Author Archive

Front View

Lovely Long Grove ranch home on 6 acres of serene land overlooking conservancy and lake. This home features 4 bedrooms, 2.5 bathrooms, full finished walkout lower level, circle drive, and side drive to an attached 3 car garage. New tear off roof in 2007 and newer appliances as well.  Home has been well taken care of and is ready for you to move in and enjoy the beauty and tranquility this private estate has to offer.  The set up of your home also gives you low energy bills in the summer while keeping you cool and low energy bills in the winter while keeping you warm. From the relaxing front porch you will enter through your cathedral foyer into your oversized great room.  All bedrooms and living areas have balcony and outdoor access to enjoy the tranquility of nature.  Must come inside and see all the home has to offer. Visit this home and many others at www.helenoliveri.com and make this home your best move today.

Website: www.helenoliveri.com
Blogs: www.helenoliveri.com/blog
Linked-In: www.linkedin.com/in/helenoliveri
Twitter: www.twitter.com/helenoliveri
Active Rain: www.activerain.com/helenoliveri

Comments No Comments »

March 17 (Bloomberg) — The Obama administration is inflating the success of programs that prevent foreclosures by skewing data on loan modifications and revising the goals, according to House Republicans.

Reports on the Home Affordable Modification Program are “glossing over disappointing results” by counting temporary changes toward the goal of permanent relief for as many as 4 million borrowers, said a letter sent yesterday to Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner by Republican representatives Darrell Issa and Jim Jordan.

HAMP was designed last year to curb record foreclosures after housing markets began to collapse in 2007. About 2.82 million U.S. homeowners lost their properties to foreclosure in 2009 and 4.5 million filings are expected in 2010, according to RealtyTrac Inc., the Irvine, California-based seller of default data.

Treasury spokeswoman Meg Reilly said the goal has “always been for offers extended to borrowers,” rather than the number completed. “This has been misreported for the past year and, while we have done our best to clarify for the public, the goal post has never moved,” Reilly said in an e-mail.

Lynn Turner, the former Securities and Exchange Commission chief accountant, said Treasury’s approach “seems to have taken a page out of the accounting manuals at Enron and Lehman,” referring to accounting disputes that accompanied two of history’s biggest financial collapses. “It has become the culture of Washington and Wall Street, and they reinforce one another.”

Turner, now a managing director at forensic accounting firm LECG LLC, is a Democrat who served under former President Bill Clinton.

Trial Plans

Issa, from California, is the ranking Republican on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee and has helped drive investigations of the Treasury’s role in bailouts for Bank of America Corp. and American International Group Inc. Ohio’s Jordan is the ranking Republican on the panel’s Domestic Policy Subcommittee.

Lenders led by Bank of America, based in Charlotte, North Carolina, and New York-based JPMorgan Chase & Co. successfully converted 168,708 trial plans into permanent loan revisions as of Feb. 28, the Treasury said in a March 12 HAMP report. More than 835,000 additional borrowers were in trial repayment plans, Treasury said.

“Rather than acknowledge the program’s failure, Treasury is trying to confuse the American people by counting HAMP’s higher number of temporary modifications — fewer than one-third of which are successfully converting to permanent ones — toward the goal,” the letter reads.

Definition of Success

Treasury’s Phyllis Caldwell, chief of the Homeownership Preservation Office, told lawmakers last month that the program was designed to give homeowners the “opportunity for a mortgage modification, not a permanent modification.”

Trial modifications shouldn’t be the standard, said Moshe Orenbuch, a Credit Suisse Group AG bank analyst in New York.

“Success of the program should be measured by the amount of borrowers who get permanent loan relief and avoid foreclosure,” Orenbuch said.

Wells Fargo & Co., the nation’s top mortgage lender, today became the second bank to agree to also modify home-equity loans as part of the program. The option will be available to borrowers who successfully complete a modification on their first mortgage through HAMP, according to a statement from the San Francisco-based company.

By Dawn Kopecki

Website: www.helenoliveri.com
Blogs: www.helenoliveri.com/blog
Linked-In: www.linkedin.com/in/helenoliveri
Twitter: www.twitter.com/helenoliveri
Active Rain: www.activerain.com/helenoliveri

Comments No Comments »

The Federal Reserve Building is seen in Washington.The Federal Reserve decided Tuesday to keep its benchmark interest rate near zero, reinforcing a commitment that rates should stay at record lows as the nation grapples with high unemployment and tight credit.

Concluding a one-day policy meeting, the Federal Open Market Committee said the target rate for overnight loans between banks would remain in the zero-to-0.25 percent range “for an extended period.”

“Household spending is expanding at a moderate rate but remains constrained by high unemployment, modest income growth, lower housing wealth and tight credit,” the Fed said in a statement.

Although it didn’t raise rates or signal that higher rates are coming, the Fed’s assessment of the economy was more upbeat than in its January statement. Committee members said the labor market is stabilizing, business spending has risen significantly and inflation is likely to remain subdued for some time.

Planet Money

The Four Most Important Words In the Market Today March 16, 2010

Rates have hovered at record lows since December 2008 as the U.S. struggles to recover from the most severe downturn since the Great Depression.

Thomas Hoenig, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, opposed the decision for the second meeting in a row. Keeping rates near zero, he warned, “could lead to a buildup of financial imbalances.”

Hoenig’s dissent illustrates the Fed’s challenge in deciding when to signal that higher rates are coming.

The Fed also confirmed plans to phase out some of the programs put in place to pump liquidity into the banking system. By the end of the month, it will stop buying mortgage-backed securities. But it left the door open to reactivating the programs if the economy deteriorates.

Job Growth Outlook Remains Weak

Meanwhile, the Obama administration said Tuesday that while companies are expected to add about 100,000 jobs a month for the remainder of the year, it’s not enough to change the unemployment rate.

Testifying before the House Appropriations Committee, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, White House Budget Director Peter Orszag and top economic adviser Christina Romer said February’s 9.7 percent unemployment rate isn’t likely to improve until 2011 and 2012.

The United States has weathered the worst of the economic decline, they said, but unemployment remains a challenge. The national joblessness rate held at 9.7 percent last month.

“Although the rate of job loss has slowed dramatically, job gain has not yet begun, and the administration will not be satisfied until the many Americans seeking work can find it,” Geithner, Romer and Orszag told lawmakers in a joint statement Tuesday.

The trio warned that the jobless rate might even rise in the coming months. They said they don’t foresee job growth until the fourth quarter of 2011, when unemployment is expected to hit 8.9 percent. The jobless rate could fall to 7.9 percent by the end of 2012, they predicted.

Home Construction Falls

The Fed’s decision came hours after the Commerce Department released a report on home construction, which was a huge factor in the economic downturn.

Construction of new homes fell 5.9 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 575,000 units in February, slightly higher than the 570,000 that economists were expecting.

Activity dropped by 9.6 percent in the Northeast and 15.5 percent in the South — both regions hit hard by snowstorms. Construction rose by 10.6 percent in the Midwest and 7.9 percent in the West.

Building permits, considered a good barometer of future activity, fell 1.6 percent to an annual rate of 612,000 units after a 4.7 percent drop in January.

Some economists blamed the drop in housing starts on the snowstorms that paralyzed much of the country during February, but others said the glut of foreclosures on the market hampered demand.

David Crowe, chief economist at the National Association of Home Builders, said the inventory of new homes is at its lowest level since 1971.

“The builders are still competing against a lot of distressed sales, foreclosures and short sales and so forth,” Crowe said. He added that builders are likely to remain cautious until more troubled properties work their way through the system.

From NPR’s Deborah Tedford, Jim Zarroli and Tamara Keith, with additional material from The Associated Press

Website: www.helenoliveri.com
Blogs: www.helenoliveri.com/blog
Linked-In: www.linkedin.com/in/helenoliveri
Twitter: www.twitter.com/helenoliveri
Active Rain: www.activerain.com/helenoliveri

Comments No Comments »

65 N. Tournament Dr., Hawthorn Woods, IL 60047 | Real Estate Virtual Flyer by VirtuallyShow.com

65 N. Tournament Dr., Hawthorn Woods, IL 60047
Exceptional 4 Bedroom Home
Details
Price: $659,000
MLS: 07470787
Type: For Sale
Bedrooms: 4
Bathrooms: 2.1
Sq. Footage: 0
Year Built: 2005

Description
Beautiful “Columbia” model in Hawthorn Woods Country Club! This home is set on a lovely corner lot and has luscious views. With lots of living space this home features 4 bedrooms including 2.5 baths & 3 car garage. Home boasts 2-story foyer & family room with wood burning fireplace with gas starter and granite surround. Spacious unfinished lower level with walk out to exterior and rough-in for future bath. High end mechanicals with 2 furnaces, zoned heat and air. Large cook’s kitchen includes Cherry stained cabinets, large island with granite breakfast bar, Bosch and Thermador stainless steel appliances, hardwood floors, granite counters, tile backsplash and closet pantry. Plush upgraded carpet and pad in living, dining, family room, and all upstairs bedrooms area. Master bath dual shower with tile, Jacuzzi Tub & upgraded maple vanities in all baths. Bright study with plush carpet and wood window treatments throughout the home add terrific ambiance. Alarmed home with home audio and speaker system carefully thought out. Finally, an in-ground sprinkler system, patio with brick pavers and fire-pit make for perfect outdoor relaxation. Neutral décor to customize and create your own color palette! Resort style living in a fabulous upper scale community.
View Tour and Information at:
Helen Oliveri
The Helen Oliveri Team of Keller Williams Realty
Office: 847-967-0022
Mobile: 847-967-0044
Email: helen@helenoliveri.com
Website: www.helenoliveri.com

Comments No Comments »

front side

4 bedroom ranch home with attached garage & lovely curb appeal.  Home is in move in condition. View the many pictures we have to offer at www.illinoisforeclosuredeals.com and call today to schedule a viewing of this property at 847-967-0022. This property is exclusively represented by The Helen Oliveri Team of Keller Williams Realty.

Website: www.helenoliveri.com
Blogs: www.helenoliveri.com/blog
Linked-In: www.linkedin.com/in/helenoliveri
Twitter: www.twitter.com/helenoliveri
Active Rain: www.activerain.com/helenoliveri

Comments No Comments »

front

4 bedroom, 2.1 bath home with full finished LL on Cul-De-Sac street backing to wonderful park with walk/bike trails. Just move in and enjoy! View the many pictures we have to offer at www.illinoisforeclosuredeals.com and call today to schedule a viewing of this property at 847-967-0022. This property is exclusively represented by The Helen Oliveri Team of Keller Williams Realty.

Website: www.helenoliveri.com
Blogs: www.helenoliveri.com/blog
Linked-In: www.linkedin.com/in/helenoliveri
Twitter: www.twitter.com/helenoliveri
Active Rain: www.activerain.com/helenoliveri

Comments No Comments »

front

Home will be freshly painted and new carpeting installed as well.  Full unfinished lower level, & is also on large lot.  Come and see today.   Buyer responsible for any/all compliances, escrows etc if required. All inspections/systems tests are at buyer’s expense. Offers require pre-approval & EM due in certified funds at acceptance. Addendum required after seller accepts offer. Cash deals require proof of funds. Seller addendum required before submitting offer. Cash deals require proof of funds.  View the many pictures we have to offer at www.illinoisforeclosuredeals.com and call today to schedule a viewing of this property at 847-967-0022. This property is exclusively represented by The Helen Oliveri Team of Keller Williams Realty.

Website: www.helenoliveri.com
Blogs: www.helenoliveri.com/blog
Linked-In: www.linkedin.com/in/helenoliveri
Twitter: www.twitter.com/helenoliveri
Active Rain: www.activerain.com/helenoliveri

Comments No Comments »

front

Lovely updated home with hardwood floors throughout and screened in porch. Only steps from the lake & in great community. Come see all this home has to offer.  Fully updated interior Buyer responsible for any/all compliances, escrows etc if required. All inspections/systems tests are at buyer’s expense. Offers require pre-approval & EM due in certified funds at acceptance. Addendum required after seller accepts offer. Cash deals require proof of funds. Seller addendum required before submitting offer. Cash deals require proof of funds.  View the many pictures we have to offer at www.illinoisforeclosuredeals.com and call today to schedule a viewing of this property at 847-967-0022. This property is exclusively represented by The Helen Oliveri Team of Keller Williams Realty.

Website: www.helenoliveri.com
Blogs: www.helenoliveri.com/blog
Linked-In: www.linkedin.com/in/helenoliveri
Twitter: www.twitter.com/helenoliveri
Active Rain: www.activerain.com/helenoliveri

Comments No Comments »

Zillow was a much clicked-on Web site after its 2006 debut, when homeowners were gleefully rubbing their hands together about their property’s escalating value before the housing bubble burst.

Even then though, there were questions about the accuracy of Zestimates, Zillow’s estimates of property value based on public records, local real estate listings and sales information. Now a trio of professors at the University of Texas at San Antonio are adding their voice to the conversation.

Their harsh conclusion: Zillow not only overvalues properties but homeowners’ own estimates might be more realistic than Zillow.

The study, thought to be the first look by academia at Zillow and its proprietary formula for determining home value, focused on 2,045 homes in the Arlington, Texas, area sold in the second half of 2006. The research found that for 40 percent of the homes in the sample, Zillow ovestimated the value by more than 10 percent, and only 0.88 percent of property values were underestimated by more than 10 percent. The study was published in the winter edition of The Appraisal Journal, a trade publication of The Appraisal Institute.

The findings have been lambasted by Zillow, which faults the study for being conducted three years ago, focusing on only one city, and comparing sales for one time period and Zestimates a few months later. “It’s unfortunate this limited study is being published and publicized so far out of date,” said Zillow spokesman Jill Simmons in an e-mail. “It’s also unfortunate that they did not reach out to Zillow to learn more about our approach to home valuation for this study. We would have been happy to talk to them as we are very open and transparent about both our accuracy and the intended use of Zestimates as a starting point for learning about home values.”

Finance professor Ron Rutherford, one of the study’s authors, said the Arlington real estate market was purposely picked because it was a stable real estate market and Zillow gave it four stars, its best rating for accuracy. Also, the researchers first collected sales data on the properties from the multiple listing service and then looked up their Zestimates several weeks later because they waited for sales to be recorded and then gave Zillow a month to update its Zestimates to factor in sales data.

Rutherford stands behind the findings. In fact, he says Zestimates are likely to be off even more in unstable housing markets like those found around the country right now. “My guess is when you’re using an automated system, it’s going to be difficult to get close when the market changes,” he said.

For its latest reporting period ended June 30, Zillow’s site gives its Zestimate accuracy for the Chicago metropolitan area three stars, a “good” rating, saying that 70 percent of its Zestimates are within 20 percent of the sale price, with a median error of 11.5 percent. That means half of the Chicago-area home Zestimates are within 11.5 percent of the selling price and half are off by more than 11.5 percent.

What’s the authors’ takeaway from their research?

“Homeowners overestimate 5 to 8 percent,” Rutherford said. “Part of our point was to say you probably know the estimate of your home as well as any of these automated systems can tell you.”

Zillow does note on several places within its site that the property value it puts on a house is a starting point for determining a home’s value, not an appraisal. The authors acknowledge that but undertook the study because they knew so many homeowners were using Zillow to judge their home’s worth.

ChicagoTribune

Website: www.helenoliveri.com
Blogs: www.helenoliveri.com/blog
Linked-In: www.linkedin.com/in/helenoliveri
Twitter: www.twitter.com/helenoliveri
Active Rain: www.activerain.com/helenoliveri

Comments No Comments »

The Federal Reserve has pushed mortgage rates to near half-century lows, but millions of U.S. homeowners haven’t benefited from that because they can’t—or won’t—refinance.

Falling home prices have left many owners with little or no equity, making it harder to qualify for refinancing. Moreover, stricter lending standards and higher fees by banks and mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and declining incomes have made it tougher and less attractive for borrowers to seek new loans.

Around 37% of all borrowers with 30-year conforming fixed-rate mortgages—who collectively hold about $1.2 trillion of home loans—have mortgage rates of 6% or higher, according to investment bank Credit Suisse. Many could reduce their rates by a full percentage point if they refinanced at current rates, about 5%. More than half could lower their rates nearly three-quarters of a percentage point, according to Credit Suisse.

But new refinance applications in January stood near their lowest levels in the past year. Weekly data compiled by the Mortgage Bankers Association also show that refinance activity has been muted, considering that rates are so low.

“Traditionally, these borrowers would be aggressively refinancing,” said Mahesh Swaminathan, senior mortgage strategist at Credit Suisse.

[MRatesPromo]

One indicator of the economic impact of refinancing: Loans that refinanced in 2009 will result in $3.4 billion in savings for consumers this year, according to a report by First American CoreLogic, a research firm based in Santa Ana, Calif. That will return an additional $17.2 billion in savings to borrowers over the next five years. That’s money consumers can potentially use to help spur economic recovery.

About a quarter of all mortgage holders are “underwater”—they owe more on the house than it’s worth—which normally makes it impossible to get refinancing: Banks want collateral to back the value of home loans they make. The Obama administration recently extended a program intended to help underwater homeowners refinance, but few people have tapped it so far. The program has faced logistical hurdles, delays and confusion from brokers and lenders.

Some people are so far underwater, refinancing ends up being out of the question. John Albright, a retired Navy officer in Manassas, Va., hasn’t been able to refinance because the value of his home has plunged. He figures its market value is now around $275,000, but he and his wife still owe more than $500,000 on their mortgage.

Their refinance application was turned down last year because they lacked equity in the home. He says his lender told him he could refinance only if he could come up with about $200,000 to pay down his mortgage. So they are stuck with an interest rate of about 6.5% at a time when his wife’s income has declined. “We’re going from paycheck to paycheck, but what can you do?” Mr. Albright says.

Some mortgage bankers say higher fees by lenders have undermined the effort to encourage refinancing. Fees that Fannie and Freddie began imposing in 2008, as loan delinquencies began to rise, have made it unattractive for some borrowers to refinance. For example, a borrower with 20% down and a 695 credit score seeking to refinance must pay fees equal to 1% of the loan amount. Those fees rise for borrowers with weaker credit scores, higher loan-to-value ratios, or other risk factors.

Overcorrecting for the abuses of financial institutions “has defeated the Fed’s purchase program,” said Alan Boyce, a mortgage-securities-market veteran. Those loan fees, he said, are partly “responsible for why there’s been no refi boom.”

The higher fees and tight credit standards show the tensions facing Fannie and Freddie. As the government-controlled companies try to raise revenue to offset their losses, those efforts can conflict with their basic public-policy mission: to help stabilize the housing market.

Fannie and Freddie have to strike a balance between risk and access to credit. Figuring out “where that line is involves some trade-offs,” said Edward DeMarco, acting head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which oversees Fannie and Freddie.

The last time mortgage rates were at current levels, in 2003, refinancing activity hit $2.9 trillion, according to trade publication Inside Mortgage Finance. Last year, refinance volume reached $1.2 trillion, the highest amount since 2003 but not nearly as much as expected, considering how low interest rates have fallen.

Traditionally, borrowers have an incentive to refinance when they can reduce their mortgage rate by one percentage point or more.

Borrowers who are refinancing tend to be those who need it least. Fannie and Freddie refinanced 4.2 million borrowers last year. On average, borrowers who refinanced through Freddie Mac saved $2,600 annually. But the savings on the whole have gone to “very, very good credit borrowers and it really isn’t going very far down the credit spectrum,” said Michael Fratantoni, the head of research and economics for the MBA.

The experience of Connecticut resident Cathy Grandahl shows some of the trade-offs borrowers must grapple with in today’s low-interest-rate, high-fee environment. She wanted to refinance two loans on her West Simsbury, Conn., home: a fixed-rate mortgage with a 5.75% rate and a second mortgage with an adjustable rate that she worries will rise sharply in coming years.

Refinancing would save them around $125 a month on their first mortgage while providing a fixed rate on their second loan. But extinguishing that mortgage by refinancing into one larger loan—considered a “cash-out” refinance—would trigger an additional fee. That, plus several thousand dollars in closing costs, ultimately persuaded the couple not to refinance after all.

mrates0302
About a quarter of all mortgage holders are “underwater”—they owe more on the house than it’s worth—which normally makes it impossible to get refinancing: Above, homeowners work with Bank of America negotiators to restructure their mortgage loan during a “Save the Dream” tour stop by the Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America last month in Palm Beach, Fla.

“It’s not a matter of our credit. We just can’t get a good enough rate to make the refi worth it,” says Ms. Grandahl, a 53-year-old land-records researcher who has three children in college.

Journal Community

We would consider it if we could somehow know that the transaction would be carried out efficiently and competently, but there are too many stories of good borrowers ending up in awful transactions because of lender performance problems. The process was tedious enough in the past, and I was told by a mortgage broker that it’s only getting worse. Don’t need the hassle.

—Jeffrey Loose

Her broker, Michael Menatian, said that sort of scenario “happens all the time” with qualified borrowers. “There’s nothing wrong with these people—good equity, good income—and you have to tell them, ‘I’m sorry, I can’t give you the low rate you thought you could get.’ ”

Falling home values are one of the biggest factors raising borrowers’ refinancing costs. Borrowers with less than 20% equity may have to pay for mortgage insurance.

On Monday, the Obama administration said it would extend for a year a program launched last April to help homeowners with little or no equity to refinance. That program, which had been set to expire this June, was called a “failure” last week by analysts at Barclays Capital. While the administration had said it would benefit millions, so far just 188,000 borrowers who owe between 80% and 105% of the value of their homes had refinanced through December. Last September, it was expanded to include borrowers who owe up to 125% of their home value, but fewer than 2,000 borrowers have used that program through December.

The administration says it is also considering new ways to allow distressed homeowners to refinance through the Federal Housing Administration.

WSJ.com

Website: www.helenoliveri.com
Blogs: www.helenoliveri.com/blog
Linked-In: www.linkedin.com/in/helenoliveri
Twitter: www.twitter.com/helenoliveri
Active Rain: www.activerain.com/helenoliveri

Comments No Comments »

pageTracker._initData(); pageTracker._trackPageview(); } catch(err) {}