Showing posts with label REO info jacksonville. Show all posts
Showing posts with label REO info jacksonville. Show all posts

Monday, June 1, 2009

What do you mean the house is sold?

Oh my gosh. I think I'm making believers out of my buyers these days! I'm NOT using car salesmen tricks by saying "you better buy it now or it'll be gone". Read my lips: you better put an offer on it or it will be gone!! I kid you not. That's how hot the Jacksonville market is right now. First time buyers are gobbling up the houses in the 100-185,000 price range like I can't even believe. This is a hot, hot price range and the inventory is there to give everyone lots of choices.

The $8000 credit towards closing costs is really going to help a LOT.

Call me today and let's go find one of these bargains for YOU!

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Help For Renters Living in Foreclosed Homes

Great news concerning renters of foreclosed properties! I have been complaining and worrying about these tenants for months! I am so relieved that SOMETHING is finally being done. I hope they follow through with all of this and really protect these families caught in the foreclosure mess. This is not fair to the tenants that have been paying their rent and playing by the rules. Please see the article below from the Florida Association of Realtors site today:

Fannie Mae bans evictions of renters

WASHINGTON – Jan. 14, 2009 – Mortgage finance company Fannie Mae said Tuesday it has adopted a policy allowing renters to remain in their homes even if their landlord enters foreclosure.

The new policy will allow residents of about 4,000 properties to sign new leases with Fannie while the property is up for sale. Michael Williams, Fannie Mae’s chief operating officer, said in a statement that the change should “help bring a measure of stability to communities impacted by high foreclosure rates.”

Fannie Mae had indicated last month that it was planning to do so. Sibling mortgage financier Freddie Mac is working on a similar policy, company spokesman Brad German said.

But Amy Marx, an attorney with New Haven Legal Assistance in Connecticut, said Freddie Mac has not been responsive to requests that it do the same, and has continued with evictions of renters in recent weeks.

“We are thrilled that Fannie Mae has done the right thing,” she said. “Our hope that Freddie Mac will follow their lead.”

New Haven Legal Assistance and two other legal aid organizations in Connecticut represent seven tenants facing eviction on properties whose loans are held by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. The legal groups argue that financial bailout legislation passed in October requires the companies allow tenants to remain in their homes.

Some households, Marx said, haven’t been notified of Fannie Mae’s policy change by the real estate agents charged with selling the properties.

Fannie and Freddie said last week they will extend a suspension of foreclosure sales and evictions from single-family homes through the end of January. The companies had suspended foreclosures through the holidays.

The government-controlled home loan giants say the extension will allow borrowers facing foreclosure to keep their homes as they work to modify more loans.

Washington-based Fannie Mae and McLean, Va.-based Freddie Mac own or guarantee around half of the $10.6 trillion in U.S. outstanding home loan debt.

The pair were taken over by the government in September and placed in a conservatorship after mounting mortgage losses put them in distress that was a prelude to the broader financial crisis that hit Wall Street last year.