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For Your Clients: Tips for Boomerang Homebuyers

Home Consumer
By Marcie Geffner
February 15, 2014, 12 am
Reading Time: 4 mins read

House_Outline_Blue(MCT)—Folks in the housing biz love people who want to buy homes. And these days, many real estate and mortgage brokers feel especially fond of so-called rebound or boomerang buyers — people who lost a home to foreclosure, but are now ready to buy again.

The chief attraction is strong motivation, says Kent Temple, broker/owner pf a real estate company in Mooresville, N.C.

“If you’ve been through a foreclosure, you’ve already been a homeowner,” Temple says. “You know what it’s about. You know the process. You’ve been through hell sometime in the last seven years, and if you really want to buy a house, you are so willing to do whatever it takes.”

With that in mind, here’s a look at what rebound buyers need to know before buying a home after foreclosure.

WAIT IT OUT: Waiting periods are a common penalty for rebound buyers. But it’s not always clear how long the wait will be because guidelines vary among lenders.

The Federal Housing Administration, or FHA, imposes a three-year wait to obtain a new FHA loan, and most lenders follow that guideline, says Bert Carpenter, a loan officer at Nova Home Loans in Chandler, Ariz.

Waiting periods can be shorter for portfolio loans that lenders keep on their own books or longer for so-called conforming or conventional loans that lenders sell to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-controlled secondary mortgage market entities, Carpenter added.

Those buy-now loans typically involve what Carpenter calls “ugly” financing terms. The interest rate will be higher than market rates and might be adjustable or fixed only for an initial term of three, five or seven years.

Waiting periods don’t start until the foreclosure is completed, according to Jim Sahnger, a mortgage originator in Jupiter, Fla. Moving out of the house or mailing the keys to the lender doesn’t start the clock.

FIX YOUR CREDIT: Some rebound buyers’ only credit impairment was the foreclosure. These buyers can repair their credit faster than would-be buyers whose credit history contains other issues, Carpenter says. Either way, buyers must “get their credit house in order,” paying off or settling old accounts and bank judgments, he says.

“Your first objective is that since you’re going to have to wait, make sure the rest of your credit is clean. That way, when you move into the phase when you’re almost out of your penalty period, you’ll know it’s just a matter of waiting,” he says.

A foreclosure remains on a credit report for seven years, though the negative impact will fade as time passes, according to myFICO.com, a website operated by the FICO credit-scoring company.

An established history of paying other bills on time can help. The website explains that a foreclosure is “a single negative item,” which does less damage in isolation than in conjunction with other late or missed payments.

High current debt relative to income also can be a problem because lenders won’t approve a loan if the borrower’s debt-to-income ratio exceeds their guidelines.

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