Showing posts with label RI foreclosures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RI foreclosures. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 05, 2010

Foreclosure halts across the nation

If you are reading all the news about banks halting foreclosures across the nation due to what they call "robo-signing", you may be wondering how this affects Rhode Island foreclosures. Rhode Island is a non-judicial foreclosure state. This means that these problems will NOT affect Rhode Island foreclosures.  The 23 states that are affected are Judicial states.

UPDATED 10/08/2010

All 50 states are now being affected by BOFA and some others.
This should "not" affect short sales.

Friday, November 21, 2008

Two Family Cranston RI REDUCED!!!!


This is it! Your chance to own a two family in a great neighborhood and get help with your mortgage. See the Virtual tour below.
This house has been drastically reduced for a quick sale. This is a bank owned home and will be selling AS IS. Mostly needs updating. You will need a prequalification letter to make an offer, so get that first then call me. Don't wait too long.
Follow this link to see the tour.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

New Housing Plan in a Nutshell








Is there a Silver Lining in all the latest Foreclosures and Doom and gloom in the Real Estate Market? Maybe...Have you heard about the most recent possible help you, as a delinquent homeowner, may have? Here is a synopsis, taken from Bloomberg News, highlighting the general conditions needed to qualify.



Under the proposal, mortgage servicers will work with borrowers to reduce monthly payments to 38 percent of their gross income, a threshold of affordability, by lowering the principal, reducing interest rates and extending the length of the loan term. The plan doesn't include money from the Treasury's $700 billion bank rescue and isn't mandatory for companies that received federal aid.
Conditions and Fees
Homeowners that qualify will receive notices about the program. Their loan modifications won't become final until they have made three consecutive payments, and there is no limit to the number of times a loan can be modified. The new payment will include all of the borrower's monthly housing costs, such as taxes and condominium payments.
Fannie and Freddie are paying mortgage servicers $800 to process each modification, which isn't available for investment or vacation properties. Fannie and Freddie will absorb the losses on loans or mortgage securities they own while investors in mortgage bonds guaranteed by the government-run corporations will bear a brunt of the losses on that debt.



So, if you qualify, you will receive a notice. Refinancing your home to 38% of your income will help you make those monthly payments, stay in your home and breathe a little easier! Basically, this percentage is what it "should" have been in the first place.



Maybe the Holidays won't be so bad, after all!