Bank of America to Speed Up Short Sale Timeline

Short sale has lots of uncertainties involved. One of the big headache is it takes very long time to get lender approval. Bank Of America’s short sale especially so. Many buyers who are in short sale transactions ended up giving up and move to a different house. When a new buyer comes, the whole approval process has to started all over again. This long process consumes lots of energy and emotion of people who involve in it.

A good piece of news to share with people who are in short sale or look to buy or sell a short sale. Bank of America says it will now be able to provide a decision on a short sale offer in 20 days.

Bank of America is making changes to its short sale procedures and introducing an improved task flow within the short sale technology module from Equator, BofA’s short sale management platform of choice. The goal: to reduce the timeframe for a short sale decision to less than three weeks, according to an artile published by DSnews.com today.

Starting Saturday, April 14, real estate professionals working with BofA will be required to submit five documents for short sales initiated with an offer:

The acknowledgement and disclosure form, short sale addendum, and the form for third-party authorization are available through the company’s online Agent Resource Center.

The third-party authorization form is a new standardized document developed specifically for BofA. Previously, the lender accepted third-party authorization forms in differing formats and from a variety of sources when transacting a short sale.

Bank of America says it recognized a need for greater compliance and consistency with this important document and has now created its own form to standardize the third-party authorization process. The two-page document requires signed acknowledgments from all borrowers and designated representatives in a short sale. Beginning April 14, BofA will accept only the official Bank of America Third-Party Authorization Form for short sales.

The bank’s new short sale process will enable real estate agents, brokers, attorneys, and other short sale specialists involved in pre-foreclosure transactions to complete tasks such as document collection, valuations, and underwriting simultaneously.

With these steps running concurrently, the timeline from initiation to closing is reduced. In fact, Bank of America says it will now be able to provide a decision on a short sale offer in 20 days. Typically, BofA’s short sale process has taken anywhere from 45 days upwards.

In continuing to streamline the decision process, should the buyer walk away from the sale, Bank of America is giving agents five days to submit a backup offer. Previously, the backup offer window was 14 days. Interested buyers are limited to two counteroffers and will receive a response from the lender within three days.

Silicon Valley To See a 1.6 Percent Increase in Home Prices in 2012

Mercury News recently published an article predicing that  Silicon Valley should see a 1.6 percent increase in home prices in 2012. Here are the numbers:

San Jose metro area
2011- down 2.5%
2012 forecast – up 1.6 %

San Francisco metro area
2011 – down 4.7%
2012 forecast – up 0.1%

 Below is the complete article: 

Bay Area home prices expected to stabilize in 2012

After years of decline, housing prices are expected to stabilize or even increase in some parts of the Bay Area this year, according to a new forecast.

Stabilizing prices are a sign of a healthier market, even though homebuyers still face challenges — tight credit, not many homes for sale and competition from investors paying cash.

In a report to be released Monday, Clear Capital, a real estate valuations company in Truckee, predicts that prices will remain almost flat this year — compared with a 4.7 percent drop in 2011 — in the San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont metropolitan area, including Contra Costa County. Silicon Valley should see a 1.6 percent increase in home prices, compared with a 2.5 percent drop last year, the company said.

“This region overall is doing pretty well,” said Clear Capital research director Alex Villacorta.

In three of the past four years, Bay Area home prices have declined from the previous year, including a dramatic 35 percent drop for the San Francisco metro area in 2008 and a 28 percent drop in Silicon Valley that year. Only in 2010 were there slight increases, followed by last year’s drop.

“We haven’t seen any stretches of normal activity for the last 20 years or so” in the Bay Area, he said, noting that prices had rocketed upward in the years before the decline. “It’s really been a roller coaster, with exception of now, when things are settling and leveling off.”

Nationally, the company sees a 0.2 percent gain in home prices in 2012, compared to a 2.1 percent drop in 2011. The San Jose area’s expected performance was in the top third and San Francisco was in the top half of 50 major metropolitan areas analyzed.

Across the country, housing could help repair the economy, said economist Sung Won Sohn at Cal State Channel Islands. Sohn, who recently released his own economic forecast, is predicting a housing-led recovery for the U.S. this year based partly on low interest rates and renewed multifamily home construction, which usually brings gains in the overall housing market. And prices, he said, are about as low as they can go.

“No one is expecting a dramatic fall in house prices,” Sohn said. “That gets people buying houses.”

The Bay Area, especially Silicon Valley, is already doing better, he said, “because the underlying economy seems to be doing better. I think we will see a somewhat faster recovery in the Bay Area.”

In the past two years, home prices bobbed up and down in response to government programs to encourage sales, as well as fluctuations in the number of foreclosures and short sales, in which homes are sold for less than is owed on them.

But agents say too few homes are on the market, and buyers still face tight credit.

“People are in escrow forever, and they finally give up,” said Richard Calhoun of Creekside Realty. “That is what I see as the biggest hindrance on the market.”

Investors paying cash for lower-priced houses remain a big obstacle for people like Nicole Collison, 25, a San Jose schoolteacher trying to buy her first home.

Motivated by the high rent she’s paying and the market’s current low interest rates and prices, Collison has looked at nearly 50 houses since October and bid on half a dozen of them, only to lose out every time to cash buyers.

“We’re always outbid,” she said. “It has been quite a challenge.”

But she hasn’t given up.

“We’re going to keep at it. We’re hopeful after the beginning of the year more things will come on to the market.”

In the East Bay, about 20 percent of the homes are selling rapidly, said Unhei Kang with Grubb Co. in Berkeley. A nicely presented home in a desirable area will draw multiple bids, she said.

“I don’t know what the future will hold, but to me it seems like it is stable. There are definitely buyers out there. Maybe it has to do with the low interest rates. A lot of buyers are feeling it’s not going to get any better than this,” Kang said.

The housing market is “spotty” in Contra Costa County, with some areas doing well and others not, said Barbara Safran, president of the Contra Costa Association of Realtors. “I think we’ve dropped about as low as it can get, unless some crazy thing happens in the economy and the world.”

The median price for single-family homes dropped about 4 percent last year, Safran said, with condos dropping about 4.6 percent.

“We’re predicting that it’s probably going to stay the way it is for a while. I think we’re going to continue to see a lot of short sales. The foreclosure market is still iffy. It’s a question of how quickly banks are going to put out those foreclosures.”

Bay Area home prices

San Jose metro area
2011- down 2.5%
2012 forecast – up 1.6 %
San Francisco metro area
2011 – down 4.7%
2012 forecast – up 0.1%
source: Clear Capital.

Obama Payroll Tax Cut Worsens Mortgage Price

Conforming and Non-conforming loan prices are starting to get worse as Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae are increasing their Guarantee Fee (GFee) effective with April “settlements.”

Lender started to implement the price increase on rate lock for 45 days and 60 days already. 30 day pricing will be impacted starting from late January and 15 day pricing will be impacted starting from mid-Febuary. The impact will be around 50 to 80 BPS. 50 BPS for a 400,000 loan is $2000, which means you could see your rate worsen by about 0.125%.

So hurry up and call me asap if you are planning to refinance and have not locked your rate yet.  As of today, I still have 3.875% for 30 year fixed loan if lock for 30 days.

The increase of the guarantee fee is used to bankroll the payroll tax cut extension signed by President Obama late in December last year. (Click here for the complete story).

On Dec. 23, 2011, President Obama signed into law the Temporary Payroll Tax Cut Continuation Act of 2011. Among its provisions, this new law directs the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) to increase guarantee fees charged by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (the Enterprises) by no less than 10 basis points from the average guarantee fees charged by these companies in 2011 on single-family mortgage-backed securities. This requirement is effective immediately, meaning that the average guarantee fees charged in 2012 need be at least 10 basis points greater than the average guarantee fees charged in 2011 and that this increase be remitted to the U.S. Treasury, rather than retained as reserves by the Enterprises. The law also requires FHFA to determine a schedule for guarantee fee increases over a two-year period that must satisfy other requirements of the law.

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