Estate Sales and things you need to know while selling or buying them…

I’ve worked with many estate sales over the years and, like most real estate transactions, they have their own issues to be aware of – and there are many times very individual circumstances to navigate. Just a couple of months ago I helped a client buy their very first home in a north Seattle neighborhood and we dealt with a situation where an attorney had been given court approval to sell a property on behalf of a disabled adult child whose mother had passed away this year.

[photopress:john_doe.jpg,thumb,alignright] There are several ways in that a home may be sold after an owner dies.  Sometimes an executor of the estate is called out in the will and they may legally sell the home.  In this case the “seller

Happy Birthday to…

It’s Jillayne’s birthday!  I was just checking out my Facebook profile and noticed that one of our very own is celebrating a birthday today.  I have known Jillayne for more years than we probably care to admit!   We once worked together for a large title insurance company…in our youts, as Vinnie would say.   If my memory serves, she was a title rep for Snohomish County and I was for King County.

Jillayne, I hope you have a wonderful birthday and many more to come.   As it is your special day, I won’t super-impose your head onto anything.  🙂   All my best to you!

Let Brokers charge what they want. Do away with YSP.

Couldn’t the whole yield spread premium (YSP) debate with all the trimmings end with a simple solution such as allowing the broker to charge whatever they want? Let the free market sort it out. Certainly lenders would have to be on board and do away with incentives or change them somehow, but it seems to me that everyone is making it so complicated.

Yes, compliance issues, licensing and fair dealing issues are important and should be implemented in some manner.

Solution:

  • Just disclose up front what the compensation is based on the interest rate or program the borrower qualifies for. Therefore…….
    • No more the need to attend sales seminars on learning how to overcome objections, which will allow more time to attend seminars on how to provide sterling service.
    • No more awkward moments for the loan officer attending an escrow singing when the borrower questions that “YSP thingy.”
    • No more loan officers asking escrow “how will you explain YSP” to the borrower, as if escrow’s response somehow dictates whether or not they will receive future business.
    • No more agents having to watch helplessly at their clients becoming frustrated or stressed out due to lending problems associated with YSP’s and the completely preventable situation where a transaction spirals out of control at the last moment.
  • How about lenders just have a simplified schedule of programs and rates that the borrower can choose from and if they pay a higher interest rate they receive a rebate that can be used on their behalf. How about just turning the PC monitor around and showing the consumer the several programs available and then have a good old fashioned counseling session. It would save every single moving part in a transaction a lot of grief. And it would save transactions from failing at the last moment because a “nuclear bomb disclosure” by a lender about the yield spread premium a loan officer is earning that freaks out the borrower.

I can just about darn near guarantee that if a consumer knows where all the chips are on the table, they would have no problem moving forward with a transaction. Give a consumer the very best rate they can qualify for, at the very lowest fee structure you can, with all the chips clearly on the table and Bam! you have a happy client, fostering long-term value.

When will someone just give the consumer what they want? Somebody is working on it and they are going to will be very successful. Is it really more complicated? If so, sound off.

Mythbusters takes on water heaters as rockets….

The other night I watched Mythbusters with my partner, Michael, a show which I have to admit I only see occasionally and only when he’s watching it. It’s okay, but I usually prefer reading. Anyhow, one of the myths that they were attempting to bust is the idea that a water heater can become like a rocket and shoot through a home’s roof when it has failed.

Ok, I’ve been an agent, and a homeowner, for many years and I am fully aware of this “truth” mostly from having spoken with many knowledgeable contractors and inspectors over the years – not to mention feedback from my dad who is an all around great fix-it guy.

Well, for anyone who has heard about this “myth” before but didn’t believe it… here is the clip from the Mythbusters folks. It’s quite eye-opening….

I wonder, if this happened to a homeowner and the insurance company determined it was the homeowner’s fault due to negligence because of lack of maintenance – does this mean they wouldn’t pay? I’m all about maintenance on a home’s water heater and replacing them BEFORE failure of any kind so I hope I never find out personally.

Did you find everything OK?

[photopress:cashier.jpg,thumb,alignright]Did you find everything OK Ma’am?  That’ll be $725,000.  Suzy at register 4 will help you with the loan paperwork and we’ll have this all ready for you to move into in 30 days.  Thanks for shopping RDC Realty.

Did you find everything OK Ma’am?  That’s a really good choice, but did you notice that the house with the view is on sale today at only $699,950?  The owners have already moved out of state, and need to close on this house before they can buy a home in their new state.  John?  Can you take these nice people back through both houses?

Did you find everything OK folks?  Didn’t see anything you like?  Oh, you did see something you liked, but it has a “hold” ticket on it.  Would you like to leave your name and number so we can call you when another one like it becomes available?

Return on aisle 1!  Return on aisle 1!  What seems to be the problem ma’am?  The inspector said the roof is leaking?  Well we can patch that up for you, would that be OK?  No?  You want a brand new roof?  Let me get the seller on the phone and see what we can do. 

((Ring))…((ring)).  Good morning, RDC Realty.  You would like to see the house on 123 main at 4?  Hold please.  Mary?  Can you meet the Smiths over at 123 Main at 4?  Good.  Hello Ma’am.  Yes, we can have someone meet you over there.  No there’s no extra charge for that.  The seller is paying a sufficient commission to cover our costs.  Mary will meet you there at 4 sharp.

Joe?  What the heck is happening over at aisle 10?!  There’s a big line over there.

Oh, that’s the new self check out lane.

What about Suzy in aisle 4?  She’s doing her nails again!

Oh, the people in the self check out lane already have their loan documents.  They got them online before they came in to purchase.

What’s going on over at aisle 6?

We’re adding four more self check out lanes.  Aisles 6 through 10 will all be self check out lanes.

Are you going to Vegas?

or more interestingly, are you going to my presentation on Tuesday morning?

If so, I’d love to know. I’m just finishing up the presentation now and would love to include a few screenshots of people’s blogs who will be in the audience.

[photopress:header_conf_sched.jpg,full,centered]

By the way, the impetus for this blog post is that I like to localize my presentation. But considering most of the people in the audience will not be from Vegas, I’m looking for another way to personalize the show… Maybe it will work, maybe it won’t… but it won’t do much harm to try.

And there are lots of clues for what the talk filed under the seminar tag

Mortgage Brokers and Loan Originators Should Support HR3915

Why am I not surprised that mortgage brokers are in a panic over HR3915, the Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Legislation? Back in January, Barney Frank gave everyone ample notice that he was committed to passing anti-predatory lending legislation before the end of 2007. Then the subprime meltdown began, setting a political stage for a perfect storm, putting mortgage brokers right in the path of harm’s way. Bush, your weapons of mass destruction are in the hands of Congress. Or so the mortgage brokerage industry would have us believe.

The fear racing through the brokerage community is rampant.  Wide-eyed loan originators are dragging themselves into my classroom looking like Iraq war veterans needing post traumatic stress disorder talk therapy, and the bill hasn’t even been put before the full house for a vote yet.   Let’s see if we can identify where all the fear is coming from.

Establishes a Licensing System for Residential Mortgage Loan Originators
We already knew this was coming. Chuck Cross with the Conference of State Bank Supervisors has been working on national loan originator licensing for months. Even better, the current proposed version of HR3915 says we’ll be keeping track of all LOs, including loan originators who work at federal and state chartered banks. This is what the mortgage brokers have said they want.

Creates a Residential Mortgage Loan Origination Standard

There’s nothing inside this paragraph that sounds too scary.  Licensing? Full disclosure? LOs are already required to do these things. What’s next? Oh, here it is:  Anti-Steering.

Anti-Steering
“For mortgage loans that are not prime loans, no mortgage originator can receive, and no person can pay, any incentive compensation (including yield spread premiums) that varies with the terms of the mortgage loan (except for size of the loan and number of loans).  Regulations will be promulgated to prohibit mortgage originators from (1) steering any consumer to a loan that the consumer lacks a reasonable ability to repay, does not provide net tangible benefit, or has predatory characteristics, (2) steering any consumer from a prime loan to a subprime loan, and (3) engaging in abusive or unfair lending practices that promote disparities among consumers of equal credit worthiness but different race, ethnicity, gender, or age.”
Let’s try to analyze why mortgage brokers and LOs are so upset about this provision. For the past year, LOs on this website have fallen all over themselves telling us how they don’t do any of these things like (gasp!) steering consumers from a prime to a subprime loan IN ORDER TO MAKE A HIGHER YIELD.  So, if you good guys out there didn’t steer or originate loans with predatory characteristics, why are you so mad about this bill? You keep saying you want the bad guys out of the business. If it’s true that you’re not doing any of this stuff, then why all the whining? If the subprime market weren’t already dead enough, this bill will put the nail in the coffin. But don’t be fooled. Instead of subprime, the loans will be called something else.  When there’s money to be made, the creative mind knows no boundaries.  This provision gives mortgage brokers and LOs exactly what they’ve been telling us they want: the end to the abuse of YSPs.

Ability to Repay/Net Tangible Benefits
“Requires creditors to make a reasonable determination, at the time the mortgage is consummated, that  the consumer has a reasonable ability to repay the loan, or;  for refinancing, the refinanced loan will provide a net tangible benefit to the consumer.”

Well I call “reasonable ability to repay

Tweet tweet

So far, we have Jeff, Joel, Jessica, Keith and Myself prepared to twitter the NAR 2007. Follow along, or better yet tweet with us, at Jeff’s summary site: NAR Updates.

And I’m voting for using “NAR2007” (one word) as our tag on Flickr, YouTube, etc. Use it and you’ll make it easy for us to find your stuff! 🙂