A few weeks ago, Bank of America
initiated a pilot program allowing homeowners facing foreclosure to remain in
their homes as renters. There are
important reasons why area homeowners should be interested in the success or
failure of BoA’s approach.
First, a note about the term “bank owned homes”. It’s not
technically correct to say that there has been some huge rise in the number of
them, because “bank owned homes” actually describes every home with a mortgage.
The mortgage holder always technically "owns" the property, even when
the homeowner retains title. However, what is true is that over the last four
years, many homeowners learned the hard way just what it means to face the
reality of your home being owned by someone else.
Enter Bank of America. Their press
release quotes Ron Sturzenegger, a Legacy Asset Servicing executive with the
Bank: "Our priority is designing a solution that helps our customer."
Although we might be justifiably skeptical of this as BoA’s sole motive,
allowing homeowners to remain as renters in bank owned homes is hardly just a
PR move.
The program certainly makes bottom-line
financial sense for a whole host of parties, including local homeowners who
have no difficulty meeting their own mortgage payments.
Under the program, a former homeowner
who qualified would be able to continue working and contributing to the economy
without the costs, loss of time, and anxiety involved in moving. For all
property owners, the ultimate effect is to keep the market from being flooded
with distress sales. Every neighborhood would benefit if home values stabilize.
Under the pilot model, bank owned homes
convert to investor ownership in a much smoother transition than the
foreclosure/short sale model. Instead of the lender being left with an empty
property generating zero revenue in the interim, former homeowners simply
become renters, making it easier for them to get back on their feet
financially.
In my opinion, any move or policy that
helps more people stay in homes is a policy worth discussing. BoA’s program is only in a limited test
stage, but here in town we can hope that it will prove to have multiple
beneficiaries: banks, investors, agents, homeowners and neighbors. Everyone
benefits when his or her neighborhood’s real estate market is healthy!
Have a question about real estate in our
area? Feel free to contact me anytime
with questions. I represent local buyers and sellers, and am always available
to chat about your own plans.
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