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July 21, 2008

Who do you know who may be facing foreclosure?

The truth is that many honest, hardworking, responsible families throughout the Sacramento region are behind on their house payments and now face loosing their home.  This is a trying and difficult time.  Many of these families just don't know where to turn to.   A recent article in MSCNB.com states that many of these foreclosures cannot be prevented. 

Click here to read article

If you or someone you know is facing the possibility of loosing a home- find out the options.  Because getting educated can make all the difference.  For a free, no obligation consultation outlining the different options that may be available email us at info@sacareahomes.com

July 12, 2008

Sacramento Homeowners May See Some Relief

This story is taken from Sacbee / Breaking News.


Schwarzenegger signs mortgage bill

By Kevin Yamamura - kyamamura@sacbee.com
Published 12:07 pm PDT Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Mortgage lenders must contact California home borrowers to explore loan modifications by phone or in person before starting foreclosure proceedings under a new law Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed today.

Senate Bill 1137, which takes effect immediately, prohibits lenders from filing a default notice until 30 days after contacting a borrower or making legitimate attempts to do so. The new law by Sen. Don Perata, D-Oakland, also requires that tenants receive 60 days' written notice to vacate a property once it is foreclosed.

The Senate in January killed an earlier Perata bill that faced intense opposition from the mortgage industry and had stricter requirements, such as a face-to-face meeting between borrower and lender. The bill signed Tuesday, SB 1137, did not face opposition and had bipartisan support.

Perata and Schwarzenegger said today that the law will help stem the tide of foreclosures in California by forcing lenders to contact home borrowers before starting costly proceedings. They suggested that early communication will encourage both parties to explore payment modifications that avoid foreclosure.

"Losing a home to foreclosure is a financial and also an emotional crash that takes sometimes years to overcome," Schwarzenegger said. "Foreclosure not only devastates families, but it hurts neighborhoods and it depresses our economy and our budget, and we lose a lot of jobs, of course."

The new law also enables cities to impose fines of up to $1,000 a day on property owners who do not maintain vacant homes purchased in foreclosure, a tool aimed at preventing blight in hard-hit neighborhoods.


June 23, 2008

What Not to Do Before Buying a Home

No Major Purchase of Any Kind

This applies to any major purchase that would create debt of any kind. This includes furniture, appliances, electronic equipment, jewelry, vacations, expensive weddings…

…and automobiles, of course.

Don’t Move Money Around

When a lender reviews your loan package for approval, one of the things they are concerned about is the source of funds for your down payment and closing costs. Most likely, you will be asked to provide statements for the last two or three months on any of your liquid assets. This includes checking accounts, savings accounts, money market funds, certificates of deposit, stock statements, mutual funds, and even your company 401K and retirement accounts.

If you have been moving money between accounts during that time, there may be large deposits and withdrawals in some of them.

The mortgage underwriter (the person who actually approves your loan) will probably require a complete paper trail of all the withdrawals and deposits. You may be required to produce cancelled checks, deposit receipts, and other seemingly inconsequential data, which could get quite tedious.

Perhaps you become exasperated at your lender, but they are only doing their job correctly. To ensure quality control and eliminate potential fraud, it is a requirement on most loans to completely document the source of all funds. Moving your money around, even if you are consolidating your funds to make it "easier," could make it more difficult for the lender to properly document.

So leave your money where it is until you talk to your mortgage consultant.

Oh…don’t change banks, either!

June 07, 2008

Check out a LIVE clip from the Sacramento Home Buyer Class

May 30, 2008

5 Rules For Buyers in Today's Market


(Money Magazine) -- There's no telling how long the housing crisis will drag on. Here's what you need to know before you start shopping in a rocky market.

Rule 1: You can't time the bottom

Face it: The house you buy today will more than likely be worth less next year. That could get you thinking about trying to time the bottom. Resist. It's harder to do than you think, and this is the best buyers have had it in two decades, with inventories up and mortgage rates low.

Pace yourself, find the perfect place and drive a hard bargain: Ignore the seller's asking price and bid 10% below what comparable homes are selling for. If the seller balks, move on. Remember that if you're trading up, your home could sit. So sell before you buy.

Rule 2: One reason to buy now - mortgage rates

Homes are plentiful and will remain so, but financing will be getting more expensive. True, the Federal Reserve has slashed interest rates, but fixed mortgages don't directly follow the Fed. They reflect the bond market's expectations about inflation, which remains a concern. The 30-year, now at 6.1%, will likely reach mid-6% by December and 7% in 2009, says Celia Chen of Moody's Economy.com.

That means there could be a penalty for waiting to buy even if prices fall more. Today a $250,000 loan would set you back $1,500 a month. At 7%, a $1,500 payment gets you only a $225,000 mortgage. As for variable-rate loans, the spread between conforming ARMs and fixed loans is too narrow to do you much good.

Rule 3: Another reason to buy - rates on big mortgages

Mortgages in amounts greater than $417,000 - the limit for buying by federally sponsored mortgage agencies - usually run a fifth of a percentage point above conventional products. But investors are shunning jumbos, which now average 7.2% and are unlikely to drop much this year, according to HSH Associates.

Certain jumbo borrowers could get relief, however. A new law allows Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae to buy loans as large as $729,750 in 71 high-priced areas. So far "jumbo conforming" loans average 6.6%. The program has gotten off to a slow start; you'll need to shop around. And unless Congress acts, this bargain will disappear at year-end.

Rule 4: Don't buy cheap; buy good schools

By now you've heard from somebody who knows somebody who got a great deal on a foreclosed property. But when you buy a house, you're also buying into a neighborhood. And foreclosures tend to be bunched in areas where residents and speculators alike took out exotic mortgages to get into homes they subsequently found they couldn't afford. That's not a recipe for stability. Prices and quality of life could both decline further.

Similarly, avoid developments that popped up in the past few years. They too likely have a lot of owners with risky loans and little equity, says Mike Larson of Weiss Research. Instead, go for areas with highly rated schools. They generally fare better during downturns, and that pattern is holding today, according to a recent study by real estate site Trulia.com.

Rule 5: Make sure your agent has your interest at heart

The real estate game has a built-in conflict of interest, since the listing agent and your agent both get paid by the seller. And these days more sellers are offering extra cash to buyer's agents.

So make sure you're not being steered to a house that's better for your agent than for you. Agree up front on his commission (typically 3%) and that any extra payments will go to you, says Jon Boyd, past president of a buyer's agent trade group.

- By Amanda Gengler of Money Magazine

May 14, 2008

Is the housing crisis over?

Read what CYRIL MOULLE-BERTEAUX writing for the Wall Street Journal has to say.  Click here to read article

November 05, 2007

Wondering what type of deals are out there?

This is just one of many Bank Foreclosures for sale in Sacramento County. Want to get a FREE list of all the Bank owned properties for sale? Send us an email and we will get one right out to you!

October 15, 2007

Exciting New Program: The Home Scouting Report

This brand new program is going to become all the rage.  The Home Scouting Report is a free, password protected sight that gives you a direct link to all the raw MLS data.  It is just now be introduced to Sacramento.  With this new program you get all the new listings, including bank repo's before most realtors do!  It also alerts you to price reductions so that you are the first to know when the seller drops their price.  In addition to the lightning-speed flow of information you can also change your own search criteria, save favorite listings, add comments to them, get driving directions, aeriel shots, school information, recent sale prices and so much more.  The best part is that it is free and registration is easy.  For more information please email us at info@sacareahomes.com

September 19, 2007

Fed Finally Cut Rates!

The Fed's rate cut yesterday was long awaited.... but what does this mean for you?  Check out this Wall Stree Journal article that explains the different ways it impacts you, the consumer...

What the rate cut means to you

September 15, 2007

New Home Buyer Class Comes to Sacramento!

This All-New class addresses how to take advantage of the rapidly changing market here in Sacrament.... You gotta check it out:

Home Buyer Class Info