About Me

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Park Ridge, Illinois, United States
Gerard Scheffler has been very actively involved in the real estate profession for over seven years. In 2005, immediately after receiving his Broker’s License, he established his first Chicago based brokerage company. The company turned out to be very successful with hundreds of satisfied customers and millions of dollars in closed real estate transactions. Over the years, Gerard has developed a network of returning customers who always refer his services to their family and friends. He is presently a managing broker at Home Gallery Realty brokerage firm specializing in default and distressed property sales. Regardless of his professional development and success, Gerard is constantly looking for ways to improve his skills as well as build his company image and reputation. He is very hardworking and aggressive when it comes to representing his customers ‘ real estate needs and doing his job right. He will work with you to ensure that your property is sold for the highest price possible in the shortest amount of time with the least amount of inconvenience to you. Area of service includes Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake and Mchenry County in the State of Illinois.

Saturday, February 11, 2012

American Dream of homeownership strong despite economic challenges, new data show

Contact: Jon Broadbooks, 217-529-2600

American Dream of homeownership strong despite
economic challenges, new data show

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. — Economic turmoil has done little to sway Illinois residents from a belief that owning a home is a fundamental part of the American Dream, according to a survey released today by the Illinois Association of REALTORS®.

The data show that even after several years of economic downturns, a majority of those polled (75 percent) say they think buying a home is a far safer long-term investment than putting money in the stock market.

The poll’s findings come as Gov. Pat Quinn announced efforts in his State of the State speech to address issues relating to foreclosures and vacant and distressed properties in Illinois. Efforts are also under way at the federal level to help Americans realize the dream of buying or staying in a home.

The Illinois Association of REALTORS® survey included 600 homeowners and renters in the state. It revealed 82 percent of respondents said they believe homeownership is a key goal for Illinoisans. The poll was conducted Jan. 17-19 by Gainesville, Fla.-based Strategic Guidance Systems Inc., a national political consulting firm.

Among other key findings:

  • Most of those polled (54 percent) said banks should have stricter requirements for obtaining a mortgage, while 39 percent said banks should make loans more accessible.
  •  More than half (55 percent) said the government should make assistance available so homeowners don’t lose their homes. Thirty-four percent said government should stay out of the business of providing a safety net. 
  • Sixty-one percent of respondents said owning a home was better than renting.

“No matter how much economic uncertainty exists, the data would suggest that the dream of homeownership is deeply rooted and largely unshaken by the Great Recession,” said Loretta Alonzo, CRB, GRI, president of the Illinois Association of REALTORS® and Broker-Owner of Century 21 Alonzo & Associates in La Grange Park. “As we begin the process of working our way out of a housing slump, this shows that the desire to buy a home isn’t likely to go away anytime soon.”

The survey gauged attitudes about the benefits of owning a home. Of those polled, 68 percent felt the feeling of having a “place of your own” was the greatest benefit. Sixty-nine percent saw homeownership as a means for family stability.

When asked about home values, 34 percent said prices would increase a lot or a little in the next five years, while 41 percent said they thought prices would stay the same. Nineteen percent said they thought home prices would decrease a little or a lot in the next five years.

The poll findings track with emerging housing data released by the Illinois Association of REALTORS® in January that showed home sales in the state were edging up in the final half of 2011, Alonzo said.

“We’re seeing growing consumer confidence, historically low interest rates and attractive home prices,” Alonzo said.  “It’s encouraging to see data that show how important homeownership is to Illinois residents.”

The Illinois Association of REALTORS® is a voluntary trade association whose 41,000 members are engaged in all facets of the real estate industry. In addition to serving the professional needs of its members, the Illinois Association of REALTORS® works to protect the rights of private property owners in the state by recommending and promoting legislation that safeguards and advances the interest of real property ownership.

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For more information: The Illinois Association of REALTORS® has several resources for media professionals seeking additional data:

Posted via email from Gerard Scheffler's Short Sale & Foreclosure News !

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Banks Paying Cash to Homeowners to Avoid Foreclosures !

 

Banks Paying Cash to Homeowners to Avoid Foreclosures

Losses for lenders are about 15 percent lower on the sales than on foreclosures, which can take years to complete while taxes and legal, maintenance and other costs accumulate, according to Moody’s. Photographer: Tim Boyle/Bloomberg

Banks, accelerating efforts to move troubled mortgages off their books, are offering as much as $35,000 or more in cash to delinquent homeowners to sell their properties for less than they owe.

Lenders have routinely delayed or blocked such transactions, known as short sales, in which they accept less from a buyer than the seller’s outstanding loan. Now banks have decided the deals are faster and less costly than foreclosures, which have slowed in response to regulatory probes of abusive practices. Banks are nudging potential sellers by pre-approving deals, streamlining the closing process, forgoing their right to pursue unpaid debt and in some cases providing large cash incentives, said Bill Fricke, senior credit officer for Moody’s Investors Service in New York.

Losses for lenders are about 15 percent lower on the sales than on foreclosures, which can take years to complete while taxes and legal, maintenance and other costs accumulate, according to Moody’s. The deals accounted for 33 percent of financially distressed transactions in November, up from 24 percent a year earlier, said CoreLogic Inc., a Santa Ana, California-based real estate information company.

Karen Farley hadn’t made a mortgage payment in a year when she got what looked like a form letter from her lender.

“You could sell your home, owe nothing more on your mortgage and get $30,000,” JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) said in the Aug. 17 letter obtained by Bloomberg News.

$200,000 Short

Farley, whose home construction lending business dried up after the housing crash, said the New York-based bank agreed to let her sell her San Marcos, California, home for $592,000 -- about $200,000 less than what she owes. The $30,000 will cover moving costs and the rental deposit for her next home. Farley, who is also approved for an additional $3,000 through a federal incentive program, is scheduled to close the deal Feb. 10.

“I wondered, why would they offer me something, and why wouldn’t they just give me the boot?” Farley, 65, said in a telephone interview. “Instead, I’m getting money.”

Tom Kelly, a JPMorgan spokesman, declined to comment on the company’s incentives.

“When a modification is not possible, a short sale produces a better and faster result for the homeowner, the investor and the community than a foreclosure,” he said in an e-mail.

A mountain of pending repossessions is holding back a recovery in the housing market, where prices have fallen for six straight years, and damping economic growth. Owners of more than 14 million homes are in foreclosure, behind on their mortgages or owe more than their properties are worth, said RealtyTrac Inc., a property-data company in Irvine, California.

Foreclosure Holdouts

Short sales represented 9 percent of all U.S. residential transactions in November, the most recent month for which data is available, up from 2 percent in January 2008, according to Corelogic. Bank-owned foreclosures and short sales sold at a discount of 34 percent to non-distressed properties in the third quarter, according to RealtyTrac.

As lenders shift their focus to sales, they are finding that some borrowers would rather risk repossession while they wait for a loan modification, according to Guy Cecala, publisher of Inside Mortgage Finance, a trade journal. In a loan modification, the monthly payment, and sometimes principal, is reduced to help prevent seizure. Homeowners facing foreclosure may live rent-free for years before they are forced out.

“That’s why the banks have got to pay the big bucks,” Cecala said. “The real question is why is the bribe so big? Is that what it takes to get somebody out of their home?”

Multiple Banks

Banks also pay a few thousand dollars to the owners of second liens, whose loans can be wiped out by a short sale, to encourage them not to block the deals.

While JPMorgan is giving the largest incentive payments, other banks and mortgage investors are also offering them, according to interviews with 12 real estate agents in Arizona, California, Florida, New York and Washington. Lenders also provide incentives on loans they service and don’t own when the mortgage investor, such as a hedge fund, requests it.

JPMorgan, the biggest U.S. bank, approves about 5,000 short sales a month. It generally offers $10,000 to $35,000 in cash payments at settlement, real estate agents said. Not all of the sales include incentives.

Borrowers also can receive payments from the federal government’s Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives program, which in 2010 began offering as much as $1,500 to servicers, $2,000 to investors and $3,000 to homeowners who complete short sales.

Quicker Resolution

For banks, approving a sale for less than is owed on the home can cut a year or more off the time it takes to unload a property. From listing to sale, the transactions took about 123 days on average at the end of last year, according to the Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance HousingPulse Tracking Survey.

Lenders spend an average of 348 days to foreclose in the U.S. and an additional 175 days to sell the property, according to RealtyTrac. In New York, a state that requires court approval for repossessions, it takes about four years to foreclose on a home and then resell it, the company said.

Lenders can often afford to forgive debt, offer the incentive and still make a profit because they purchased the loan from another bank at a discount, said Trent Chapman, a Realtor who trains brokers and attorneys to negotiate with banks for short sales.

Chapman, who also writes a blog on TheShortSaleGenius.com, said he’s heard about 50 homeowners who have received incentives from lenders including JPMorgan, Wells Fargo & Co., Citigroup Inc. and Ally Financial Inc.

Wells Fargo

“My guess is they want to get rid of bad loans,” Chapman said. “If they short sale these types of loans, they have less of a headache and have some goodwill with the homeowner.”

Wells Fargo, based in San Francisco, offers relocation assistance of as much as $20,000 for borrowers who complete short sales or agree to transfer title through a deed in lieu of foreclosure “in certain states with extended foreclosure timelines, including Florida,” Veronica Clemons, a spokeswoman, said in an e-mail.

Bank of America Corp. sent letters to 20,000 Florida homeowners as part of a pilot program, offering incentives of as much as $20,000, or 5 percent of the unpaid loan balance, Jumana Bauwens, a spokeswoman, said in an e-mail. The program expired in December and the Charlotte, North Carolina-based bank hasn’t decided whether to introduce it in other states, she said. About 15 percent of the homeowners agreed to participate in the program, she said.

Citigroup Offers

“The bank is pleased with the response,” Bauwens wrote. “The state is experiencing higher foreclosure rates than other parts of the country and is therefore seen as a viable market to gauge incremental short-sale response and completion rates when presenting homeowners with relocation assistance at closing.”

Citigroup offers $3,000 to most borrowers who qualify for its program, but the “amount may increase based on the circumstances of each individual case,” Mark Rodgers, a spokesman for the New York-based bank, said in an e-mail. “Investor programs have different guidelines for relocation incentives, which we honor.”

Susan Fitzpatrick, a spokeswoman for Detroit-based Ally, didn’t comment specifically on incentives when asked about them.

Borrowers typically can’t negotiate the incentives, which arrive by mail, Chapman, the Realtor, said.

Tap on Shoulder

“It’s not really easy to identify the guidelines because Chase doesn’t tell you, they kind of tap you on the shoulder,” he said. “When I first saw it in January 2011, I thought it was a joke or a typo. I was convinced it must say $3,000, not $30,000.”

Offering enough for the homeowner to put down a deposit on a rental apartment is reasonable, said Sean O’Toole, chief executive officer of ForeclosureRadar.com, which tracks sales of foreclosed properties. Giving tens of thousands of dollars to delinquent homeowners sends the wrong message, particularly if they got into trouble by running up home-equity loans during the housing boom, he said.

“It may make sense for people to walk away, it doesn’t make sense for them to get rewarded for doing it,” O’Toole said. “It’s not the homeowner’s fault that house prices dropped so dramatically, but they have already received months of free rent, if not cash out.”

Cecala of Inside Mortgage Finance said he wonders whether lenders are making big payments on properties with underlying title problems. Evan Berlin, managing partner of Berlin Patten, a real estate law firm in Sarasota, Florida, said representatives of a large bank told him the incentives are primarily given to borrowers when it doesn’t have the proper paperwork needed to win its foreclosure case. He declined to name the bank for publication.

Incentive Disconnect

State attorneys general across the U.S. began investigating foreclosure practices in October 2010 following allegations that the nation’s top mortgage servicers were using faulty documents to repossess homes.

Berlin said his office negotiated about 400 short sales in the past year and about a quarter included an incentive, ranging from $3,000 to $48,000. In some cases, the payments aren’t incentives at all because they’re offered after the borrower has almost completed the short sale, he said.

“The idea is that this is relocation assistance,” Berlin said. “But when you’re offering $48,000, obviously it doesn’t cost $48,000 to relocate.”

Cooperation Sought

The size of the payment may have little to do with sales price. JPMorgan gave one Phoenix homeowner $20,000 after she sold her property in June for $32,000, according to Royce Hauger, the real estate agent who represented the seller and shared a copy of the settlement sheet with Bloomberg News. The bank also agreed to forgive more than $70,000 in debt, she said.

Kelly, the JPMorgan spokesman, declined to comment on the payment.

The homeowners are getting the money in exchange for their cooperation, said Kris Pilles, a Riverhead, New York-based real estate broker who represents banks, servicers and hedge funds that own distressed housing debt.

Pilles is frequently dispatched to the homes of delinquent borrowers to explain the benefits of avoiding foreclosure, he said. His clients have paid as much as $92,500. In return, the lenders expect the seller to clean the house before showings, and trim the grass.

“Money talks,” Pilles said. “From the bank side, it’s anything to initiate a conversation with someone who may not be listening to them.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Prashant Gopal in New York at pgopal2@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Daniel Taub at dtaub@bloomberg.net; Rob Urban at robprag@bloomberg.net.

Posted via email from Gerard Scheffler's Short Sale & Foreclosure News !

Freddie Mac to increase short sale incentives !

By Jon Prior
• February 6, 2012 • 4:10pm

Posted via email from Gerard Scheffler's Short Sale & Foreclosure News !

DataQuick: New HARP 2.0 could help 6.7 million more borrowers !

By Andrew Scoggin
  February 6, 2012 

Changes made to the Home Affordable Refinance Program could open the platform up to nearly double the number of homeowners eligible per previous requirements.

A study from San Diego-based DataQuick found an additional 6.7 million households may qualify under HARP 2.0, according to new loan-to-value ratio requirements. Those changes remove a 125% LTV upper limit, altering it to include borrowers with 80% or more LTV on their homes.

In total, DataQuick said 13.8 million mortgages meet HARP requirements based on LTV ratios, with the 6.7 million accounting for loans with a 125% LTV or higher.

That near doubling mirrors initial estimates for the actual completion of program refinances from the Federal Housing Finance Agency. The regulator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac said in October the then-900,000 refinances "may roughly double or more" by the end of 2013, HARP's expiration date, but warned such estimates are "inherently uncertain."

Program refinances totaled nearly 1 million in the latest FHFA data, and the agency said effects of HARP 2.0 could start to surface in February.

Initially, the FHFA estimated HARP would reach 4 million to 5 million homeowners.

The DataQuick numbers do not account for whether homeowners meet HARP conditions on loan delinquency, which preclude anyone who missed a mortgage payment in the previous six months or more than one in twelve months. That excludes the 4.1 million borrowers at least 30 days past due on their mortgage, according to Lender Processing Services ($19.72 0%).

Randy Wussler, who headed the project for DataQuick, said delinquencies will limit the number of eligible borrowers, but the company does not have a solid estimate. TransUnion will provide credit information for DataQuick, but only on an individual-loan basis for clients.

DataQuick launched its study shortly after the FHFA announced the HARP changes in October.

"We expected the number to be in the millions," said Wussler, also vice president of product management and marketing for DataQuick. "It didn't surprise us when we found this number."

DataQuick compiled the results from its 120-million-mortgage database, which Wussler estimates represents between 80% and 85% of the nation's mortgages. He said they limited the study's results to only Fannie- or Freddie-owned loans, per HARP requirements.

About 11 million homeowners are underwater, or owe more than their house is worth, according to CoreLogic ($14.27 -0.1%).

ascoggin@housingwire.com

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Fannie Mae survey shows Americans expect home prices to improve !

By Kerri Panchuk
• February 7, 2012 • 7:40am

A majority of Americans believe mortgage rates will remain steady over the next year, while home price expectations in January improved for the fourth consecutive month in a row, Fannie Mae said in its consumer sentiment report.

The government-sponsored enterprise interviews 1,000 Americans each month to gauge consumer expectations about housing and the overall economy.

A majority of respondents expect home prices to rise by at least 1% on average over the course of the next 12 months.

"Consumer sentiment has continued to rebound to the level witnessed around a year ago since hitting a setback last summer," said Doug Duncan, vice president and chief economist of Fannie Mae. "The strengthening employment picture last Friday provides encouragement that the improving trend in consumer confidence will continue and will at some point be reflected in a firming up of consumer spending." 

Duncan said the Federal Reserve's commitment to keeping the target fed funds rates low through 2014 has spurred a general sense of confidence that interest rates will remain in the bottom range for a while.

Only 28% of those interviewed expect home prices to increase over the next 12 months, while 16% said they believe home prices will fall. Another 51% believe prices will stay the same.  

Of those interviewed, 71% believe now is a good time to buy a home, while only 10% think it's a good time to sell. Consumers also expect rental prices to rise by 3.2% over the course of the next 12 months, and 17% said their income levels are lower than a year ago, while 62% say it's unchanged.

Homeownership still maintains a premium value among those surveyed with 64% saying they expect to buy a home, while 30% will rent.

kerripanchuk@housingwire.com

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Wednesday, February 1, 2012

President’s Obama’s Plan to Help Responsible Homeowners and Heal the Housing Market

Obama Refi Plan Would Help Non-GSE-Backed Borrowers !

In the details released today, President Barack Obama fleshed out a proposal he announced in his State of the Union speech to boost the housing market by helping more underwater home owners than are currently being served by lenders.

The President said he wants to make the federal government's existing mortgage refinance program, called HARP (Home Affordable Refinance Program) available to more home owners. It's currently available to struggling borrowers with loans backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. For these borrowers, incentives are provided under certain conditions to make refinancing more attractive.

Key points:

1.) More underwater home owners would be able to tap federal refinance assistance than can do so today,

2.) mortgage servicers would be restricted in their ability to foreclose until after they’ve exhausted efforts for borrowers who’ve make a good-faith effort to modify their mortgage, and

3.) efforts to reduce the inventory of foreclosed homes through bulk sales to investors for use as rental housing would be tried in a pilot program.

Under the new proposal, HARP would be expanded to include borrowers with loans that aren't backed by Fannie and Freddie. These are the borrowers whose loans were securitized in private-label securities without any federal backing, and they would be allowed to refinance into FHA-backed loans, the same as the Fannie and Freddie borrowers. The administration has estimated that borrowers would save $3,000 a year in mortgage costs.

To be eligible, borrowers would have to have made their mortgage payments over the last six months with only one delinquency, and their loan amount couldn't exceed the FHA loan limit for their area. If borrowers owe more than 140 percent of the value of their home, the lender has to agree to reduce the loan balance. Also, borrowers wouldn't have to submit a full file of paperwork for the refinancing as long as they can verify their employment. The proposal also would enable borrowers who still have equity in their home — up to 20 percent — to participate.

The changes will require legislation, so Congress will have to agree to them for the expanded program to take effect.

In his State of the Union speech last week, Obama said he would pay for the expanded program using a fee charged to the country's largest banks so the initiative wouldn't add to the deficit. But some members of Congress have said they oppose charging banks a fee to cover the cost.

The Obama plan would also introduce a Bill of Rights for home owners, part of which is intended to smooth the mortgage modification and foreclosure processes, which today can be contentious and difficult for borrowers to understand. A key part of this is an effort to curb banks' practice of undertaking a mortgage modification while at the same time proceeding with a foreclosure — a process called dual tracking. Before they can start foreclosure, banks will have to show they took all reasonable steps to modify a borrower's mortgage.

To help ease inventories of foreclosed homes, the plan would give a green light to Fannie Mae to implement a pilot program to make foreclosures available to investors in bulk purchases for conversion to rental housing. Under the pilot, Fannie would package for sale foreclosed homes in a limited number of markets and require them to be used as rental properties for a period of time. 

NAR has concerns with this proposal and has been talking with federal regulators to ensure that the program is carefully tailored to the communities who can truly benefit from it, that small- and medium-sized investors be able to participate, and that real estate professionals continue to play a role in the disposition of the homes.

In a statement released after the President outlined the details of his proposal, NAR said it’s urging the regulator of Fannie and Freddie, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, “to proceed cautiously with the REO-to-rental program since housing markets are complex and varied.

“NAR believes an overly aggressive REO-to-rental program that is not privately administered by local entities and does not involve substantial participation of local market experts, especially licensed real estate professionals, could be disruptive and counterproductive to communities already suffering from high foreclosure inventories and lower housing values.” 

By Robert Freedman, REALTOR® Magazine

Read More

More on Obama's proposal

Analysis on implementation of the proposal

Announcement of the proposal in the State of the Union speech

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