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FBC Central Florida Mortgage Report for April 2010

May 26th, 2010 admin No comments

Attached is a copy of the FBC Central Florida Mortgage Report for April 2010. Below are some highlights from the month of April. Scroll down to see the full report.

• Year to Date purchase prices are up 8% through April
• Average loan amounts are up nearly $20,000 since February
• Refinance activity is almost non-existent. Purchase transactions are continuing to dominate the overall mortgage transactions in Central Florida, continuing to buck the national trend.
• The gap between new mortgage payments and borrowers’ previous rental payments continues to narrow- a good indicator of housing affordability.
FBC Mortgage had another record month closing 228 loans equating to over $33 million dollars in loan volume in Central Florida. This comprises close to 20% of all financed loans in Central Florida.

We are anticipating very strong numbers for May and June. The stimulus has clearly helped jump start the market. We have increased our staff by over 10% in the last quarter and will continue to hire and look for new growth opportunities as the market recovers.
-Rob Nunziata

- scroll down to see full report

Press Release – FBC Mortgage, LLC. Acquires Staff and Certain Assets of Renaissance Mortgage Group, Inc., Merritt Island, Florida

February 22nd, 2010 gavin No comments

February 18, 2010     

FBC Mortgage LLC

189 S. Orange Ave., Ste. 970

Orlando, FL 32801

Contact: Stephanie Simmons

(407) 377-0327

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                                                               

 

FBC Mortgage, LLC. Acquires Staff and Certain Assets of Renaissance Mortgage Group, Inc., Merritt Island, Florida

 

 

          FBC Mortgage, LLC has acquired the staff and certain assets of Renaissance Mortgage Group, Inc. Renaissance Mortgage is a traditional residential mortgage lender headed by mortgage veteran Shawn Crouch. Shawn will manage the Merritt Island office as well as help develop the Merritt Island area for FBC.  “We are very excited about the opportunity to expand FBC’s reach into the Merritt Island market with this talented team. Additionally, this will also help us better serve the customers of our affiliated Brevard County Bank, Prime Bank” said Joe Nunziata, CEO of FBC Mortgage, LLC. Prime Bank provides competitive banking products to individuals, small to medium size businesses and professionals all designed to help their clients achieve economic success and financial security. “We are pleased to expand our service offerings to our clients to include the mortgage products of FBC Mortgage.  We welcome their mortgage professionals to our team.”   Said Dana Kilborne, President/CEO, Prime Bank

 

“Speaking on behalf of Renaissance Mortgage, we are extremely pleased to be joining such a sound, stable and successful mortgage banking organization. With the support of the FBC Mortgage platform we expect to be able to significantly increase our ability to serve the mortgage needs of the Merritt Island Area. With the changes we have seen in the market and our industry it made sense for us to look to partner with a company that has resources to excel in this new mortgage industry. ,” stated Shawn Crouch.  “We have wanted a presence in the Brevard market for some time and this acquisition gives us an instant presence and credibility” stated Rob Nunziata, President of FBC Mortgage LLC. 

About FBC Mortgage, LLC-

          Founded in 2005, FBC Mortgage is an employee and community owned residential mortgage lender. FBC is headquartered in Orlando Florida at the Plaza. Through its affiliation with Florida Bank of Commerce and its direct lending authority with FHA, VA, USDA, and conventional conduits, FBC has become one of the largest privately owned mortgage lenders in Central Florida. For additional information on FBC, please visit our press section at www.fbchomeloans.com

Foreclosures easing in Metro Orlando?

January 7th, 2010 tfolley No comments

Filings in Orlando area down for third straight month, but no one’s predicting a bottom

Foreclosure-related filings have fallen in Metropolitan Orlando for a third straight month, according to a new report by RealtyTrac Inc. Still, the Orlando area ranked eighth in the U.S. for foreclosure activity in November, with 7,349 legal actions filed, down 3 percent from October but up 21 percent from November 2008. Jeffrey Sachs, a senior mortgage consultant for FBC Mortgage LLC in Orlando, said it’s still too difficult to say whether Central Florida has hit bottom in terms of foreclosures, because banks are dealing with their legal filings and short sales at such different rates. “I firmly believe that what we see with the number of foreclosure filings is never an accurate reflection of where the market is,” Sachs said Thursday. “. . . At this point, we should be near the bottom — we’re seeing bidding wars on some bank-owned properties.” Florida had the nation’s second-highest rate of foreclosure activity in November: one in every 165 households received some sort of foreclosure filing during the month. Florida, behind only Nevada, took the No. 2 spot from California, which posted the nation’s third highest foreclosure rate, with one in every 180 housing units getting a foreclosure filing. The only Florida metro area with an activity rate higher than Orlando’s last month was Fort Myers, which was also fourth in the nation. Las Vegas and seven California metro areas filled out the rest of the national top 10. The four-county Orlando metro area had one foreclosure for every 120 households in October, according to RealtyTrac, a Californiabased
research company. In comparison, the nationwide rate of foreclosure activity in November was one household out of every 417. “Loan modifications and other foreclosure-prevention efforts, along with the recently extended and expanded homebuyer tax credit, are keeping a lid on the most visible symptoms of the nation’s ailing housing market — foreclosures and home-value depreciation,”
said James J. Saccacio, chief executive officer of RealtyTrac. “This is providing a welcome respite for the real-estate industry, but a full recovery will only come when unemployment recedes to normal, healthy levels, and when availability of credit reaches a more rational
balance between the extremes of the past few years.”
Within Metro Orlando, Osceola was the only county that showed an increase in foreclosure filings, which jumped 56 percent from a month earlier, though they were up only 4 percent from November 2008. Lake County had an October-to-November decrease of 3 percent (also down 3 percent from a year ago); Orange, 5 percent (down 41 percent from a year ago); and Seminole, 40 percent
(down 3 percent from a year earlier). Outside the metro area, Volusia County recorded a 16 percent increase in filings (up 61 percent from a year ago), Brevard a 19
percent increase (up 9 percent from a year ago), and Polk a 58 percent increase (up 8 percent from a year ago).

Mary Shanklin can be reached at 407-420-5538 or mshanklin@orlandosentinel.com.

New FHA rules could help condo market — for now

January 7th, 2010 tfolley No comments

Orlando Business Journal – by Christopher Boyd Staff Writer

New Federal Housing Administration rules promise relief for some badly stressed condo projects — but mortgage and real estate
brokers said the impact could be short-lived.
The changes are important, though, because condo prices have plunged from speculative highs in 2006, with units in many
buildings now selling for a quarter of what they cost back then. As lenders watched values shrink, they became reluctant to
finance sales to anyone without a big down payment — typically 20 percent or more.
That has left some new condo towers in downtown Orlando relatively empty, with some deciding to lease out unsold units.
“Given how hard it is to get financing, this certainly will help the condo market — but it won’t set it on fire,” said Joe Nunziata,
CEO of FBC Mortgage LLC in Orlando.
The metro Orlando condo resale market has 2,873 unsold units. In downtown Orlando, just 118 condos were resold this year
through the end of October, for an average of $153,859 per unit, said the Orlando Regional Realtor Association.
The revamped guidelines are temporary and would benefit only condo developments with a limited number of investor-owned
or foreclosed units. Nonetheless, they offer potential relief for some sellers after a long period when financing has been difficult
to find.
Among the temporary changes:
• FHA loans would require down payments as small as 3.5 percent of the sales price.
• The guidelines extend the amount of time lenders have to submit so-called spot loans, or loans on individual condo units in buildings that don’t have
overall FHA loan approval, to February. Spot loans were supposed to go away in December.
• The rules increase from 30 percent to 50 percent the units in a condo project the FHA will finance.
• The FHA will finance buildings in which just 30 percent of new units have been sold. Private-sector lenders generally require sales of 70 percent or
more.
• The FHA will offer financing to all the units in a project if all of them have been sold, no single entity owns more than 10 percent of them, a
homeowners association operates the project and owners occupy half of the dwellings.
The looser new rules take effect Dec. 7 and remain through the end of next year, when they likely will become more restrictive.
Lindsey Pfaeder, sales and marketing manager for the Vue at Lake Eola condo tower in downtown Orlando, said her building is seeking FHA
approval to create a financing channel for its unsold units. The developer has sold 210 of the building’s 375 units.
“It is nearly impossible to get conventional financing, even if a buyer has $1 million and can put 80 percent down,” she said. “We all have buyers for
condos, but they can’t buy because of financing.”
Less-restrictive FHA rules could mean more sales and increase the potential that conventional lenders would provide financing on the remaining
units, said Pfaeder.
Ernst Urbainczyk, an agent with Keller Williams Heritage Realty in Lake Mary, said the revisions could stimulate sales, but the prospect that
they’ll change again is a drawback. “If I buy a condo today under these FHA rules and the rules change, where will I find a buyer two years from now
when I want to sell it?”
Marcus Burke, owner of the Condo Metropolis brokerage in Orlando, said another FHA requirement, which demands at least half the units in a
building be owner-occupied, will limit the number of eligible condos. “A lot of older buildings won’t qualify because so many units are foreclosures or
delinquencies.”
Cristian Michaels, an agent with Re/Max Town Centre in Orlando who specializes in downtown condo towers, said price is another problem. Even
with the new rules, the FHA won’t finance units costing more than $400,000, which are still fairly common despite the plunge in prices. “I don’t think
it will increase our sales because of the price points.”

Foreclosures easing in Metro Orlando?

December 11th, 2009 tfolley 1 comment

By Mary Shanklin, Orlando Sentinel
December 10, 2009

Foreclosure-related filings have fallen in Metropolitan Orlando for a third straight month, according to a new report by RealtyTrac Inc.

Still, the Orlando area ranked eighth in the U.S. for foreclosure activity in November, with 7,349 legal actions filed, down 3 percent from October but up 21 percent from November 2008.

Jeffrey Sachs, a senior mortgage consultant for FBC Mortgage LLC in Orlando, said it’s still too difficult to say whether Central Florida has hit bottom in terms of foreclosures, because banks are dealing with their legal filings and short sales at such different rates.

“I firmly believe that what we see with the number of foreclosure filings is never an accurate reflection of where the market is,” Sachs said Thursday. “. . . At this point, we should be near the bottom — we’re seeing bidding wars on some bank-owned properties.”

Florida had the nation’s second-highest rate of foreclosure activity in November: one in every 165 households received some sort of foreclosure filing during the month. Florida, behind only Nevada, took the No. 2 spot from California, which posted the nation’s third-highest foreclosure rate, with one in every 180 housing units getting a foreclosure filing.

The only Florida metro area with an activity rate higher than Orlando’s last month was Fort Myers, which was also fourth in the nation. Las Vegas and seven California metro areas filled out the rest of the national top 10.

The four-county Orlando metro area had one foreclosure for every 120 households in October, according to RealtyTrac, a California-based research company. In comparison, the nationwide rate of foreclosure activity in November was one household out of every 417.

“Loan modifications and other foreclosure-prevention efforts, along with the recently extended and expanded homebuyer tax credit, are keeping a lid on the most visible symptoms of the nation’s ailing housing market — foreclosures and home-value depreciation,” said James J. Saccacio, chief executive officer of RealtyTrac. “This is providing a welcome respite for the real-estate industry, but a full recovery will only come when unemployment recedes to normal, healthy levels, and when availability of credit reaches a more rational balance between the extremes of the past few years.”

Within Metro Orlando, Osceola was the only county that showed an increase in foreclosure filings, which jumped 56 percent from a month earlier, though they were up only 4 percent from November 2008. Lake County had an October-to-November decrease of 3 percent (also down 3 percent from a year ago); Orange, 5 percent (down 41 percent from a year ago); and Seminole, 40 percent (down 3 percent from a year earlier).

Outside the metro area, Volusia County recorded a 16 percent increase in filings (up 61 percent from a year ago), Brevard a 19 percent increase (up 9 percent from a year ago), and Polk a 58 percent increase (up 8 percent from a year ago).

Mary Shanklin can be reached at 407-420-5538 or mshanklin@orlandosentinel.com.

Wrapping Up Orlando Real Estate 2009

December 1st, 2009 tfolley No comments

Written by David Welch, Agent in Winter Park
December 1, 2009 8:44 AM Market Conditions in Orlando

I looked back at my predictions for 2009 last December, and I have to say with the exception of price we have exceeded every expectation I had. I was hoping to see sales in the 1,600 per month range through the second half of the year. We have actually been seeing sales above the 2,000 mark since June. I was also hoping to see our inventory level drop below 22,000. The faster sales, slower foreclosure rate and the MLS rule requiring short sales to be pended has pushed our inventory down to just over 16,000. Foreclosures and short sales are continuing to pressure prices lower with a median sales price in the $120’s in November. Our “normal” sales, however, are typically around my forecast $180,000 mark. Later this month I’ll take a shot at forecasting 2010.
Right now, November sales are not disappointing at all. I posted yesterday on Twitter that our closed sales stood at 1,788 with a median sales price of $123,250. Jeffrey Sachs with FBC Mortgage texted me when he saw this pop up on Facebook. Jeffrey wanted to let me know that his company had 43 closing scheduled for yesterday to add to that total. FBC does close a fair amount of loans in our market, but there are a number of other lenders in and around Orlando that also had home purchase loans closing yesterday. Jeffrey and I have been working together for ten years, and I highly recommend Jeffrey Sachs and FBC Mortgage for your financing needs. I closed two transactions last month with Jeffrey, and both were ready ahead of schedule. Both buyers were pleased not only with the loans that they received, but also the service that Jeffrey and his team provides. Contact Jeffrey for your loan, then contact me for your home.

Orlando Real Estate, David Welch Real Estate Optimist, As Seen on HGTV’s House Hunters

December 1st, 2009 tfolley No comments

orlandoRealtor NOVEMBER / DECEMBER 2009

Orlando-based FBC Mortgage, LLC reports
that the average credit score of its
clients with closed mortgages saw sharp
increases in the first and second quarters
of 2009. According to FBC Mortgage, LLC
President Rob Nunziata, the average credit
score has been trending upward for the
past two years due to the elimination subprime
lending, tighter underwriting and
minimum credit score guidelines of 620.

New FHA rules could help condo market — for now

November 23rd, 2009 tfolley No comments

Orlando Business Journal – by Christopher Boyd Staff Writer

 

New Federal Housing Administration rules promise relief for some badly stressed condo projects — but mortgage and real estate brokers said the impact could be short-lived.

The changes are important, though, because condo prices have plunged from speculative highs in 2006, with units in many buildings now selling for a quarter of what they cost back then. As lenders watched values shrink, they became reluctant to finance sales to anyone without a big down payment — typically 20 percent or more.

That has left some new condo towers in downtown Orlando relatively empty, with some deciding to lease out unsold units.

“Given how hard it is to get financing, this certainly will help the condo market — but it won’t set it on fire,” said Joe Nunziata, CEO of FBC Mortgage LLC in Orlando.

The metro Orlando condo resale market has 2,873 unsold units. In downtown Orlando, just 118 condos were resold this year through the end of October, for an average of $153,859 per unit, said the Orlando Regional Realtor Association.

The revamped guidelines are temporary and would benefit only condo developments with a limited number of investor-owned or foreclosed units. Nonetheless, they offer potential relief for some sellers after a long period when financing has been difficult to find.

Among the temporary changes:

• FHA loans would require down payments as small as 3.5 percent of the sales price.

• The guidelines extend the amount of time lenders have to submit so-called spot loans, or loans on individual condo units in buildings that don’t have overall FHA loan approval, to February. Spot loans were supposed to go away in December.

• The rules increase from 30 percent to 50 percent the units in a condo project the FHA will finance.

• The FHA will finance buildings in which just 30 percent of new units have been sold. Private-sector lenders generally require sales of 70 percent or more.

• The FHA will offer financing to all the units in a project if all of them have been sold, no single entity owns more than 10 percent of them, a homeowners association operates the project and owners occupy half of the dwellings.

The looser new rules take effect Dec. 7 and remain through the end of next year, when they likely will become more restrictive.

Lindsey Pfaeder, sales and marketing manager for the Vue at Lake Eola condo tower in downtown Orlando, said her building is seeking FHA approval to create a financing channel for its unsold units. The developer has sold 210 of the building’s 375 units.

“It is nearly impossible to get conventional financing, even if a buyer has $1 million and can put 80 percent down,” she said. “We all have buyers for condos, but they can’t buy because of financing.”

Less-restrictive FHA rules could mean more sales and increase the potential that conventional lenders would provide financing on the remaining units, said Pfaeder.

Ernst Urbainczyk, an agent with Keller Williams Heritage Realty in Lake Mary, said the revisions could stimulate sales, but the prospect that they’ll change again is a drawback. “If I buy a condo today under these FHA rules and the rules change, where will I find a buyer two years from now when I want to sell it?”

Marcus Burke, owner of the Condo Metropolis brokerage in Orlando, said another FHA requirement, which demands at least half the units in a building be owner-occupied, will limit the number of eligible condos. “A lot of older buildings won’t qualify because so many units are foreclosures or delinquencies.”

Cristian Michaels, an agent with Re/Max Town Centre in Orlando who specializes in downtown condo towers, said price is another problem. Even with the new rules, the FHA won’t finance units costing more than $400,000, which are still fairly common despite the plunge in prices. “I don’t think it will increase our sales because of the price points.”

Deal gives Orlando mortgage company a Tampa presence

September 30th, 2009 tfolley No comments

By Richard Burnett Sentinel Staff Writer

Orlando-based FBC Mortgage LLC is expanding into the Tampa market by acquiring certain assets of First Alliance Mortgage Co., the companies said Monday.

As part of the deal, FBC Mortgage has absorbed the management, loan officers, support staff, office facilities and loan pipeline of First Alliance in Tampa, company officials said.

The deal became final last week. Financial terms were not disclosed.

With the move, FBC took on nearly 20 new employees, increasing its work force to 100, the company said. It hopes to double the size of its Tampa unit during the next year.

The company operates out of headquarters in the Plaza office towers, on Orange Avenue in downtown Orlando.

Joining FBC as part of the transaction are James Girard, Robert Pinion and Mary Pinion — a trio of former First Alliance executives.

Girard was made senior vice president and operations manager for FBC.

Robert and Mary Pinion, First Alliance’s senior managers in Tampa, will head up the Tampa operation for FBC.

FBC Mortgage buys Tampa lender

September 30th, 2009 tfolley No comments

FBC Mortgage LLC acquired certain assets of residential mortgage lender First Alliance Mortgage Co. in Tampa for an undisclosed price.

Among those that will remain with the company are mortgage veterans Rob and Mary Pinion, who will manage the Tampa office and help develop the Tampa Bay area for FBC Mortgage, said a news release. In addition, James Girard will join FBC Mortgage as a senior vice president and operations manager in Orlando, the release said.

“We are extremely pleased to be joining such a sound, stable and successful mortgage banking organization,” Girard said in a prepared statement. “With the support of the FBC Mortgage platform, we expect to be able to significantly increase our ability to serve the mortgage needs of the greater Tampa area.”

Orlando-based FBC Mortgage, an employee- and community-owned residential mortgage lender, is among the largest privately owned mortgage lenders in Central Florida.

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