REALTORS® Warn Consumers of Rising Loan Fraud Scams
C.A.R. Loan Fraud PSA
SOURCE: LeFrancis Arnold, 2012 President – www.LeFrancisArnold.com www.LeFrancis2012.com
California Association of REALTORS®http://videos.car.org/bcpid=987216733001&bckey=AQ~~%2cAAAAzBtBmCE~%2cgKfMMlGoPZI5kU4oXdOB9V1GODmgg1BX&bclid=969642122001&bctid=1550636009001
ASAE Open Letter to Congress re Restrictions on Government Employees Attending Meetings and Conferences
NAR has signed on to a letter being circulated by the ASAE and asks you to consider signing on as well. Over 800 other groups have already signed on including some state and local REALTOR® associations. The letter urges Congress to consider revisions to amendments passed by the House and Senate in two separate bills April 25 that place severe restrictions on government employees attending meetings and conferences. These amendments were included in bills passed by the House and Senate in the last two weeks of April.
The ASAE letter indicates support for the intent of creating greater transparency and accountability in government spending. However, while designed to limit spending on government-sponsored conferences and travel expenses for federal employees, the actual language would have a chilling effect on government employees’ participation in non-governmental meetings and conferences such as those that REALTOR® organizations hold at the federal, state and local levels. A reasonable reading of one section of the amendment is that, for example, if employees from FHA attend a meeting sponsored NAR, no other FHA employee can attend any other NAR event until the next fiscal year. Obviously, the dialogue that takes place between federal agency staff at various NAR sponsored events essential to the development of informed policymaking that facilitates real estate markets.
The ASAE email below includes links to the text of the letter and instructions for how to sign on to the letter electronically. The email also provides more details on the amendments and the issues involved. The deadline for signing on to the letter is May 4.
From: Jim Clarke, ASAE Public Policy
Sent: Wednesday, May 02, 2012 10:40 AM
To: Marcia Salkin
Subject: Update on Government Travel Restrictions
ASAE
Thanks to those of you who have already signed on to ASAE’s open letter to Congress this week. The letter urges Congress to revise legislative language attached to separate bills in both chambers last week that severely restricts government employees from attending meetings and conferences held by associations, nonprofits and other private sector organizations. (Read the amendment language here)
The response from our community has been outstanding. More than 800 organizations have signed on to ASAE’s letter to date. ASAE is collecting signatures through this Friday, May 4 before delivering the letter to Congress. If you have not done so already, please take action and add your voice to the hundreds of associations, nonprofits and for-profit corporations who want to preserve the valuable interchange between government and the private sector at meetings and conferences. If not revised, the provisions passed separately by the House and Senate last week could greatly impact attendance at many meetings and conferences and further erode the important dialogue between federal agencies and the private sector.
You can help ASAE’s efforts on this issue in three ways:
— Take a look at ASAE’s open letter with signatures received as of 8AM this morning. If you have already signed on in support, review your organization’s name and send any changes to Robert Hay at rhay@asaenet.org. If you have not already signed, use the web form or complete this document to add your voice to this effort.
— Share this email with your colleagues, members, business partners or other contacts. These provisions would impact all organizations that hold meetings and conferences and invite government employees, either as speakers or just attendees. There are no types of conferences exempted from these proposed restrictions.
— During this week’s recess, contact your members of Congress in the district and share with them your concern on this issue. Here is a one-pager that outlines the concerns with these provisions.
Thank you again for your strong support on this issue. If you have any questions about these provisions or ASAE’s related advocacy efforts, please contact us at 202-626-2703 or publicpolicy@asaenet.org.
SIGN ON VIA WEB SIGN-ON FORM OR BY COMPLETING THIS DOCUMENT
SOURCE: Jim Clarke, Public Policy American Society of Association Executives
1575 I St. N.W., Washington, DC 20005-1103
Phone: (202) 626-2703; Fax: (202) 371-1673; Email: phpgrassroots@asaenet.org
Malibu Association of REALTORS®
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Malibu Association of REALTORS® Legislative Committee Chair William Bowling attended a private primary campaign event for Assemblywoman Betsy Butler who is running for the 50th district (West Hollywood to Malibu). Members of the Beverly Hills Greater Los Angeles Board of REALTORS® also attended the event hosted by REALTOR® Jeanne Dorbin at her west side home. Butler was instrumental in a bill that bans biphenyls in baby bottles and promises to continue fighting for environmental rights in her district. Bowling plans to meet with Butler again to discuss other issues and concerns of Malibu and Topanga residents. Leadership from the Malibu Association of REALTORS® including President Bobby Lehmkuhl, will join thousands of California REALTORS® headed to Sacramento for their annual meetings with state legislators this week.
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SOURCE: Susan Manners, Association Executive
Malibu Association of REALTORS® – 23805 Stuart Ranch Road, Suite 140, Malibu CA 90265
Phone: 310.456.5566 – Fax: 310.456.1809 Email: info@MalibuRealtors.org
Join CAR for Legislative Day on May 2, 2012 in Sacramento, CA
Join CAR for Legislative Day on May 2, 2012 during the May 2-5 business meetings in Sacramento, CA.
SOURCE: LeFrancis Arnold, 2012 President – www.LeFrancisArnold.com www.LeFrancis2012.com
California Association of REALTORS® for Legislative Day, May 2, 2012, Sacramento, CA.
http://videos.car.org/?bcpid=987216733001&bckey=AQ~~%2cAAAAzBtBmCE~%2cgKfMMlGoPZI5kU4oXdOB9V1GODmgg1BX&bclid=969642122001&bctid=1550636009001
REALTORS® Praise FHFA for Issuing Short Sale Approval Guidance
WASHINGTON (April 18, 2012) –
The National Association of REALTORS® applauds the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) for issuing new guidance requiring servicers of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac loans to speed responses to short sale requests.
The guidelines would require servicers to acknowledge receipt of short sale purchase offers within three business days; respond to short sale requests within 30 days (with a possible 30-day extension); and make a final decision within 60 days of receiving purchase offers.
“As the leading advocate for housing and homeownership, NAR knows that delays in approving short sale requests remain a significant challenge for REALTORS® and consumers and often result in canceled contracts and the property going into foreclosure,” said NAR President Moe Veissi, broker-owner of Veissi & Associates Inc., in Miami. “REALTORS® greatly appreciate FHFA’s efforts in establishing a timeframe for responding to sellers and potential buyer offers to help streamline the short sales process.”
NAR has long urged the lending industry to improve the process for approving short sales. When a family is absolutely unable to stay in their home, a short sale minimizes the negative impact on sellers and communities, and NAR believes that streamlining the approval process will reduce the amount of time it takes to sell the property, improve the likelihood that the transaction will close, and reduce the number of foreclosures. Short sales also help stabilize home values and neighborhoods by keeping homes occupied, which benefits the housing market and aids in the recovery.
Veissi praised FHFA Acting Director Edward DeMarco for responding to the concerns of consumers and REALTORS® regarding the ongoing delays in the approval process and the negative impact that slow response times are having on buyers, sellers, lenders, and the housing market.
NAR also thanked Sens. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), Scott Brown (R-Mass.) and Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) for introducing S. 2120, and Reps. Tom Rooney (R-Fla.) and Rob Andrews (D-N.J.) for introducing H.R. 1498, proposed legislation to reduce delays in approving short sale transactions.
“Their leadership on this issue helped raise the attention needed to make the short sales process more efficient. While these new guidelines will hopefully help close short sale transactions at higher rates, we believe legislation is still needed to impose mandatory deadlines on all loan servicers,” said Veissi.
Implementation of the new guidelines should begin after June 15, 2012. For more information, visit www.realtor.org/topics/short-sales.
The National Association of RealtorsÒ, “The Voice for Real Estate,” is America’s largest trade association, representing 1 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries.=
SOURCE: Chris Gosselin, Regional Political Representative AK, CA, CT, GU, HI, MA, ME, NH, NV, RI & VT
National Association of Realtors® – CGosselin@realtors.org
Chris Gosselin’s Brief Update from DC to State and Local GAD’s
Hello from Washington. While Congress has been notably quiet about big picture items that we are continuing to monitor such as tax policy and the future of the secondary mortgage market, there are some things moving here in DC that I wanted to update you about.
First is the taxation of forgiven debt – there is now legislation in the House that would extend the provision for two years and another provision that would extend it for one year. Obviously two years is better than one, but we are not taking a position on which one goes forward. More information about the issue can be found on our website: Will I Pay Tax on Short Sales, Foreclosures, or Loan Modifications?
There have been several questions about the Bank of America announcement about their deed-for-lease pilot program and our position. I’ve attached a summary from B of A that outlines their proposal.
You may have gotten questions about the AG Mortgage Settlement and its impact on the real estate market. We are still going through the full settlement but we have put together a brief document that outlines the top things we are watching: National Mortgage Settlement and Realtors – Five Quick Takeaways.
We also just sent regulators a letter updating our position on the REO bulk sales initiative now that we have some more guidance on the direction of the program. It’s four pages and should answer most questions about what NAR is doing on this issue – attached to this email as well. It also references the Bank of America proposal above.
Rally update: If you are getting any questions about the Realtor Rally at the midyear meetings, our website www.realtorrally.org is up and running and has answers to most questions that you or your members may have. If there is additional information needed, there is a web form on the site that is monitored by our staff in DC planning the rally. Of course, feel free to get in touch with me if I can answer any questions as well.
SOURCE: Chris Gosselin, Regional Political Representative AK, CA, CT, GU, HI, MA, ME, NH, NV, RI & VT
National Association of REALTORS® — CGosselin@realtors.org
C.A.R. applauds California Congressional members urging FHFA to refrain from implementing bulk REO sales in California
For release:
April 9, 2012
LOS ANGELES (April 9) – California Congressman Gary Miller (R-Brea), along with 18 other members of California’s congressional delegation, issued a letter last week to Edward J. DeMarco, acting director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), urging DeMarco to refrain from implementing the agency’s “REO Initiative” pilot program in California because it would negatively impact California’s housing market and raise costs for taxpayers.
The REO Initiative pilot program calls for the sale of more than 600 Fannie Mae-owned foreclosed homes in Los Angeles and Riverside counties to institutional investors.
The CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.)
“We commend the California congressional delegation’s letter to Mr. DeMarco,” said C.A.R. President LeFrancis Arnold. “They clearly understand that this program may be a viable solution in states where there is a large inventory of unsold foreclosures. However, carrying out this plan in California would potentially further delay a housing recovery and, ultimately, result in greater losses for the taxpayer,” said Arnold.
The letter states, “We are concerned that including California counties in this initiative is in direct conflict with your duty as conservator to preserve and conserve the Company’s assets… In California, there is no question that disposing properties through bulk sales will yield a lower return for the GSEs and taxpayers than through traditional disposition methods. This means that such a program will increase losses to the taxpayer and GSEs,” the letter concludes.
The 19 California Congressional members who backed the letter include Gary Miller, Jerry Lewis, Ken Calvert, Jeff Denham, Elton Gallegly, Dana Rohrabacher, Buck McKeon, Duncan Hunter, Brian Bilbray, Mary Bono Mack, Susan Davis, Brad Sherman, Joe Baca, Grace Napolitano, Judy Chu, Jim Costa, Adam Schiff, Barbara Lee, and Howard Berman.
Leading the way…(r) in California real estate for more than 100 years, the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (www.car.org
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SOURCE: http://www.car.org/newsstand/newsreleases/2012releases/fhfaletter
Housing Crisis to End in 2012 as Banks Loosen Credit Standards
Capital Economics expects the housing crisis to end this year, according to a report released Tuesday. One of the reasons: loosening credit. The analytics firm notes the average credit score required to attain a mortgage loan is 700. While this is higher than scores required prior to the crisis, it is constant with requirements one year ago. Additionally, a Fed Senior Loan Officer Survey found credit requirements in the fourth quarter were consistent with the past three quarters. However, other market indicators point not just to a stabilization of mortgage lending standards, but also a loosening of credit availability.
Banks are now lending amounts up to 3.5 times borrower earnings. This is up from a low during the crisis of 3.2 times borrower earnings. Banks are also loosening loan-to-value ratios (LTV), which Capital Economics denotes “the clearest sign yet of an improvement in mortgage credit conditions.” In contrast to a low of 74 percent reached in mid-2010, banks are now lending at 82 percent LTV.
While credit conditions may have loosened slightly, some potential homebuyers are still struggling with credit requirements. In fact, Capital Economics points out that in November, 8 percent of contract cancellations were the result of a potential buyer not qualifying for a loan.
Additionally, Capital Economics says “any improvement in credit conditions won’t be significant enough to generate actual house price gains,” and potential ramifications from the euro-zone pose a threat to future credit availability.
SOURCE: DSNnews.com, Krista Franks Brock
Southland Home Sales Jump in February, Prices Still Down Yr/Yr
March 14, 2012, La Jolla, CA—The Southland housing market posted the highest number of February home sales in five years as record levels of investor and cash buyers helped spur robust activity under $300,000. The median price paid for homes across the six-county region inched up from January but dropped below the year-earlier level for the 12th consecutive month, a real estate information service reported.
A total of 15,573 new and resale houses and condos sold in Los Angeles, Riverside, San Diego, Ventura, San Bernardino and Orange counties last month. That was up 7.2 percent from 14,523 in January, and up 8.4 percent from 14,369 in February 2011, according to San Diego-based DataQuick.
The increase in sales between January and February was larger than usual. On average, sales have risen 1.1 percent between those two months since 1988, when DataQuick’s statistics begin. Southland sales have increased year-over-year for two consecutive months and for six out of the last seven months. However, last month’s sales tally was 12.3 percent below the average for all the months of February since 1988.
Sales did not rise across the price spectrum last month. Transactions below $300,000 rose 9.5 percent from a year earlier, while the number of $300,000-$800,000 deals dipped 0.8 percent year-over-year and sales above $800,000 fell 12.6 percent.
“February sales got a big boost from investors and others paying cash for relatively affordable homes, as well as from an extra day’s worth of sales thanks to the leap year. Without the latter, sales might have been up a bit, but not to a five-year high. It’s just one more reason for us to remind everyone that January and February usually aren’t good months to use for forecasting purposes. The big picture remains one where the bottom of the housing market continues to see much of the action, while move-up activity remains sluggish. Financing is still difficult for many and lots of potential move-up buyers and sellers are stuck because they owe more than their homes are worth,” said John Walsh, DataQuick president.
The median price paid for a Southland home last month was $264,750, up 1.8 percent from $260,000 in January but down 3.7 percent from $275,000 in February 2011.
Last month’s median was 7.2 percent above the low point for the current real estate cycle – $247,000 in April 2009 – and 47.6 percent below the $505,000 peak in mid 2007. The peak-to-trough drop was due to a decline in home values as well as a shift in sales toward lower-cost homes, especially inland foreclosures.
Distressed sales continued to make up more than half of the resale market.
Foreclosure resales – properties foreclosed on in the prior 12 months – accounted for 32.5 percent of the resale market last month, down from a revised 32.6 percent in January and down from 37.0 percent a year earlier. Foreclosure resales hit a high for the current cycle of 56.7 percent in February 2009 and a low of 31.6 percent last November.
Short sales – transactions where the sale price fell short of what was owed on the property – made up an estimated 20.5 percent of Southland resales last month. That compares with 21.1 percent in January, which was a high point for the current real estate cycle, and 19.7 percent in February 2011.
Credit conditions remained tight.
Adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) accounted for 5.7 percent of last month’s Southland home purchase loans, down from 6.0 percent in January and 7.7 percent a year ago. Since 2000, a monthly average of about 37 percent of purchase loans were ARMs.
Jumbo loans, mortgages above the old conforming limit of $417,000, accounted for 14.4 percent of last month’s purchase lending, down from 15.2 percent in January and down from 15.6 percent a year earlier. In the months leading up to the credit crisis that struck in August 2007, jumbos accounted for 40 percent of the market.
Absentee buyers – mostly investors and some second-home purchasers – bought a record 29.7 percent of the Southland homes sold in February, up from a revised 28.0 percent in January and 26.4 percent a year earlier. Last month’s absentee buyers paid a median $192,750, down from $195,000 in February and $202,000 a year earlier. The Inland Empire saw absentee purchases rise to a record 37.2 percent of all sales. Since 2000, the Southland’s absentee buyers have purchased a monthly average of 17.0 percent of all homes sold.
Cash purchasers accounted for a record 32.8 percent of February home sales, up from 32.2 percent in January and up from 32.3 percent a year earlier. Cash buyers paid a median $200,000 last month, the same as in January and down from $205,000 a year earlier. Since 2000, the monthly average for Southland homes purchased with cash is 15.2 percent. Cash purchases are where there was no indication in the public record that a corresponding purchase loan was recorded.
Government-insured FHA loans, a popular low-down-payment choice among first-time buyers, accounted for 31.2 percent of all purchase mortgages in February. Last month’s FHA level was up from 31.1 percent in January and down from 32.2 percent a year earlier. Two years ago FHA loans made up 36.8 percent of the purchase loan market, while three years ago it was 36.9 percent.
Last month 16.5 percent of all sales were for $500,000 or more, up a hair from a revised 16.4 percent in January but down from 18.7 percent a year earlier. The low point for $500,000-plus sales was in January 2009, when only 13.8 percent of sales were above that threshold. Over the past decade, a monthly average of 28.1 percent of homes sold for $500,000 or more.
DataQuick monitors real estate activity nationwide and provides information to consumers, educational institutions, public agencies, lending institutions, title companies and industry analysts.
The typical monthly mortgage payment that Southland buyers committed themselves to paying was $998 last month, compared with $983 in January, which when adjusted for inflation was the lowest in DataQuick’s records back to 1988. Last month’s figure was down from $1,174 for the same month last year. Adjusted for inflation, current payments are 56.9 percent below typical payments in the spring of 1989, the peak of the prior real estate cycle. They are 64.7 percent below the current cycle’s peak in July 2007.
Indicators of market distress continue to move in different directions. Foreclosure activity remains high by historical standards but is lower than peak levels reached over the last few years. Financing with multiple mortgages is very low, and down payment sizes are stable, DataQuick reported.
Source: DQNews.com Real Estate News and Custom Data
Media calls: Andrew LePage (916) 456-7157
LAPD Warning Against Hiring Unmanned Aircraft Operators for Aerial Photos
Los Angeles authorities have asked C.A.R. to communicate this warning to REALTORS® who hire unmanned aircraft operators to take aerial photographs for marketing high-end properties. Using these devices (also known as drones) for flight in the air with no onboard pilot may violate, among other things, the Federal Aviation Administration’s (FAA) policy on unmanned aircrafts, and Los Angeles’s local ordinance requiring permits for filming commercial motion pictures and still photographs.
The Los Angeles Police Department’s (LAPD) investigation has apparently revealed that aerial photos where unmanned aircraft were observed have appeared on certain real estate sales websites. According to Film L.A., the LAPD Air Division has issued this warning as it intends to prosecute violators in the near future. Film L.A. is a public benefit company created by the City and County of Los Angeles to manage film permit activity and related issues.
Under the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)’s current policy, no one can operate an unmanned aircraft in the National Airspace System without specific authority. Operators who wish to fly an unmanned aircraft for civil use must obtain an FAA experimental airworthiness certificate, which will not be issued to an unmanned aircraft used for compensation or hire. Although the FAA allows hobbyists to fly model airplanes for recreational purposes under specific guidelines, that authority does not extend to operators flying unmanned aircraft for business purposes. More information is available from the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Notice on Unmanned Aircraft Operations at http://www2.realtoractioncenter.com/site/R?i=F7v_Afz4hzZriFhj3GF0PQ and the FAA’s policy at
http://www2.realtoractioncenter.com/site/R?i=necHXPMoo94DzEOdZAaRKQ
SOURCE: Realegal® is published by the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®
Edited by Stella Ling, Email: StellaL@car.org








