio. If home prices have recovered by the fourth or fifth year to meet the amount owed, Bank of America would stop forgiving money in the interest-free account, which would have to be paid off when the home is sold or the loan is refinanced.

To be sure, there are drawbacks. One big challenge in modifying loans has been the presence of second mortgages. Bank of America said it will modify first mortgages that have seconds behind them only when Bank of America owns the first mortgage in its portfolio. The government’s modification program, Home Affordable Modification Program, has faced challenges because borrowers haven’t been able to document their incomes, and those requirements don’t go away in this effort.

But it does offer an interesting test case to see if, for the riskiest and worst performing loans, borrowers will stick with a better payment program.

View the original article from the Wall Street Journal here.

Keene – R. H. Thackston & Company REALTORS has opened a new office in Keene, New Hampshire located at 149 Emerald Street in the Center at Keene Plaza.

The real estate company employs twenty-six agents in the new location. The agents employed in the new Keene location include agents that are licensed in New Hampshire, Vermont and Massachusetts. Many have broker’s licenses and include individuals who have obtained special recognition from the National Association of REALTORS including CRB, Certified Residential Broker, ABR, Accredited Buyer’s Representative, ABRM, Accredited Buyer’s Representative Manger and GRI, Graduate of the REALTOR Institute.

The company also operates offices in Winchester, New Hampshire and Bellows Falls, Vermont.

All the agents in Thackston new office are members of the National Association of REALTORS, New Hampshire Association of REALTORS and Monadnock Region Board of REALTORS.

Here’s a handy chart to help you out.

NAR Issue Brief

Homebuyer Tax Credit Changes

National Association of REALTORS® Government Affairs Division

500 New Jersey Avenue, NW, Washington DC, 20001

FEATURE Jan 1 – November 30, 2009Rules as enacted February 2009 December 1 – April 30,2010 Rules as enacted

November 2009

First timeBuyer –

Amount of Credit

$8000($4000 married

filing separate)

$8000($4000 married

filing separate)

First time Buyer – Definition for Eligibility May not have had an interest in a principal residence for 3 years prior to purchase Same
Current Homeowner – Amount of Credit No Provision $6500($3250 married

filing separate)

Effective Date – Current Owner No Provision Date of Enactment
Current Homeowner –Definition for Eligibility No Provision Must have used the home sold or being sold as a principal residence consecutively for 5 of the previous 8 years
Termination of Credit Purchases after November 30, 2009. (Becomes April 30, 2010 on Date of Enactment.) Purchases after April 30, 2010
Binding Contract Rule None So long as a written binding contract to purchase is in effect on April 30, 2010, the purchaser will have until July 1, 2010 to close.
Income Limits (Note: Increased income limits are effective as of date of enactment of bill) $75,000 – single$150,000 – married

Additional $20,000 phase out

$125,000 – single$225,000 – married

Additional $20,000 phase

out

Limitation on Cost of Purchased Home None $800,000Effective Date of Enactment
Purchase by a Dependent No Provision IneligibleEffective Date of Enactment
Antifraud Rule None Purchaser must attach documentation of purchase to tax return

 This chart is just another way Dick Thackston and the REALTORS at R.H. Thackston & Company REALTORS can help you. Dick works with the other 34 New Hampshire, Vermont & Massachusetts agents in his 3 offices helping buyers find and close on homes. To see all the homes on the market today in New Hampshire, Vermont & Massachusetts visit www.dickthackston.com or give him a call today at 603.283.0622.

Sadly the question “What do you mean I don’t own my house anymore?” is being heard more and more by real estate agents and property managers around the country and through-out our region as well. 

 Foreclosure filings — default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions — were reported on 937,840 properties in the third quarter, a 5 percent increase from the previous quarter and an increase of nearly 23 percent from Q3 2008, according to the RealtyTrac U.S. Foreclosure Market Report. One in every 136 U.S. housing units received a foreclosure filing during the quarter — the highest quarterly foreclosure rate since RealtyTrac began issuing its report in the first quarter of 2005. Foreclosure filings were reported on 343,638 properties in September, a 4 percent decrease from the previous month but a 29 percent increase from September 2008.

 Often homeowners are shocked to find that they have become part of the statistics above and the home has been taken and they no-longer own the property. Realistically no one has a greater interest in working out a short sale than the homeowner. Just because a house has an offer on it does not mean that the lender will stop the foreclosure. Helping you in negotiations for a short sale is just one of the critical ways Dick Thackston and his team can help you.

 The opportunity exists for homeowners to move on with their lives a maintain and strengthen their credit ratings if a short sale is handled correctly putting them in a far better position than they will be if they allow their home to go to foreclosure and become a statistic.

 Defaulted properties, REO’s, have been a big part of Dick Thackston’s business since the S&L Crisis of the early 1990′s. Short Sales are already having a major impact on real sales in the region. Dick works with the other 34 New Hampshire, Vermont & Massachusetts agents in his 3 offices helping property owners complete short sales and buyers find Short Sales and REO properties.

 Helping you in negotiations for a Short Sale is just one of the ways Dick Thackston and his team can help you when they help you buy a Lender owned – REO property.  To see all the homes on the market today in New Hampshire, Vermont & Massachusetts visit www.dickthackston.com or give him a call today at 603.283.0622.

Dick Thackston, Managing Broker of R. H. Thackston & Company REALTORS with offices in Keene, Winchester & Bellows Falls, attended the Five Star Default Servicing Conference in Fort Worth, Texas.

 Thackston is one of a limited number agents invited to the exclusive conference sponsored by nationwide lenders with foreclosed properties and seriously delinquent mortgages. Thackston has been recognized within the real estate and lending industry as a local expert on default resolution in both residential and commercial loans. Thackston has participated in programs conducted by both Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac as well as various individual lenders.

 Thackston is a licensed real estate broker in New Hampshire, Vermont and Massachusetts and is a member of the National Association of Realtors and well as residential and commercial MLS in all three states.

Keene –  R. H. Thackston & Company – REALTORS has been accepted as a member of the Leading Real Estate Companies of The World TM.  Leading Real Estate Companies of The World TM is a Network of hundreds of the most prominent and qualified residential real estate brokerage firms in the United States as well as a growing number of international firms that recognize the benefits of active participation in a quality oriented real estate and relocation network.

According to surveys in the U.S., nearly forty percent of all home sales are made by people moving from one metropolitan area to another.

Leading Real Estate Companies of The World TM is dedicated to achieving the highest results for their customers and clients by providing access to world class professional staff and marketing support. The company’s member training and education programs are considered the best in the real estate industry through its RELO Institute TM. 

Leading Real Estate Companies of The World TM provides Corporate Service programs with an emphasis on quality referrals through strict guidelines to ensure that the referrals for clients receive open lines of communication that are designed to keep clients informed about new programs, industry trends, market changes and network activity.

Leading Real Estate Companies of The World TM provides International Connections, critical to modern business, for markets outside the Untied States, including Canada, Mexico, The Caribbean, South America, Europe, the United Kingdom, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand.

You can visit Leading Real Estate Companies of The World TM on the web at LEADINGRE.com and R. H. Thackston & Company – REALTORS at Thackston.com.

 R. H. Thackston & Company – REALTORS is a full service real estate brokerage with licenses in New Hampshire and Vermont and Massachusetts.

The following is a letter from Monadnock Habitat for Humanity.

Building homes, building hope.
June 30, 2009
Mary Larsen
R. H. Thackston & Company REALTORS®
640 Marlborough Road
Keene, NH 03431

Dear Mary and Thackston Volunteers:

On behalf of Monadnock Habitat for Humanity, I would like to express our sincere appreciation for your volunteer efforts on our new Habitat house in Troy.

Your hard work gave us a big boost and it was a pleasure to have such an enthusiastic team of volunteers at the Troy Site!

As we continue to fulfill our mission of providing affordable housing in the greater Keene community, it is the involvement of people like you that help make it possible.

The family, Mark, Jennifer, Jewel, and Isaak, join us in saying thank you for caring and helping to make this dream of a new home become a reality!

Sincerely,
Chris Ekblom, President
Board of Directors
Monadnock Habitat for Humanity

Well, you can’t say things aren’t interesting in real estate and the economy right now. The real estate market in Cheshire County and the Monadnock Region of New Hampshire and Southeastern Vermont has taken some hits in the last three years but no one can say that opportunities don’t exist for the savvy investor or first-time buyer.

 

Real estate markets, as a rule, die from the top down and recover from the bottom up which makes certain aspects of the stimulus package potentially just what the doctor ordered for any first-time buyers who are looking to buy and hold a home for the long term.

 

The seemingly huge number for foreclosed properties as also provided great opportunities for investment buyers that are looking to flip or hold and rent properties as well.

 

The housing market remains tight through-out the region because of the large number of homes vacated as a result of foreclosure on top of the region’s historically limited housing inventory has actually driven rents up through out the area.

 

The largest drop in employment in the United States since 1949 has lead to several government programs. The “Making Home Affordable” program is designed to help as many as 7 million families remain current on their mortgages. The program has two main parts the first is to help homeowners with a solid payment history on existing loans owned by Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac but have been unable to take advantage of today’s favorable rates because their homes have lost value, the other is a loan modification to help at risk homeowners avoid foreclosure by reducing monthly payments.

 

Federal Reserve Chairman, Ben Bernanke, said this morning in a Q&A session with the Council on Foreign Relations was optimistic about the American economy. He did point out at one point that his record or predicting the end of the current downturn has not be correct so far although he still believes that markets should stabilize by year’s end and 2010 should be a year of recovery.

 

Stabilization and recovery are unlikely to have double digit rates of increase in housing values until there is major economic growth or 1970’s style inflation or perhaps both which would solve problems for home owners that over mortgaged. This may in fact be the best route out of the current problems for both homeowners and a government that have found themselves deeply in debit with limited options.