Archive for August 13th, 2009


Mortgage Aid is a nightmare to administer. Well, any kind of aid is hard to administer well and fairly. I have lived some years in Nicaragua a country that pretty much subsists on financial aid from the United States, the European Union and Japan. These countries try to provide Aid in a fair and effective way I’m sure, but this is hardly the case. In most situations the poor never saw any benefits and if they did it was only a portion of the original amount while the powers that be or savvy businessmen take the cream of the aid.

Mortgage Aid in the United States or any other developed country is hardly easier, which is why the Obama Mortgage plan is being played with for the profit of some savvy homeowners that are willing to lie.

How does this work?
The current Mortgage Plan provides help for homeowners that are in “imminent default” they will get help from the government that will rework their mortgage by lowering interest rates and lengthening the loan or even lowering the principal of the mortgage in order to reduce the monthly mortgage payments to under a third of the homeowner’s income.

This idea is great. It helps homeowners that spent too much on their home and helps them avoid foreclosure. Estimates place the number of Americans that will lose their homes at 5 million in the next three years even with government help.
The problem is that borrowers are lying on their income and expenses in order to get a better deal just as they lied to get a better house. It is much easier to make yourself look poor than rich.

The Obama administration aims to help 4 million borrowers, one in fifteen Americans with a mortgage, an amazing goal, through mortgage modifications. Up to now they have helped around 200,000 homeowners with trial modifications. The BIG question is how many of these homeowners really need the help and which are just playing the system.

The thing is that the lying is very easy for many Americans as it might not even seem dishonest to many. Millions of Americans are self employed. They pay themselves a wage from their business. If it is better to have a lower income in order to qualify for Mortgage Aid then they can decide to pay themselves a lower wage and invest more in their business. Many might not see anything wrong in this and I am not sure I could make a compelling argument to browbeat a plumber who decides to invest in a new van and pay himself a lower wage this year in order to get some help on the mortgage.

The real hazard is that those that need help will be pushed aside by savvier homeowners that can play the system and make their cases look “better” and have the resources and the knowhow to get the mortgage aid they want.

Related posts:

  1. Obama Mortgage Plan Why So Slow
  2. Obama Mortgage Plan, Pays For Paying Your Mortgage
  3. Mortgage Plan: Who Actually Qualifies

Related posts:

  1. Obama Mortgage Plan Why So Slow
  2. Obama Mortgage Plan, Pays For Paying Your Mortgage
  3. Mortgage Plan: Who Actually Qualifies

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: Getting started, Johnson and Johnson (JNJ), United Parcel’B’ (UPS), Wells Fargo (WFC), Serious Money, Stocks to Buy, Best Stocks for 2009, Olin Corp. (OLN)

Money market accounts and certificates of deposit are safe, but they provide very little return on your investment. This fact, and the invigorated stock market, provoked one of my bankers, Dobrinka, at the local Santa Monica Wells Fargo branch, to ask for advice on how I would invest $25,000 if I was just starting out.

This is a common question although the starting point in terms of cash varies. It certainly makes a difference how old the person is, their general knowledge about investing and finance, and the particulars of their financial statement.

Here is what I suggested sticking to regular themes I have written about before and broadly speaking would be a conservative approach emphasizing safety, diversity, liquidity, dividends and the potential for growth far exceeding cash in the mattress or in a money market account. I also think that it is important for beginners to educate themselves so my suggestions include an educational aspect.

Continue reading Serious Money: What to do with $25,000

Serious Money: What to do with $25,000 originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Thu, 13 Aug 2009 14:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Filed under: Products and services, Competitive strategy, Best Buy (BBY)

Best Buy Co.’s (NYSE: BBY) Geek Squad service arm will soon be remotely fixing those malfunctioning laptop and desktop PCs, with a growing number of technicians working from home and with little to no travel. About two dozen Geek Squad techs do this now (and have been for six months), and the plans are to expand remote support beyond PCs to those complex remote controls and even setting up televisions correctly.

Perhaps as more items become connected to the internet, remote support can be made more and more possible. Derek Krueger, Best Buy’s manager of remote support, said “we absolutely anticipate supporting complex remote controls and calibrating televisions … as consumers become more comfortable seeing the Internet as a resource for getting services, we’ll be there.”

Continue reading Best Buy’s Geek Squad to fix more PCs remotely

Best Buy’s Geek Squad to fix more PCs remotely originally appeared on BloggingStocks on Thu, 13 Aug 2009 13:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Some people would like to believe that the outstretching tentacles of green shoots will all of a sudden resurrect the California housing market.  You have people focused on the Westside of Los Angeles with eagle eyes waiting for their moment to pounce on their prized 900 square foot piece of property.  Something over the last […]

Some people would like to believe that the outstretching tentacles of green shoots will all of a sudden resurrect the California housing market.  You have people focused on the Westside of Los Angeles with eagle eyes waiting for their moment to pounce on their prized 900 square foot piece of property.  Something over the last few months has shifted and people are jumping back into the housing game.  That something was a pause in the financial Armageddon that was leading us to Mad Max territory.  They all of sudden dismiss the Alt-A and option ARM catastrophe heading down the tracks and suddenly feel that they will miss housing bubble 2.0.  Many think that if they don’t buy now, they will miss the next manic phase of the market where a 500 square foot shack will cost $1 million.  A little bit of housing bubble perfume is back in the mix in Southern California.

To give you a true sense of what is happening, we uncovered some 40,000 homes being hidden by banks here in the region.  Consider it the bank keeping a few homes in their back pocket for another rainy day.  Today we are going to shed our light once again on Culver City.  Why are we heading back to this spot?  Because this is the perfect landscape where the Alt-A and option ARM problems will take place in 2010 and 2011.  Out of the 5,559 homes sold in June in Los Angeles County only 19 took place in Culver City.  This is considered a prime location by many, (certainly not on the level of Bel Air or Santa Monica but still a good location).  You have many fence sitters wondering whether it is time to jump back into the game.  Ideally, after looking at another on the ground example, you will sober up.  Today we salute you Culver City with our Real Homes of Genius Award.

Culver City - Prime Time

culver city home

Whenever I think about half million-dollar homes, I think about steel bars over my window.  Some people have forgotten what insanity looks like in the housing market because they assume that prices for the most part have come down to reflect reality.  In many areas, they are still over priced.  Take the above home for example.  The home has 2 bedrooms and 1 bath on a palatial 901 square feet.  The home was built in 1941 so you can rest assured everything is up to date.

Let us take a look at some sales history here:

Sales History:

03/24/2005: $652,000

11/18/2004: $530,000

Good times in Southern California.  Where else are you going to pay over $500,000 for a 900 square foot home?  We probably want to get a better angle look if we are going to drop half a million on a home:

culver-city

Keep in mind these are the kind of homes people are obsessing about in the Westside of L.A.  But this home has more of a story than meets the eye.  This home also demonstrates the wonderful lending habits of Washington Mutual and Citibank, two big crony banks.  WaMu is no longer with us but many of you are probably sick of seeing all those ex-WaMu buildings telling you that “Chase is finally here” and Citibank is pretty much one of the ultimate taxpayer banking bailout stories.  This home is currently listed as a short-sale:

culver-city-notice-of-default

What happened here probably flies in the face of what many people think would be a typical foreclosure.  The first sale in March of 2005 looked conservative in terms from the banks standpoint.  Of course to WaMu anything that moved and didn’t smell like old socks was a good bet for underwriting.  So let us walk through that last sale in 2005:

03/24/2005: $652,000

Down payment 20%:              $130,400

Loan #1:                                  $521,600

Holy crap!  I think we may have found one of the few loans that Washington Mutual did with a 20 percent down payment.  Even a 20 percent down on this place isn’t enough to keep you safe if you start using your home like a mortgage equity withdrawal machine.  Only 3 months after purchase, Citibank thought it wise to allow that 20 percent to be yanked out from the home in the form of a second to the tune of $130,000.  Well at least the home had equity of $400 at that point.  So much for that 20 percent buffer.

But this is 2005 baby.  Time for another trip to the mortgage ATM.  Like an addicted gambler in Vegas, the ATM is not your friend.  Another 3 months go by and Citibank sees it fit to allow for a loan of $250,000 as a second.  So apparently, the home increased in value by $120,000 in the matter of three months.  Maybe it had to do with that spectacular lawn?  So let us now run the notes:

Loan #1:          $521,600 (WaMu)

Loan #2:          $250,000 (CitiBank)

Total:              $771,600

Now this is looking more and more like a Real Home of Genius.  In the span of six months we took what was a conservative 20 percent down payment and turned the house into a zero equity mortgage equity withdrawal machine.  Some may think this is something from the bubble bursting days but this is something happening right now if you look at the NOD and NTS.  When the first notice of default was sent in February of this year, the borrowers were already behind by $13,937.  They obviously have not caught up with their payment and the NTS was filed in May.  The current list price is $550,000 and is in the more expensive zip code in Culver City if you believe the data.

And some will probably chalk this up to one example.  But since the Real Homes of Genius series has over 100+ homes that are ridiculous examples of Southern California real estate, I have a feeling this is the tip of surface.  And here is more savory details.

MLS Single family homes in this zip code:                12

Distress property notices:                                            35

So you have nearly a 3 to 1 ratio of distress homes to MLS listed homes.  Of those 35 homes only 3 show up on the MLS.  Hello shadow inventory!  And how do those other 2 short-sales look like?

short-sales
Oh yes, this is certainly the bottom!
Today we salute you Culver City with our Real Homes of Genius Award.

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Real Homes of Genius: $770,000 in Mortgages on a 900 Square Foot Culver City Home. Housing Short Sales and the Hidden Mortgage Equity Withdrawal Machine.

Via [DrHousingBubble]


Foreclosure, bankruptcy, unemployment are problems that seem so large as to become apparently insurmountable for many of its victims. That of course is one of the worst aspects of these crisis, they take away hope and energy out of people leaving them as shells of the people they used to be.

The situation is difficult and there are no easy fixes no matter what sleazy debt relief companies tell you however there are steps you can take to improve your situations. These steps are not magical and they will not guarantee your financial safety, they should however be part of your plan to avoid foreclosure or bankruptcy when in financially dire straits.

Step 1. Talk to your lender.
Lenders need to hear from their borrowers to have a clear understanding of their position. Imagine if you lent some money to two friends. One of them explains he has lost his job and cannot pay you as fast as he had hoped but presents to you a revised schedule with smaller but regular payments. The other friend has also lost his job but decides to ignore you and will not even explain his situation to you. Who would you be more inclined to give a break or treat kindly? Yep, banks feel the same way.

Step 2. Contact approved housing counselors.
There are plenty of debt relief companies willing to take your money to “help” you refinance or modify your mortgage. Some of them can help others are frauds. It pays to contact legitimate counselors throught the Department of Housing and Urban Development to make sure you are dealt with fairly. These counselors can help you for free and offer unbiased advice.

Step 3. Don’t pay for services you haven’t received and always sign a contract.It is against the law for debt relief companies to receive payment before they sign a contract explaining the services they will provide and before they actually carry out those services. Don’t be duped by companies that promise to reduce your loan and ask for payment before they do the work.

Step 4. Do not transfer your home to a debt relief company or “rescuer”.
A popular scam the Treasury and HUD departments are warning against is being carried out by fraudulent debt relief companies. They will tell you, you need to transfer ownership of your property to someone with a better credit rating so he can refinance your home and you can later on repay it. Obviously this is a scam to steal your home and rape it of any equity it might still have.

Step 5. Only pay your mortgage payments to your lender. Some scam consultants offer to take over the details of paying your mortgage as part of their debt settlement services. There have been many reports of debt relief companies pocketing the payments without making payments.

Related posts:

  1. Mortgage Scams: How To Avoid Them
  2. Avoid Foreclosure With A Personalized Home Loan Modification
  3. How To Avoid Foreclosure By Declaring Bankruptcty

Related posts:

  1. Mortgage Scams: How To Avoid Them
  2. Avoid Foreclosure With A Personalized Home Loan Modification
  3. How To Avoid Foreclosure By Declaring Bankruptcty

Source [blownmortgage]

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