The new iPad from will APPLE will be released next month. What do you think about it? Do you like it? Do you think realtors can use the iPad in their everyday use? When it was first introduced by Steve Jobs, I thought it was cool product. The demo that he gave was phenominal. I have always been an APPLE fan but never was able to afford any of their laptops, I have not yet converted to the iPhone just yet (always been a Blackberry user) however one day I will own a MacBook Pro, yes I will. But back to what I was writing about, can the iPad be used for the everyday real estate agent. I think that it can be very useful to the everyday agent due to its capabilities and ease of use. If you have been a APPLE user all of your life then you should have no problems of using it.

Some the features that will be great for real estate agents are the fact you can have a listing presentation be more interactive than on regular laptop and be impressive with giving a listing presentations. Showing property images to both buyers and sellers. Look for information while on the road with clients (obviously you have to have the 3G service from AT&T). I don’t think that it can run the Windows Emulator where I can get access to the Multiple Listing Service (which only runs on Internet Explorer). And many more functions that would make it easier for agents.

Am I going to run to the store when it becomes available? I don’t think so, I would rather wait until the frenzy dies down and see if it really makes sense for me to get the iPad. I would rather invest my money in a 15″ MacBook Pro that can run Windows emulator and be able to connect to the MLS. Apple is bringing another great product to consumers…Like I said, one day I will own a MacBook Pro.

What are your comments…let me know…Leave me a comment…

Steven Bastian

For Sale: 3BR/2BA Single Family House in Boca Raton, FL, $225,000.

For Rent: 2BR/2BA Townhouse in Coconut Creek, FL, $1,350/month.

Welcome to the Year 2010!

Yes, I know…it’s already the end of February and you thought I neglected this Blog site. Well, you are wrong. I have actually been really busy with my real estate career. I have been working with first-time homebuyers as well as investors to find them dream properties. Amazing, isn’t it…There are actual buyers out there looking for properties. Finding the properties, that is the challenging part of this. I mean, we find them and you ask the Listing agent if there are any offers on them – most often they say – yes. That is real frustrating part of this job to me as well as the buyers. They seem to fall in love with them and you turn around and call them and say - ”I am so sorry, there is already an offer on the property”.  Agents should have the common courtesy to change the MLS status as soon as they have just one single offer. But I also understand their point of view, they are interested in getting more offers on the people…But what can I do…I am just looking forward to having a good year, finally after years of frustration.

On a good note – I finally closed on my sisters house in Wellington, FL – a cute little single family house that is in a great community. This was the perfect house for my little sister. She so deserves it. It took us awhile to find it, but is worthwhile. I just hope I get invited to the Housewarming Party!

Well…this for the year 2010…the year I finally say – Steven you have made the right decision in going into the real estate industry.

Talk to you all later…Hopefully sooner than later…

– Steven Bastian

Daniel Vasquez on consumer issues Consumer columnist, December 15, 2009

As if things weren’t bad enough for the South Florida condominium real estate market, the Federal Housing Administration is setting tougher limits and requirements on the number of buyers in new and existing condo developments who can get FHA-insured loans.

Now, the FHA is limiting the number of units with FHA-financing in each development to 30 percent or less. Until now, that limit was 50 percent. At the same time, lenders are now expecting applicants to have higher credit scores to qualify for a loan, at least 620 to 640. A year ago, those scores could be as low as 540.

The FHA provides mortgage insurance on loans made by government-approved lenders throughout the country. It represents the best bet for many local condo buyers and sellers because it requires a comparatively low down payment of 3.5 percent.

Unfortunately, approximately 18 percent of FHA-insured loans are in delinquency or foreclosure, in large part because of high unemployment and poor and fraudulent mortgage lending practices, experts say.

Earlier this year, both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, government-sponsored funders for the housing and mortgages market, announced tougher limits for condo loans.

“These new FHA rules could decimate what is left of the South Florida’s condo market,” said Theresa M. Schmitz, senior underwriter with AmeriFirst, a local lender that handles FHA loans. “Condo units here will only be worth what someone can pay in cash because it will be so hard for buyers to find financing.”

Even those with good credit may find it impossible to secure FHA-backed financing for reasons beyond their control. For instance, the new rules block loans for units in financially-struggling buildings and those with high percentages of rental units or owners behind in maintenance fees.

Another new rule requires at least 30 percent of units in new buildings to be sold with other financing before FHA will finance any purchases. The requirement jumps to 50 percent in 2011.

This could be good news in the long run.

“The fact that lenders in the past waived or didn’t enforce the lending guidelines already on the books resulted in bad loans, loans to people that could not afford the payments and for properties that were not financially sound,” said Lisa A. Magill, attorney with Becker & Poliakoff, one of the largest Florida firms representing condo associations and owners. “Enforcement of the new guidelines in a uniform and consistent manner is likely to fend off losses and help keep liquidity in the local mortgage market.”

The rules also may discourage developers from taking on financially-risky condo projects in hopes of the big pay days they saw in the past, she said.

Coldwell Banker Real Estate Study Finds Consumers’ Anticipated ‘Smart Spending’ of Homebuyer Tax Credit Will Aid Economic Recovery | SYS-CON CANADA.

Here is an article I recently found in the SUN SENTINAL which ranks Coral Springs, Florida as one of the safest cities in the state of Florida. I am not surprised at this, because Coral Springs is truly a great city to live in.

By Lisa Huriash, Sun Sentinel | December 3, 2009

Coral Springs is the safest city in Florida, according to “City Crime Rankings 2009-2010: Crime in Metropolitan America,” a new report put together by criminologists based on 2008 data.

“Hopefully this can give everybody some level of comfort,” said Mayor Scott Brook.

Coral Springs rated No. 48 in the country; the nation’s safest city is considered to be Colonie, N.Y. At the bottom of the list of 393 metro areas: Camden, N.J.

The report looked at cities with populations higher than 75,000 and evaluated them according to six crime categories: murder, rape, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary and vehicle theft.

The report, released by Washington-based publisher CQ Press, lists Boca Raton as the safest city in Palm Beach County. It ranked No. 75. //

Introducing the newly redesigned coldwellbanker.com that makes finding a home online an easier and more innovative experience than ever before.  

By matt_carter

The Obama administration is moving to tighten underwriting standards on FHA-backed loans by increasing the amount of upfront cash homebuyers must bring to the table, raising minimum FICO scores for new borrowers, and reducing maximum seller concessions from 6 percent to 3 percent.

The most obvious way to increase upfront cash requirements would be to raise the 3.5 percent minimum downpayment requirement for loans guaranteed by the Federal Housing Administration.

A bill introduced Oct. 1 by Rep. Scott Garrett, R-N.J., would raise the minimum downpayment for FHA loans to 5 percent and prohibit financing of closing costs. HR 3706 [1], which has 27 co-sponsors, has been referred to the House Financial Services Committee.

Housing Secretary Shaun Donovan, briefing [2] committee members on the administration’s plans Wednesday, said there are several ways to make sure borrowers have more “skin in the game” currently under consideration.

HUD has “made the decision to exercise our authority to increase the upfront cash that a borrower has to bring to the table in an FHA-backed loan,” Donovan said, but there “are several ways to accomplish this, and so we are currently analyzing various options to determine which is the most effective and consistent with our mission.”

Testifying [3] on behalf of the National Association of Realtors, Vicki Cox Golder urged Congress and the administration to “exercise caution before introducing proposals that may have a profound adverse impact on our economic recovery.”

NAR is strongly opposed to HR 3706, she said, because increasing FHA’s downpayment requirements would make it impossible for many borrowers to use the program, and “not add a penny to FHA’s reserves.”

Dan Green, a Cincinnati-based loan officer for Waterstone Mortgage Corp., said an increase in minimum FICO could have “a much larger impact than increasing downpayment requirements from 3.5 to 5 percent.”

The minimum FICO score for FHA-backed loans was raised from 500 to 580 earlier this year, he said, although most lenders already have even higher minimums.

“Most consumers are going to walk into their bank, and their bank will say 620″ is the minimum score needed to obtain a mortgage, Green said.

FHA is in a difficult position, Green said, because Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac continue to tighten their guidelines, and that pushes more borrowers who are less creditworthy into FHA loans.

“They are trying to limit their exposure to the riskiest borrowers,” Green said. “Your median FHA borrower looks decidedly worse today than 18 months ago.”

Green noted that Fannie Mae will implement a minimum 620 FICO score and other underwriting changes over the weekend of Dec. 12 as part of its rollout of its Desktop Underwriter Version 8.0 software (see Fannie Mae bulletin [4]).

With claims on its mortgage insurance fund rising, HUD is also considering raising FHA mortgage insurance premiums, Donovan told the committee.

Borrowers currently pay an upfront premium of 1.75 percent, plus annual premiums of 0.5 percent on loans with loan-to-value ratios of up to 95 percent. The annual premium on loans with higher LTVs is 0.55 percent.

Although HUD has the authority to raise the upfront premium to as high as 3 percent without additional input from lawmakers, annual premiums are at their statutory limits.

Donovan said HUD is requesting authority from lawmakers to raise annual premiums for new borrowers, “as this is one of the most effective means of raising capital” for the FHA’s capital reserve fund, which has dipped below statutory minimums (see story [5]).

Raising the annual premiums of FHA borrowers would likely be a greater hardship than increasing their upfront premiums, since the cost of upfront premiums can be financed into a mortgage, said Faramarz Moeen-Ziai, a mortgage banker at San Ramon, Calif.-based Bank of Commerce Mortgage.

Moeen-Ziai said that because an FHA-backed loan is, for all practical purposes, the only option for most borrowers who can’t come up with a 20 percent downpayment, the program “must survive. If FHA goes away you have nothing to fill its place right now.”

He doubts that raising credit scores or minimum downpayments will help FHA’s bottom line in the short term, but is not opposed in principal to raising minimum downpayment requirements.

“We don’t want to kill the golden goose here just to keep real estate prices inflated by making money available to a lot of borrowers,” Moeen-Ziai said.

That said, he worries that the FHA is proposing to tighten its standards at about the time the Federal Reserve plans to shut down a program in which it has kept interest rates low by purchasing $1.25 trillion in mortgage-backed securities issued by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae. The Fed has said it will wind the program down at the end of March, which could send interest rates up and put downward pressure on prices.

Most of the changes Donovan outlined can be made with no additional authority from Congress, and Donovan said HUD expects to provide more details and public guidance on the changes by the end of January.

“The good news is that when FHA rolls out changes, they don’t do it overnight,” Green said.

If HUD issues guidelines to lenders in January, they aren’t likely to take effect for 60 days, meaning homebuyers have several months before the latest changes kick in. In September, FHA announced new guidelines for ordering appraisals and streamlined refinancings, which take effect Jan. 1 (see story [6]).

Donovan said HUD is currently analyzing what the floor for FICO scores should be, including the relationship between FICO scores and downpayments. HUD is looking at whether to increase FICO minimums in combination with changes to other FHA underwriting criteria for lower-downpayment loans.

Reducing the maximum allowable seller concession to 3 percent would bring FHA “in line with industry norms,” Donovan said. The current 6 percent level exposes the FHA to excess risk by creating incentives to inflate appraised value, he said.

HUD is also stepping up enforcement to make lenders more accountable, he said, increasing its review of lender compliance with FHA program requirements. HUD will develop a “Lender Scorecard” summarizing the performance of lenders who do business with FHA, and post it on the Web.

In releasing the results of an actuarial study last month that found FHA’s capital reserve ratio has fallen below a 2 percent minimum established by Congress, Donovan noted that seller-funded assistance loans were the most substantial pool of troubled loans on FHA’s books, with claim rates 2.5 to three times higher than other loans.

HUD has estimated that seller-funded downpayment assistance was used on more than 35 percent of all home purchase loans insured by FHA in fiscal year 2007, compared with less than 2 percent seven years earlier.

Congress abolished seller-funded downpayment assistance on FHA loans in 2008, but HUD says remaining risks to FHA include its greatly expanded market share and subprime lenders moving into FHA lending.

In the 12 months ending Sept. 30, FHA insured almost 30 percent of all purchase loans and 20 percent of total refinances in the housing market, HUD said. First-time homebuyers accounted for nearly eight out of 10 FHA-backed purchase loans in the second quarter of 2009, with nearly 50 percent of all first-time buyers relying on FHA-insured loans.

A recent Federal Reserve report [7] demonstrated HUD is “not the new subprime lender,” NAR’s Golder said, with the average credit score for current borrowers having increased to 693, and only 13 percent of purchase borrowers having FICO scores below 620.

In September, 45 percent of FHA loans had FICO scores above 700, and less than 5 percent had scores below 620, she said. The percentage of FHA-backed loans with loan-to-value ratios above 95 percent fell from 72 percent in 2007 to 62 percent in 2008.

“The reason the capital reserves have fallen below 2 percent actually has nothing to do with FHA’s current business activities,” Golder said. “The decline is simply a reflection of falling value of homes in their portfolio.” 

Editor’s note: This story has been edited to correct that Dan Green works for Waterstone Mortgage Corp.

It’s a strange kind of real estate market in here in South Florida, and the other day I realized that it’s getting a little bit crazier. Traditionally we have seller’s markets and buyer’s markets. Right now, we are in what could be called a buyer’s market. But I realized that there is barely anything available for sale because so much of the listings are wrapped up in the “short sale abyss” waiting for bank approvals.

Usually in a buyer’s market, the prices are driven up by multiple offers being placed on a single property. While this is true for our current market as well, prices still seem to be fairly low. Lenders are so cautious and appraisers are as well. So, even if buyers offer more than the asking price, many times the property will not appraise for the offered price and the seller (a bank, a seller in short sale, or a traditional seller) will then have to accept the appraised value.

So, this is a new kind of market . . . maybe it needs a new name. The other thing that is abundantly clear is that there is NOTHING available for sale. I am a agent that is working with a few buyers. I have one buyer that looking for a home in the North Lauderdale, Margate or Tamarac (all Broward County) areas (northern part of Broward County)  for under $150,000. To me, this sounded simple. Once I started to search for then, I then proceeded to forward him all of the ACTIVE listings in a particulary area. He then asked about particular single family detached homes that he happened to like and drove by. To my amazement, once I made the call to listing agents they had offers on them or no longer available or were about to put on BACKUP status. Crazy right! I don’t get it either….Yet, there are many, many properties in contingent status waiting to be approved by the banks.

As part of this new market (for which I cannot find a name), agents are selling their listings to their own buyers before even putting them on the MLS. I think there is famous quote that begins with something like, “Necessity breeds innovation.” Huummm. Maybe we should call this new market the Innovative Market. What say you?

Contact Info: Steven.Bastian@hotmail.com

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