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From the category archives:

Foreclosures

From USAToday.com:

When Sharon Sakson was laid off recently from her job as a television writer and producer, she burned through her savings to pay the $2,400 monthly mortgage on her home. But she soon decided it didn’t make sense: Her home was worth thousands less than the mortgage she carried on it.

The home had been appraised at $390,000 when she refinanced in 2006, but she estimates it’s not worth the $320,000 it initially cost in 2004. So Sakson did what a growing number of homeowners are doing today: She stopped paying and decided to let the bank take her home.

What Sakson did is called a strategic default, or a voluntary foreclosure, and it’s fast becoming a major challenge to the government’s $75 billion effort to keep distressed borrowers in their homes. Walking away from a mortgage is serious business — it can knock 100 points off your credit score and make you ineligible for a new mortgage for seven years. Yet, about 588,000 borrowers walked away from homes last year, double the number in 2007, according to a recent study by credit-scoring firm Experian and management consultants Oliver Wyman. While home prices are rising, the increases pale compared with overall drops in home prices since 2005 that threaten to push millions more homeowners into Sakson’s predicament, owing more than their homes are worth and seeing little chance of rebuilding equity soon.

Make sure you read the rest of the article. We get a lot of calls everyday from people in this same situation. I would never suggest someone simply walk away from their home. If someone was to do a Strategic Default it should be for the benefit of completing a loan modification or a short sale. There are times when a bank will refuse to accept either of those options, unless the owner goes late.

If you are considering walking away from your home, or are running through your savings to keep up on your payments, please don’t wait to give us a call: (480) 389-5199 We can help you understand what all of your options are. Call us today.

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Phoenix Real Estate: Could Senate Bill 1271 be re-reversed?

October 27, 2009

This just in from The Phoenix News Times:
Banks Suing Governor over Reversal of Controversial “Anti-Deficiency” Law
Remember when we wrote about a bill that could financially devastate homeowners facing foreclosure? Remember when they reversed the bill?
Well, it might just be back.
Last Monday, the American Bankers Association — which represents more than 70 banks in the state [...]

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Phoenix Foreclosures: 1 in 53 Homes Received a Foreclosure Notice

October 15, 2009

From RealtyTrac: U.S. FORECLOSURE ACTIVITY INCREASES 5 PERCENT IN Q3

RealtyTrac® … today released its U.S. Foreclosure Market Report™ for Q3 2009, which shows that foreclosure filings — default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions — were reported on 937,840 properties in the third quarter, a 5 percent increase from the previous quarter and an increase [...]

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Phoenix Foreclosures Wont Go Away

October 13, 2009

From the Phoenix Business Journal today:
“Two-thirds of the homes sold last month were either new foreclosures or resales recent foreclosures, according to the September Realty Studies report from the W. P. Carey School of Business at Arizona State University.”
“Although the level of activity appears strong, the market is being driven by [...]

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Stupid Idea of The Week: How To (Not) Close More Phoenix Short Sales

October 3, 2009

Does this sound stupid to anyone else? I have yet to work on a short sale where the hold up was the seller (The lien holder is a different story). How would that help move things along?
And if you were a lien holder taking a $100,000 loss on an asset, how [...]

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Phoenix Luxury Foreclosures

July 3, 2009

Luxury Foreclosures in Phoenix are everywhere! Take a look at the latest Luxury Homes In Phoenix below, then head over to our search page to find the Luxury Foreclosure that you are dreaming of!

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Short Sales vs Foreclosures

May 21, 2009
Thumbnail image for Short Sales vs Foreclosures

Short Sale or Foreclosure? Apples or Oranges? Well more like braeburn apples or pink lady apples. Same fruit, one just tastes WAY better.

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