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If your interest rate is 4.75% or higher you are wasting money every day you let go by that you don't call me. Call for a no cost, no obligation mortgage check up. I'll need 5 minutes of your time over the phone to gather some information to show you how much money I can save you. Rates are at all time lows, so what are you waiting for? You can also apply online by clicking the below link. Have a great day and I look forward to the opportunity to help save you money!
http://www.theanswerisclear.com/MLO/rmagee/
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http://www.minnesotahomescontractfordeed.com
http://www.mnhomescontractfordeed.com
http://www.mnlakehomescontractfordeed.com
http://www.mnownerfinancedhomes.com
BoardWalk Premier Reaty INC
651-334-8312 STEVE VENNEMANN
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The nation’s biggest banks and mortgage lenders have steadily amassed real estate empires, acquiring a glut of foreclosed homes that threatens to deepen the housing slump and create a further drag on the economic recovery.

All told, they own more than 872,000 homes as a result of the groundswell in foreclosures, almost twice as many as when the financial crisis began in 2007, according to RealtyTrac, a real estate data provider. http://www.mnlakeplace.com
<!--StartFragment--> <!--EndFragment--> In addition, they are in the process of foreclosing on an additional one million homes and are poised to take possession of several million more in the years ahead.
Five years after the housing market started teetering, economists now worry that the rise in lender-owned homes could create another vicious circle, in which the growing inventory of distressed property further depresses home values and leads to even more distressed sales.
With the spring home-selling season under way, real estate prices have been declining across the country in recent months.
“It remains a heavy weight on the banking system,” said Mark Zandi, the chief economist of Moody’s Analytics.
“Housing prices are falling, and they are going to fall some more.” Over all, economists project that it would take about three years for lenders to sell their backlog of foreclosed homes. http://www.mnlakehomescontractfordeed.com
<!--StartFragment--> <!--EndFragment--> As a result, home values nationally could fall 5 percent by the end of 2011, according to Moody’s, and rise only modestly over the following year.
Regions that were hardest hit by the housing collapse and recession could take even longer to recover — dealing yet another blow to a still-struggling economy.
Although sales have picked up a bit in the last few weeks, banks and other lenders remain overwhelmed by the wave of foreclosures.
In Atlanta, lenders are repossessing eight homes for each distressed home they sell, according to March data from RealtyTrac. http://www.mnownerfinancedhomes.com
<!--StartFragment--> <!--EndFragment--> In Minneapolis, they are bringing in at least six foreclosed homes for each they sell, and in once-hot markets like Chicago and Miami, the ratio still hovers close to two to one. Before the housing implosion, the inflow and outflow figures were typically one-to-one.
The reasons for the backlog include inadequate staffs and delays imposed by the lenders because of investigations into foreclosure practices.
The pileup could lead to $40 billion in additional losses for banks and other lenders as they sell houses at steep discounts over the next two years, according to Trepp, a real estate research firm.
“These shops are under siege; it’s just a tsunami of stuff coming in,” said Taj Bindra, who oversaw Washington Mutual’s servicing unit from 2004 to 2006 and now advises financial institutions on risk management.
“Lenders have a strong incentive to clear out inventory in a controlled and timely manner, but if you had problems on the front end of the foreclosure process, it should be no surprise you are having problems on the back end.”
A drive through the sprawling subdivisions outside Phoenix shows the ravages of the real estate collapse. Here in this working-class neighborhood of El Mirage, northwest of Phoenix, rows of small stucco homes sprouted up during the boom. http://www.mnhomescontractfordeed.com
<!--StartFragment--> <!--EndFragment--> Now block after block is pockmarked by properties with overgrown shrubs, weeds and foreclosure notices tacked to the doors.
About 116 lender-owned homes are on the market or under contract in El Mirage, according to local real estate listings. But that’s just a small fraction of what is to come. An additional 491 houses are either sitting in the lenders’ inventory or are in the foreclosure process.
On average, homes in El Mirage sell for $65,300, down 75 percent from the height of the boom in July 2006, according to the Cromford Report, a Phoenix-area real estate data provider.
Real estate agents and market analysts say those ultra-cheap prices have recently started attracting first-time buyers as well as investors looking for several properties at once.
Lenders have also been more willing to let distressed borrowers sidestep foreclosure by selling homes for a loss.
That has accelerated the pace of sales in the area and even caused prices to slowly rise in the last two months, but realty agents worry about all the distressed homes that are coming down the pike. http://www.minnesotahomescontractfordeed.com
<!--StartFragment--> <!--EndFragment--> “My biggest fear right now is that the supply has been artificially restricted,” said Jayson Meyerovitz, a local broker.
“They can’t just sit there forever. If so many houses hit the market, what is going to happen then?” The major lenders say they are not deliberately holding back any foreclosed homes.
They say that a long sales process can stigmatize a property and ratchet up maintenance and other costs. But they also do not want to unload properties in a fire sale.
“If we are out there undercutting prices, we are contributing to the downward spiral in market values,” said Eric Will, who oversees distressed home sales for Freddie Mac.
“We want to make sure we are helping stabilize communities.”
The biggest reason for the backlog is that it takes longer to sell foreclosed homes, currently an average of 176 days — and that’s after the 400 days it takes for lenders to foreclose.
After drawing government scrutiny over improper foreclosures practices last fall, many big lenders have slowed their operations in order to check the paperwork, and in two dozen or so states they halted them for months.
Conscious of their image, many lenders have recently started telling real estate agents to be more lenient to renters who happen to live in a foreclosed home and give them extra time to move out before changing the locks.
“Wells Fargo has sent me back knocking on doors two or three times, offering to give renters money if they cooperate with us,” said Claude A. Worrell, a longtime real estate agent from Minneapolis who specializes in selling bank-owned property.
“It’s a lot different than it used to be.” Realty agents and buyers say the lenders are simply overwhelmed.
Just as lenders were ill-prepared to handle the flood of foreclosures, they do not have the staff and infrastructure to manage and sell this much property. Most of the major lenders outsourced almost every part of the process, be it sales or repairs.
Some agents complain that lender-owned home listings are routinely out of date, that properties are overpriced by as much as 10 percent, and that lenders take days or longer to accept an offer.
The silver lining for home lenders, however, is that the number of new foreclosures and recent borrowers falling behind on their payments by three months or longer is shrinking.
“If they are able to manage through the next 12 to 18 months,” said Mr. Zandi, the Moody’s Analytics economist, “they will be in really good shape.”
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Homeowners who want to refinance but have little or no equity, might want to check out a federal government initiative called the Home Affordable Refinance Program, or HARP. Recently extended to the middle of 2012, HARP gives homeowners an opportunity to capture a lower interest rate or trade in an adjustable-rate mortgage for a fixed-rate loan, even if they are underwater on their mortgage -- that is, they owe more than the house is worth. HARP isn't a free ride, however. Borrowers must complete a loan application, submit full documentation, meet other guidelines and pay closing costs, according to Vickee Adams, a spokeswoman for Wells Fargo in Des Moines, Iowa. "It's a new loan," Adams says, "so it has to go through the underwriting process, meaning that loan refinance fees will apply." http://www.mnhomescontractfordeed.com HARP is open only to borrowers whose existing mortgage is owned or guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. That leaves out anyone whose loan is insured by the Federal Housing Administration or guaranteed by the Department of Veterans Affairs or Department of Agriculture. Exotic payment-option adjustable-rate mortgages, or ARMs, stated-income, stated-asset loans and larger jumbo loans are typically excluded. The borrower must be current on the existing loan and have a good payment history. Fannie Mae allows one 30-day late payment in the prior 12 months. Freddie Mac requires no late payments in the prior 12 months. When the program was launched, an existing Fannie Mae loan had to be funded prior to March 1, 2009, and an existing Freddie Mac loan had to be funded prior to June 1, 2009. However, a recent program change has matched (aka "conformed") Fannie Mae's date to Freddie Mac's, adding an additional three months of eligibility for those borrowers. The window is still a stopper for some homeowners, according to Kirk Chivas, chief operating officer of First Commerce Financial in Wixom, Mich., which closed 60 HARP refinances last year. http://www.minnesotahomescontractfordeed.com "I wish they didn't have it (only) through May 2009," he says. "I wish it was a forever thing, or at least up through 2010 May, because home values were still declining." A second program change is that Freddie Mac has elected to exempt new HARP loans from certain recently announced "price adjustments," or added fees, which lenders usually pass along to the borrower in the form of higher closing costs or a higher interest rate. The chief advantage of HARP is that it allows borrowers to refinance with a loan-to-value, or LTV, ratio as high as 125 percent. Borrowers naturally may wonder whether such loans will require private mortgage insurance, or PMI. The answer isn't simple. In most cases, existing loans that have borrower-paid PMI are eligible, the PMI contract can be transferred to the new loan, and new PMI won't be required. There are some technical exceptions, however, so borrowers should discuss their situation with a loan officer who is familiar with the guidelines. The main exception is that it is difficult or impossible to do a Most PMI policies are borrower-paid. http://www.mnlakehomescontractfordeed.com Another significant advantage is that borrowers who have a second loan can exclude that amount from the LTV ratio.Guidelines updated
New PMI not required
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western wisconsin contract for deed houses-cd condos-town homes cd-homes with acreage cd-farms and hobby farms contract for deed-owner financing WI-wisconsin contract for deed-new construction contract for deed-
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http://www.mnhomescontractfordeed.com/contract-for-deed
MINNESOTA OWNER FINANCED HOMES-SELLERS WILL FINANCE HOMES CONTRACT FOR DEED ALL THE CITIES BELOW.
IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR A OWNER FINANCED HOME-LAND CONTRACTS WE HAVE 100S TO CHOOSE FROM.
>If you cant sell you property call us today we will get it sold for you<
As you can see we can get your property in front of 1000s of potential buyers. We will market your property till it sells-
WE ARE MINNESOTA’S LARGEST CD PROPERTY SITE IN MINNESOTA AND WESTERN WISCONSIN. “””””No body has more contract for deed properties than us. That’s right nobody we work with contract for deed homes on a daily basis.
Mn owner financed homes-land contracts-real estate in the twin cities metro area-100s of listings to browse. Our services are free to buyers. "We only work with clients who do not have realtors. " If you have 10% down we can find you a home-condo-town house-lake properties-lake home with access-lake view-MN owner financing is alot easier than getting a mortgage.
If you have money and employment we can find you a home. Bad credit no problem-lack of credit-bankruspey-foreclosures- We have properties all areas in Minnesota look at our cities on the blog- Minneapolis and St.Paul metro area properties have a truth n housing we recommend you purchase homes with a good housing report.
Remember you can write the interest off your taxes when you own a property on cd/land contract/contract for deed but you cant when you rent to own. Also you own the house on a cd/contract/land contract. Rent to own is exactly that you rent and have an option to purchase it at a later date.
For people who have a little amount down rent to own maybe the way to go. Contracts are usually a lot higher due to the risk by the sellers and closing costs they have to pay.
We recommend searching craigslit.org for rent to own properties- If you want owner financing for homes in Minnesota or western Wisconsin we can help.
In some areas we have acreage-farms-lake properties- new construction- Counties like Sherburne-Anoka-Wright-Carver-Ramsey-Hennepin-Scott-Pine-Dakota-Washington-
You dont have to have stellar credit to purchase a home with owner financing. The 3-5 years in terms will help get our buyers on track to fix their credit or get their taxes in order.
Banks require 2 years taxes and descent credit with employment for usually 2 years.
If you have a bk it will take around 2-3 years to get a loan-
Foreclosures are 3 years.
We work with contracts on a daily basis..
http://www.mnhomescontractfordeed.com
651-334-8312 steve vennemann
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