Alternative Real Estate Solutions

An online resource for creative real estate in the midwest

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During the down cycle of a bull market you’ll notice the media begin to uncover schemes and scams of the rats and hucksters of that market: note Bernie Madoff and Tom Petters.   Does the impending down market attract more of this illegal activity, or is it just coincidence that we see more of this in the news once the down market begins? The answer is no, the down turn doesn’t attract more of that activity, it’s actually the bull market that attracts it; however, it’s the down turn that exposes it.    It is usually harder to hide the Ponzi charade when markets turn south.    Just like in the equities market, the real estate market has also had its share of deceptive plots to part money and equity from the unsuspecting.   This article below mentions many offenses the FBI is currently investigating across the country.    Beware of people who promise too much of a good thing!   Although this article is interesting, I am not validating its  accuracy;  merely promoting its relevancy to those in the creative real estate market.

Foreclosure Boom Causes Fraud To Erupt

Do You Know the Red Flags of Mortgage Fraud?

By Howell Haunson

RISMEDIA, August 18, 2010–Mortgage fraud is not going away any time soon. The FBI has been working with bureaus of investigation in states that recently passed residential mortgage fraud acts to stay abreast of the latest fraud tactics.

The FBI has found that fraudsters are evolving new ways to take advantage of others and hide their intent. For this reason, anyone involved in the mortgage industry needs to be educated on the red flags of possible mortgage fraud, such as those outlined below:

Flipping vs. Serial Flipping:
A fraudulent flip is one that erroneously increases the value of the property by using an inflated appraised value. If a property was purchased for $175,000 and soon thereafter was sold for $500,000, most professionals would notice. However, serial flipping is trickier. Say a house sold for $175,000, soon after sold for $250,000, then $325,000, then $400,000 and then $500,000. Fewer professionals would even raise an eyebrow. This scheme takes more time, but the end result is the same: fraud.

Multiple Contracts & HUD-1 Settlement Statements
In this scheme, unbeknownst to the seller, the contract and settlement statement that is sent to lender shows inflated sales price. This enables the buyer to obtain a higher mortgage. In the end, the seller believes the property was sold for $300,000, but lender, agent and buyer believe the sales price was $500,000 (the amount on which the agent’s commission is calculated).

Fraudulent Qualification Documents
In this scenario, the borrower’s ability to qualify for a loan is misrepresented by fabricated employment history, income, credit records, and bank statement balances. FBI calls this is an “emerging issue” and a result of sophisticated Photoshop and editing software.

Bogus Assignment Fees
Buyer #1 enters into an assignable contract with the seller at an inflated price. Buyer #1 locates Buyer #2 who may be a co-conspirator or a naïve investor. Buyer #2 takes an assignment of the contract at the inflated price and agrees to pay Buyer #1 an assignment fee. Inflated appraisal is used and Buyer #2’s application may contain misrepresentations.

Bogus Liens or Invoices
A buyer contracts with a seller at an inflated price. At closing, the difference between the true sales price and the inflated contract piece is paid to a bogus shell company of the buyer or individuals affiliated with the buyer.

Chunking
Chunking transactions are similar to flipping, but instead of multiple sales of the same property, it involves multiple loans to the same borrower. In this situation, a borrower purchases more properties than underwriting guidelines would allow or obtains multiple refinance loans secured by the same property.

Chunking usually begins with an unsophisticated borrower attending a “how to get rich quick” seminar. At or following the seminar, a third party contacts the unsuspecting borrower to encourage investment in a specific property with no money down. The third party acts as an agent for the borrower and simultaneously submits loan applications on the borrower’s behalf to multiple financial institutions for the various properties. The borrower may not be aware of this.

The third party acts as agent for the borrower during the closing, and often, unbeknownst to the borrower, pockets the loan proceeds. The “unsophisticated” borrower is left with numerous loans from various financial institutions and usually has insufficient cash flow to repay the debt.

Builder Bailouts
These bailouts often occur when a builder is highly motivated to move inventory that has been sitting in a declining or depressed market. According to the FBI, condominium conversions are particularly vulnerable to this type of fraud.

In a builder bailout, the builder may use a variety of ways to quickly dispose of the property. Some of the methods are:

  • Aiding in fraudulent borrower qualification.
  • Offering excessive incentives not disclosed to the buyer’s lender.
  • Offering no down payment by inflating the sales price by the buyer’s down payment and forgiving the buyer of that amount.
  • Inflating the sales prices and using bogus liens or invoices.

Straw Borrowers
This type of fraud intentionally disguises the true beneficiary of the loan proceeds.
It may be used to:

  • Conceal questionable transactions;
  • Replace a legitimate borrower who may not qualify for the mortgage or intend to occupy the property
  • Circumvent applicable lending limit regulations by applying for and receiving credit on behalf of a third party who may not qualify or want to be contractually obligated for the debt. The straw borrower may be a friend or relative of the true beneficiary, or merely a paid participant.

Mortgage Elimination
Mortgage elimination is an attack on an existing mortgage through forced cancellations and unusual cancellations (usually called a “declaration of avoidance”).

Purchase Disguised as Refinance
In this scenario, the buyer executes a contract for purchase and convinces seller to quitclaim the title to buyer prior to closing. This is done with or without a security deed from buyer to seller and is done without the payment of the sales price to seller. At this point, the buyer then applies for a refinance of the property instead of a property purchase.

Reverse Mortgage Fraud
The FBI calls reverse mortgage fraud an emerging type of scheme that takes years to identify. In this scenario, fraudsters identify foreclosed, distressed or abandoned properties and use straw buyers to commit occupancy fraud. Seniors are recruited to purchase the property from the straw buyers without the exchange of money. After living in the property for 60 days, the seniors obtain a reverse mortgage. A fraudulently inflated appraisal is used as justification, possibly based on repairs or renovations that may not have been performed. At this point, a lump sum disbursement of the equity is requested, which the fraudsters abscond with at closing. Unfortunately, this type of fraud usually is not discovered until after the death of the borrower.

Short Sales
Many argue that residential mortgage fraud cannot be involved in a short sale transaction. The misstatement, misrepresentation or omission of fact to the seller’s existing lender would not be in the mortgage loan process. Nevertheless, mortgage fraud is often involved! Not against the seller’s lender (although other crimes may be involved), but usually against the buyer’s lender. Sellers, agents, buyers, and others involved in the process find a way for the buyer to pay some money to the seller for the purchase of personal property or as rent for the buyer taking possession prior to closing.

The issue is whether the buyer made a misstatement, misrepresentation or omission of fact in the mortgage loan process for the new loan being obtained. If the buyer is paying $2,000 to the seller for personal property or rent that expenditure would have to appear on the Loan Application Form or itemized on the HUD-1 Settlement Statement. Otherwise, the buyer is misstating assets. The lender believes the buyer has $2,000 more in liquid assets than the buyer actually has. If the buyer became committed to pay $2,000 for a car or furniture prior to closing, this would have to be disclosed to the lender. That requirement is not changed merely because the payment is to the seller. Even if the seller has not committed residential mortgage fraud against the existing lender by receiving the undisclosed funds, the existing lender could refuse to accept the negotiated payoff.

Buyer brokers in particular, beware! How can a broker or agent avoid becoming involved in such fraudulent activity? Here is my advice:

  • Closely evaluate the “chain of sales”
  • Communicate with other agents involved in the most recent transactions
  • Consider if the sales price is congruent with the sales and list price of other homes in the area
  • Communicate with the loan officer…and your broker…if unsure
  • Consider the buyer’s apparent ability to qualify for the purchase
  • Avoid assignment fees payable to “original” buyers
  • Avoid multiple transactions involving the same borrower in a short period of time
  • Realize that any attempt to satisfy a mortgage without payment in full typically is NOT going to work. In a short sale, it might work, but ensure the lender has given written consent for the acceptance of a lesser amount…
  • …and, be sure the conditions for the lender to accept a lesser amount are fulfilled

More homeowners are opting for ’strategic defaults’

Underwater on their mortgages and angry at banks, more borrowers are choosing to hand over the keys, even if they can afford the payments.

March 17, 2010|By Alana Semuels

Wynn Bloch has always dutifully paid her bills and socked away money for retirement. But in December she defaulted on the mortgage on her Palm Desert home, even though she could afford the payments.

Bloch paid $385,000 for the two-bedroom in 2006, when prices were still surging. Comparable homes are now selling in the low-$200,000s. At 66, the retired psychologist doubted she’d see her investment rebound in her lifetime. Plus, she said she was duped into an expensive loan.

The way she sees it, big banks that helped fuel the mess all got bailouts while small fry like her are left holding the bag. No more.

“There was not a chance that house was ever going to be worth anywhere near what my mortgage was,” said Bloch, who is now renting a few miles away after defaulting on the $310,000 loan. “I haven’t cheated or stolen.”

Time was when Americans would do almost anything to hang on to their homes. But that commitment appears to be fraying as more people fall behind on their loans while watching the banks and lenders that helped trigger the financial crisis return to prosperity.

Nearly one-quarter of U.S. mortgages, or about 11 million loans, are “underwater,” i.e. the houses are worth less than the balance of their loans. While home values are regaining ground — median prices rose 10% in Southern California last month to $275,000 compared with a year earlier — they remain far below the July 2007 peak of $505,000.

Stuck with properties whose negative equity won’t recover for years, and feeling betrayed by financial institutions that bankrolled the frenzy, some homeowners are concluding it’s smarter to walk away than to stick it out.

“There is a growing sense of anger, a growing recognition that there is a double standard if it’s OK for financial institutions to look after themselves but not OK for homeowners,” said Brent T. White, a law professor at the University of Arizona who wrote a paper on the subject.

Just how many are walking away isn’t clear. But some researchers are convinced that the numbers are growing. So-called strategic defaults accounted for about 35% of defaults by U.S. homeowners in December 2009, up from 23% in March of 2009, according to Luigi Zingales, a professor at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business.

A flood of walkaways could damage the nation’s fledgling housing recovery by swamping the market with foreclosed properties. Still, some experts are dubious that millions of underwater homeowners will pull the plug as Bloch did. Homeownership remains the cornerstone of the American dream. Moving is a hassle. And the stigma associated with a foreclosure is likely to keep many hanging on for a recovery.

Some purchased their homes at the peak of the market only to see the value drop precipitously when the bubble burst. Others bought low but couldn’t resist borrowing against their rising equity to make home improvements and pay off other bills. When home values fell, they too found themselves underwater.

Joseph Shull, a 68-year-old marketing professor, said he’s planning to walk away from the town house he bought in Moorpark in June 2006.

“I’m angry, and there are a lot of people like me who are angry,” he said.

He purchased the home for $410,000 and spent $30,000 renovating. Now the house is worth around $225,000.

Shull admits he overpaid for his property. But he said it fell in value in part because of “regulatory mismanagement.”

“The bank stabbed me, but at least I got in a pinprick back,” he said. “This is the new economy. The old rules don’t apply any more.”

Please contact me at 651-271-4582 if you’d like to just walk away from your home.


“It’s getting better all the time” is the key refrain to the Beatles’ song Getting Better. That sentiment would have been foolish if it had been sung this time last year. Today, though, it appears to hold true, particularly now that we have finally received the break we have all been anticipating – a drop in unemployment.

On that front, the nation’s employers have stopped eliminating jobs en mass. The unemployment rate dipped to 10% in November. Many forecasters – and forecasting is a perilous endeavor, to be sure – believe hiring will hit stride late in the first quarter of 2010. If they are right, the employment recovery will come quicker compared to the previous two recessions (1991 and 2001) despite the greater severity of the current downturn.

More jobs, in turn, will help reduce the number of homeowners on the brink of foreclosure, which, by the way, has dropped for a fourth-straight month. One in every 417 homes received a foreclosure-related notice in November, but that is down 8% from October, according to numbers released by RealtyTrac.

We are not out of the woods yet. RealtyTrac expects foreclosure filings will post a second-consecutive record in 2009, with 3.9 million notices sent to homeowners in default, compared to 2008’s 3.2 million. However, if employment continues to improve, chances are good we will see a substantial reversal of that trend in 2010.

The drop in home values is another trend we expect to see reversed in 2010. According to real estate Web site Zillow, total home values in the U.S. declined by $489 billion in the first 11 months of 2009. That sounds like an astronomical figure, but it is actually an 87% improvement over the $3.6 trillion in lost homeowner value suffered in 2008.

More jobs could also reverse the trend in mortgage rates, pressuring rates to rise as loan demand increases. Though not showing signs of rising yet, mortgage rates have been at a plateau. Bankrate.com’s recent lender surveys suggest the downtrend is abating, with its most recent survey posting marginally higher rates than the previous week’s survey.

Economic
Indicator

Release
Date and Time

Consensus
Estimate

Analysis

Producer Price Index
(November)

Tues, Dec. 15,
8:30 am, et

Finished Goods: 0.7% (Increase)
Core: 0.2% (Increase)

Important. Rising producer prices will raise inflation concerns.

Industrial Production
(November)

Tues, Dec. 15,
9:15 am, et

0.3%
(Increase)

Moderately Important. Production is increasing to meet renewed consumer demand.

Housing Market Index
(December)

Tues, Dec. 15,
1:00 pm, et

19 Index

Important. Confidence is expected to receive a boost from extension of the homebuyer’s tax credit.

Mortgage Applications

Wed, Dec. 16,
7:00 am, et

None

Important. Purchase and refinance applications rise as the decrease in rates slows.

Consumer Price Index
(November)

Wed, Dec. 16,
8:30 am, et

Finished Goods: 0.3% (Increase)
Core: 0.1% (Increase)

Important. Consumer prices remain subdued but could be pushed higher on rising producer prices.

Housing Starts
(November)

Wed, Dec. 16,
8:30 am, et

560,000 (Annualized)

Important. Starts should rebound strongly after October’s decline.

Federal Reserve FOMC Meeting

Wed, Dec. 16,
2:15 pm, et

Federal Funds Rate: 0.0% to 0.25%

Very Important. The Fed is expected to hold short-term rates steady through the first quarter of 2010.

Leading Indicators
(November)

Thurs, Dec. 17,
8:30 am, et

0.6%
(Increase)

Moderately Important. The indicators suggest the recovery remains on track.

Are We There Yet?

We cannot say for sure, but we think we are darn close. Of course, we are speaking of the bottom in mortgage rates. Last week we explained how the Federal Reserve has influenced the market with its massive purchases of mortgage-backed securities. This week we offer statistical support for our contention that rates are at least close to bottoming, if not likely to reverse soon.

Calculated Risk, an insightful Web site that tracks the comings and goings of the housing and mortgage markets, supplied the evidence. Calculated Risk has noted (as have we) the close relationship between the 30-year conventional fixed-rate mortgage and the yield on the 10-year Treasury note. Based on statistical analysis reprinted on Calculated Risk’s Web site, the 30-year conventional fixed-rate mortgage is expected to rise to 5.4% based on the current 10-year Treasury yield of 3.45%.

We must be careful; statistics imply a certitude that does not always exist, but it is worth noting that the aforementioned model has a determination coefficient (statistic-speak for predictive value) of 0.97, which is very high. Today’s 30-year fixed-rate loan is lower than 5.4%, but Calculated Risk opines that the difference is due to prepayment speed and randomness and to the Federal Reserve’s purchases of mortgage-backed securities, which we expect to taper off considerably in coming months – and that’s key. When the Fed starts throttling back on theses purchases, look for mortgage rates to throttle higher

If you’re thinking the recession is over, not so for he housing market.  It’s reported that Chase is holding over 600,000 houses vacant.  Countrywide/Bank of America is twice as big as Chase - how many do you think are being held off the market from all the banks?   More in the next post; however, this article will help you understand where the market is today. http://www.marketwatch.com/story/delinquencies-foreclosures-break-record-mba-2009-11-19-10500

1,004. 1,046. 1,083. 1,078. 1,120. 1,185.

Notice a pattern? That’s the number of signed purchase agreements each of the last six weeks in the Twin Cities housing market, growing most weeks at the spring buyer market heats up. The 1,185 pending sales during the week of May 9 were a robust 26.6 percent higher than the same week in 2008. Over the last three months, there have been 2,228 more pending sales than the same time period last year!

There are some caveats to this good news.

1.) Traditional home sales (excluding foreclosures and short sales) over those last three months are down 17.6 percent from a year ago.

2.) Sales above $190,000 are down. 19.2 percent from a year ago.

3.) Sales of new construction homes are down 16.8 percent from a year ago.

Looking through a sharper lens is sometimes the best way to fully understand market dynamics.

Active Listings Current Inventory One Year Ago One Year Change
Inventory as of: 5/18/2009 26,419 33,193 -20.4%
New Listings Current Activity One Year Ago One Year Change
For the Week Ending: 5/9/2009 2,058 2,257 -8.8%
Pending Sales Current Activity One Year Ago One Year Change
For the Week Ending: 5/9/2009 1,185 936 +26.6%
Month Supply of Inventory May 2009 May 2008 Percent Change
7.7 10.2 -24.5%
Supply-Demand Ratio: May 2009 - 5.23 houses for sale per buyer
*Data collected from the Regional Multiple Listings Service, for residential properties in the 13 county region exclusively

I was at my local REIA (real estate investors assocation) meeting last night and we were talking a bout foreclosure.

Mike Jacka, the host of the meeting showed this video below and I thought it was very thought provoking. My comments are below after you watch the video.

Charles Dickens’ “A Tale of of Two Cities” compared the fortunes of two protagonists who lived in Paris and London during the French Revolution. Paris was in a mob rule - full of chaos. Much like our foreclosure market. Then, there is London, repressed and quiet somewhat oblivious of what is going on in the other city.

In first housing marketing, many buyers/sellers find themselves in a deflationary reality where their home values, their neighbors home prices, and interest rates are dropping almost daily. REOs, short sale, foreclosures are all pulling the market down at a steady pace. This video talks about the affordability index. When affordability is at it’s lowest, it marks the peak in house prices, with a decline sure to follow. We’re now approaching unprecedented affordability index. The video stated the median income is 202% of what’s necessary to qualify for the median priced home. That means on average Minnesota’s make twice as much to qualify for our housing stock. Now is the time to upgrade and move up. If your thinking about buying, now is the time.

However, as an investment group, we are still seeing prices in a deflationary cycle. Therefore, we are trying to unload everything new we buy. We are not holding, unless it’s a can’t loose situation. The mobsters are the lenders and the government. However, things are soon to change.

The second market is one of inflationary price values. Inflation is bad - right? We’ve all learned that. How about hyper-inflation? This new “second” market will drive up prices once the built-in inflationary machine from the government begins gaining momentum. You think $4 gas was bad? Wait until you see $8 gas. Once we perceive prices going up, we will stop selling and spend as much of that cash that we’ve still got on more houses. We’ll let inflation drive up the prices while we rent them watching the prices go up and our rents increase.

stay tuned for more tips.

I’ve never bought in the war zone.

I guess I’ve never had a deisre to have my life threatened at or near one of my houses.   Of course that isn’t just necessarily restricted to the war zone.  I’ve felt very uncomfortable a few times at my apartment building in Fridley; then there was the time my tenant tried to blow up the house with me in it,  by leaving the gas line open.  In any case, the war zone has it’s own business model.

For those that read this blog, many of you know my good friend Brian Dickerson (www.briandickersonflips.com).  He knows more than anyone about working in the war zone.  He made his living in the neighborhoods where you needed a gun in order to fit in.

Below I’ve included an article that talks about free money available for real estate.   Who says there is no such thing as a free lunch?

Here’s the business model.
Identify a house to buy at 40% of value.  Hopefully it needs < 20k in work, and you’re buying it for about 20k (*worth about 80k).   Buy the house using the money talked about below and a little of your own if needed.   Fix and flip.  Fix and flip.  It’s a great cash strategy (strategy to bring you cash).
More tips soon.   If you’d like to sell your home, please visit our website at http://LakesAreaHomeBuyers.com

Housing: Agency collaboration could ease foreclosure crisis in Minnesota

by Scott Carlson Staff Writer

F&C file photo
F&C file photo

Humphrey Institute panel says Minnesota could be role model in search for housing solutions

The foreclosure crisis is sweeping across Minnesota, just like other states. And some areas, such as north Minneapolis – with triple the foreclosure rates of that city’s other neighborhoods – have been particularly devastated.

And yet, some housing experts see a glimmer of hope in the coalition of agencies, organizations and individual efforts converging to solve Minnesota’s problems.

Several Twin Cities housing experts, speaking at a Humphrey Institute forum Thursday, said Minnesota could even wind up serving as a role model of how the United States may be able to extricate itself from the nation’s growing mortgage foreclosure crisis.

Minnesota is “at the forefront of the mortgage-foreclosure recovery,’’ contended Thomas Fulton, president of the Minneapolis-based Family Housing Fund. “The housing industry (in Minnesota) has built a tradition of collaboration.’’

Fulton said a key source of collaboration is the Minnesota Foreclosure Partners Council, whose more than 20 members include cities, housing agencies, counties, trade groups and state agencies. Formed in 2007, the nonprofit council’s mission has been to develop a rapid, coordinated response to the mortgage foreclosure crisis affecting the Twin Cities and greater Minnesota. Its ultimate goal is to help stabilize neighborhoods and assist families recover from foreclosures, or help avoid the process altogether.

The Council’s efforts come at a time when foreclosures in Minnesota have gone from 6,500 in 2005 to nearly 30,000 in 2008. In north Minneapolis, about a fifth of the homes are in foreclosure; in other areas of the city, the rate is still less than 10 percent of neighborhood homes.

Fulton conceded that there are no signs the foreclosure crisis will abate any time soon, but added that “we are in a good position to act decisively … on the issue.’’

Carolyn Olson, president of the Greater Metropolitan Housing Corp. in Minneapolis, said her group has bought nearly 160 foreclosed homes in north Minneapolis since mid-2007 for rehab and resale. The GMHC has carried out the program largely with $10 million from the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency.

Olson said this pool of money is often helping her group beat speculators in bidding to buy foreclosed properties. Increasingly, GMHC is looking to sell homes to low- and moderate-income families on contract for deeds when they are having trouble getting mortgages because of the lack of traditional financing, she said.

Olson also noted that her group has been one of the first in the nation to benefit from the National Community Stabilization Trust, which is allowing Minneapolis and St. Paul, as pilot cities, to acquire foreclosed properties before they are put on the market. Under this program, the GMHC has looked at nearly 493 properties since September and closed on 23, she said.

Given these kinds of initiatives, the GMHC is starting to help push back up home values in north Minneapolis, Olson said. And the group’s efforts of restoring homes – in some cases, five to seven homes on a block at the same time – are giving local residents hope that their neighborhood is due for a rebound, she said.