1751 Edwin Drive, Yuba City
Wonderful, well kept home in an established neighborhood with mature trees. Covered patio and arbor for entertaining. NOT a short sale or bank owned!
California To Offer Program To Trim Underwater Mortgages
by Jim Wasserman – Sacramento Bee, 6/28/2010 (Legal)
Lots of people will want to get in on this one: California is going to use federal money to pay down the mortgages of struggling homeowners.
The California Housing Finance Agency announced that it will spend $420 million to trim individual mortgages by up to $50,000. Lenders will be asked to match the amount, a deal that could make thousands of mortgages newly affordable across the Sacramento area.
The program, launching Nov. 1, will be run on a first-come, first-served basis, said Evan Gerberding, marketing manager for the CalHFA’s “Keep Your Home” initiative. “Unfortunately, there will likely be more demand than funding,” she said.
Specifics on the selection process are still in the works. But CalHFA will exclusively fund applicants from low to moderate-income households.
In Sacramento, that’s expected to mean people earning less than $68,000 a year. Borrowers will have to be delinquent or in imminent danger of defaulting, but have adequate income to continue paying after getting the help. Gerberding advised people to keep checking the Keep Your Home website for applicant criteria to be posted later. She said people struggling to make payments shouldn’t wait for the program to start, but should contact lenders and loan counselors now.
Thousands of Californians who meet the income guidelines will want in, but one fact will block many. “This is to help people with purchase loans,” Gerberding said Wednesday. That rules out borrowers whose troubles began with cash-out refinances when their homes were worth more than now. Gerberding said exceptions may be made for people who refinanced to get lower interest rates. The program also requires that homeowners live in the house they mortgaged.
For years, federal and state governments have rolled out programs to stimulate loan modifications, and most have proved disappointing. California’s new program is one of the first large-scale attempts at wholesale “principal writedowns,” where loans are shrunk to more closely match today’s home values. “We think it’s encouraging that they took on principal reduction in the way that they did, devoting most of the resources to it,” said Kevin Stein, associate director of the California Reinvestment Coalition.
The low-income advocacy group has campaigned for principal reductions since 2007. “That’s the real need in California, to address the negative equity of borrowers being underwater,” Stein said. CalHFA, the state’s affordable housing bank, estimates it will help 40,000 or more households avoid foreclosure with principal writedowns and other plans unveiled Wednesday. In all, the agency received $700 million for the relief programs, part of a $1.5 billion federal initiative to curb foreclosures in the hardest-hit housing crash states. “We anticipate offering this over the next three years,” Gerberding said.
The agency will also spend $129 million providing up to $15,000 to help people catch up with late payments. An additional $64 million will provide the unemployed up to $1,500 a month to pay the mortgage for six months. Finally, homeowners will receive up to $5,000 to move when they cannot afford the mortgage under any circumstances. In all, the program will steer a maximum of $50,000 to qualifying households to avert foreclosures.
The CalHFA manager said there is no geographical quota. But help will roll first to hardest-hit counties, including much of the Central Valley. In Sacramento, Placer, Yolo and El Dorado counties, 12 percent of mortgages are seriously delinquent or in the foreclosure process. And nearly half the region’s mortgaged households owe more than the house is worth, according to housing industry tracker CoreLogic. “There are thousands who could benefit,” said Pam Canada, executive director of Sacramento nonprofit loan counselor NeighborWorks Homeownership Center. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger pledged Wednesday to work with CalHFA “to ensure that these programs are implemented in a way that assists the greatest number of Californians.”
CalHFA hopes banks will match the $700 million. “We’re asking lenders to come to the table with us on this,” Gerberding said. “We can’t force them to do that. But many of them have indicated they are happy to do that,” she said. Gerberding said CalHFA will add fewer than 10 new staff members to run the program. Administrative costs are estimated at about $52 million – 7.5 percent of the funding. — Call The Sacramento Bee’s Jim Wasserman, (916) 321-1102 or email him at jwasserman@sacbee.com. Read his blog on real estate, Home Front, at www.sacbee.com/blogs.
Open Houses – Saturday June 26th
OPEN HOUSES
Saturday, June 26th
11 AM to 2 PM
1725 Meadowlark Way, Yuba City
Desirable Northwest Yuba City neighborhood.
4 BD, 2 BA, two living rooms, furniture included in sale.
Directions: North on Stabler, R on Jamie, R on Meadowlark
$299,900.
Saturday, June 26th
11AM to 1 PM
3244 Lyle Ct., Yuba City
Beautiful home with gorgeous pool in the backyard. 3 BD, 2 BA 1877 SF.
Directions: Hwy 20 to Royo Ranchero, R on LaMantia, L on Cyda.
$265,000
Real Estate Update
DEAR FRIENDS, CLIENTS & ASSOCIATES:
Coldwell Banker Heritage House welcomes you to our on-line real estate magazine known as Yuba-Sutter Real Estate Guide. This publication is designed to reach a much wider area of home buyers and sellers and provide additional value to our clients. Buyers and sellers will also benefit from the pertinent and timely articles and statistics in each publication that will help them stay on top of the many influences affecting our areas unique real estate market. This is important information not found anywhere else! We hope you’ll find it useful!
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HOMEBUYER TAX CREDIT CLOSING DEADLINE EXTENDED
The Senate has amended a bill to give homebuyers who were under contract on a home purchase by April 30 an additional three months to close the deal and claim the federal homebuyer tax credit.Extending the deadline for closing from June 30 to Sept. 30 would allow lenders more time to clear a backlog of 180,000 homebuyers nationwide.
The Senate has not yet voted on the amended bill itself. The House and Senate must resolve differences between versions of the bill before it becomes law.
The National Association of Realtors supports the amendment, saying Realtors have reported that as many as one-third of qualified applicants have been told by lenders that their loans will not close before June 30 because of the sheer volume of loan applications in the pipeline.
The amendment does not extend the deadline for homebuyers to qualify for the tax credit, NAR said in urging lawmakers to approve it, but simply extends the deadline for closing transactions already in contract.
“Since these applications were already in the pipeline and figured into the program’s cost, the extension of the closing deadline should not incur any further government costs,” NAR President Vicki Cox Golder said in a statement.

