Monthly Archives: September 2009

Leaving Las Vegas

Latoya Jackson

Latoya Jackson

Not too much good news has been coming from the Jackson family these days.

Michael Jackson’s older sister, La Toya, is about to lose her luxurious condo in Las Vegas, Nevada. The property is located in the Regency Towers of Las Vegas International Country Club. She reportedly owes $745,670.27 on a home she paid $260,000 for back in 1996, according to TMZ.

Yep, she tripled her money on the refinance and is now heading for the hills — she apparently had all her personal effects packed up and shipped elsewhere last month.

Anyway, the Clark County Recorder’s office has a scheduled auction date for the condo on September 30 (TODAY).

Free Community Short Sales Seminars

If you or someone you know could benefit from learning about a Short Sale then please continue reading.  Many people are looking for alternatives to foreclosure now that loan modifications are not an option.  Or you may be in a negative equity situation and want to know your options even if it’s not a hardship with the mortgage.  A comprehensive hour spent going over the specifics of how a Short Sale works.  Topics such as Recourse and Non Recourse Loans, tax ramifications, income property, Second lien holders….etc will be addressed.

Please email or call to be placed on the interest list.

(310) 493-9678  or  reagentlea@yahoo.com

Sell At a Loss, Buy At a Discount

I saw this article on CNN.com and thought that some of your might be able to relate.  Enjoy.

*****************************************************************

(Money Magazine) — The month Jennifer Galdes moved into her condo in the Albany Park section of Chicago, the local paper suggested that the area was up and coming. Six years later, she’s still waiting for a Whole Foods.

Galdes, a self-employed publicist, longs to trade up to a similar-size (2,000-square-foot) apartment in a tonier neighborhood. With area condo prices down 16% since their peak, according to S&P/Case-Shiller, she sees her chance.

The catch: She’ll have to unload her current place first.

So is now really the right time to make this move, she wonders? Wheaton, Ill., financial planner Kristopher Johnson says yes.

Galdes, 43, may have to sell her condo — bought in 2003 for $287,000 — for less than she’d hoped. But the discount on a better place will more than offset the reduction on hers. And she’ll net $86,000 after closing even if she breaks even.

Still, she’s got to be strategic in selling and buying.

The solution

1. Nail down a value. Galdes should talk to agents to get an idea of what her place might sell for. If that price is acceptable to her, she should list it ASAP, as she may need six months to sell, says local realtor David Hanna. (And she should sell before buying, Johnson adds.)

2. Set a budget. Because Galdes is debt-averse, Johnson wants her to keep her mortgage the same ($175,000). He says she can use up to $100,000 from nonretirement savings toward a down payment. If she nets $86,000 on her condo, she can afford to spend about $360,000.

3. Shop like a shark. Area condos are selling 5% to 10% below list price, says Hanna. So Galdes can shop that much above her budget.

By Beth Braverman, Money Magazine staff reporter

***************************************************************

Posted by: Lea Anderson

Lea Anderson is a REO/Short Sales Specialist  in View Park, CA (L.A. County).

Short Sale vs. Foreclosure

If you can no longer make your mortgage payments and your home is now worth less than you owe on it, foreclosure may not be your only option.

By: BankRate.com

A short sale, in real-estate terms, is the sale of a house for less than what the owner still owes on the mortgage. If the lender agrees to a short sale, the rest of the homeowner’s debt typically is forgiven. Lenders sometimes agree to the procedure in order to take a small loss and avoid the lengthy and costly foreclosure process.

While there are some significant negative consequences to a short sale, an ever-increasing number of properties are being advertised with that label.

Short sale: Win-win-win situation

The beauty of short sales is that they can be a win-win-win situation for seller, buyer and lender. Here’s how:

 

  • The seller gets out of the mortgage liability without facing bankruptcy.

 

  •  The buyer gets the home at a reduced price.

 

  • The lender agrees to a loss it considers minimal without going through a foreclosure and being saddled with an unsalable property.

 

While it may seem surprising that lenders would agree to accept less than what they are owed, they benefit from the process, too.

 

“The lender benefits by not having to go through the protracted process of foreclosing on the borrower and then having to put the property on the market and go through the whole marketing process,” says Stuart Wilson, a real-estate agent with Paragon Real Estate in San Francisco.

A market saturated with foreclosures can cost lenders billions — and as much as $50,000 per foreclosure — according to a study by the congressional Joint Economic Committee.

*******************************************************************

I hope this post has been informative to you or someone you know.  If you have questions regarding short sales and foreclosures, feel free to email or call me.  Stay tuned for information regarding a FREE Short Sale vs. Foreclosure Seminar.

Lea Anderson
B.A. Clark Realty
5633 Overhill Drive
Los Angeles, CA 90043
(310) 493-9678 direct
(323) 294-0094 x227 office
DRE#01704736