Archive for October, 2010

FHA’s Rehabilitation Program

Saturday, October 30th, 2010

If you are looking at buying a home, but don’t know if you can get financed because it requires a little work, then have no fear. The FHA offers a program that could help you purchase the home and rehab the property.

The Federal Housing Administration’s (FHA) 203(k) rehabilitation program is “an important tool for community and neighborhood revitalization and for expanding homeownership opportunities.”

How does it work?

With conventional financing, a lender won’t close on a loan unless the condition of the property, and thus the value, ensure loan security. This means that a property requiring rehabilitation may be out of reach for many buyers. These properties generally require the buyer to find additional financing for the needed construction and repairs. These loans can involve short term loans with high interest rates. And in a housing market where many new homes are out of reach for buyers, rehab ready may be a good financial choice. The FHA’s program should allow more buyers to enter the market, and to help to move a specific segment of inventory.

As an alternative to conventional financing, the FHA is offering a chance for buyers to get just one mortgage loan, at a long-term fixed (or adjustable) rate, to acquire and rehab the property.

To be eligible, a property must be a one- to four-family dwelling that has been completed for at least one year. If a home has been demolished, part of the existing foundation must still be in place.

This program has been in use since 1978. Many borrowers, however, think that only “far gone” properties are eligible.

The house “doesn’t have to be falling apart; it could just be outdated,” said Joseph Latini Sr., the president of Hartford Funding, a lender in Ronkonkoma, N.Y. “It just has to appraise below market value and then at market value with the repairs.”

BOA resumes foreclosures in 23 states

Thursday, October 21st, 2010

Bank of America reviewed 102,000 foreclosures in the 23 states where a court must sign off on the proceedings, and it is now restarting the process on those cases, the company said yesterday.  The company said the first of the new affidavits will be submitted by Oct. 25, and that it will continue its review in 27 other states.  According to a spokeswoman for the bank, no errors were found during the review, and fewer than 30,000 foreclosure sales across all 50 states will be delayed as a result of the investigation.  The announcement comes one day before the bank’s third quarter earnings report, and might ease investor concerns over the scale and timeframe of the banks review process.  “This is an even better outcome than we previously thought,” said Paul Miller, an analyst at FBR Capital Markets. “We thought January was a more likely time to restart the [foreclosure] process.”  All told, 1.8 million loans are in foreclosure in the 23 so-called judicial states, while 1.3 mil lion are pending elsewhere in the country, according to a Morgan Stanley analyst report.

Ask the HOA Expert

Wednesday, October 6th, 2010
Question: Is it permitted for a property manager or board member to go door to door to try to collect past due assessments?

Answer: Sure, but why do it? The HOA has extraordinary collection powers. Ask nicely. If no response, then swing the collection hammer using a qualified attorney.

Question: Our board enacted a security policy that requires guests to show identification to entry gate guards. Do they have the authority to deny my invited guest onto the property? The board never provided notice that they would be enacting this policy.

Answer: Yes, the board has the authority to enact and enforce this policy. Requiring identification is not the same as denying entry. You live in a gated community for a reason…to restrict access to all but invited guests and vendors. This requires certain protocol. While this policy is certainly more restrictive than some, it does deter those with bad intent.

Question: Have you ever heard of a board doing a straw poll to see where majority of members sit on a touchy issue?

Answer: Straw polls are not very effective, particularly for sensitive issues, since the poll does not allow discussion of deeply held feelings and beliefs. Sensitive issues are bound to set somebody off and create a public relations problem for the board.

If there is an sensitive issue, the board should hold a special meeting to discuss it. Rather than have some rambling discussion, there should be a specific proposal to do such and such. Those that like or oppose it will then have something specific to bounce their ideas off of.

For more innovative homeowner association management strategies, see Regenesis.net.