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Posts Tagged ‘Dave Liniger’

BusinessWeek has named Dave Liniger, RE/MAX International Chairman and Co-Founder, among the 50 Most Powerful People in Real Estate. The list appeared in the March 23 edition of the magazine.

Leaders from various industries such as government, lending, insurance, investment, construction and real estate, made the list. Liniger is included with heavy hitters such as U.S. President Barack Obama, U.S. Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, U.S. Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan, U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, FHA Commissioner Dave Stevens and others.

Liniger was among just two leaders from real estate brokerages who were featured on the list (the other was the Realogy CEO). Liniger was lauded for encouraging more than 10,000 RE/MAX agents to earn the Certified Distressed Property Expert (CDPE) designation in 2009. He also played an integral role in lobbying government leaders to create legislative policies aimed specifically at extending the Homebuyer Tax Credit and streamlining Short Sales.

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As you know, Dave Liniger spoke to many of you last week while on his Demand Success Today Tour. If you’d like all of the resources shown on the slides and discussed, please visit:

http://www.demandsuccesstoday.com/resources

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RE/MAX International Chairman and Co-Founder Dave Liniger (ABR, CDPE, CRB) met with top housing officials last week in Washington, D.C., to advocate for a streamlined Short Sale process that would stem foreclosures, assist homeowners and advance the recovery of both the real estate industry and the wider economy.

RE/MAX International issued this press release about the meeting:

Secretary Donovan Meets With RE/MAX Chairman Liniger
RE/MAX Recommends Procedures to Streamline Short Sales

RE/MAX Chairman and Co-Founder Dave Liniger met with Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan on Friday. They had a conversation on a variety of topics related to the current state of the real estate market, but focused primarily on recommendations for streamlining the Short Sale process.

“We feel strongly that if Short Sale transactions can become more like normal real estate transactions, we can make significant headway in reducing the number of vacant and foreclosed homes on the market,” Liniger said. “Because most homeowners aren’t aware that they have this option and loan servicers haven’t made it a priority, we feel that the federal government should facilitate an effective national initiative.”

Also present at the meeting, held in Secretary Donovan’s office, were FHA Commissioner Dave Stevens and Laurie Maggiano of the Treasury Department’s Chief of Homeowner Preservation Office. Accompanying Liniger to Washington was RE/MAX Senior Vice President Mike Ryan.

A Short Sale can occur when a lender allows a homeowner to sell a home for a price that is less than what is owed on the mortgage, if the homeowner is experiencing a financial difficulty that would make monthly mortgage payments a significant burden. Unfortunately, nearly 70% of homeowners facing foreclosure never list their home for sale, even though a Short Sale has many benefits over a foreclosure.

RE/MAX has made assisting such families a high priority and has undertaken a comprehensive, targeted agent training program. In March, Liniger set a goal of having 7,500 RE/MAX Sales Associates earn the Certified Distressed Property Expert (CDPE) designation by the end of the year. The actual number has already passed 7,000 and represents 62% of all CDPE agents in the United States.

Surveys show that after earning a CDPE designation, agents are twice as likely to be able to keep families in their homes. With the CDPE designation, agents are also able to cut the time in half that it takes to close a Short Sale. The average CDPE agent closes about 10 Short Sale transactions a year.

“Secretary Donovan has a very good understanding of how Short Sales can help this market, and he was certainly open to our specific recommendations, especially in the area of agent training and public awareness. We are expecting an announcement will soon be made about procedures to facilitate a streamlined Short Sale process,” Liniger added.

Short Sales could be the best solution for homeowners who are facing a foreclosure, have been turned down for a loan modification, or who have lost their job and can no longer make their mortgage payments. Homeowners who find themselves in one of these difficult positions should contact a real estate professional who is specifically trained to handle Short Sales to find out how the process could result in a positive outcome. A CDPE agent is especially aware of this critical process.

A streamlined Short Sale process could benefit the entire real estate marketplace and offers a much better alternative to foreclosure. Lenders often experience greater losses taking a home to foreclosure, neighborhoods suffer greater losses in home values with foreclosed homes, which are often vacant, and homeowners sustain more severe damage to their credit as the result of foreclosure.

The real estate market will not recover until the number of foreclosures is reduced and home prices start to rebound. An efficient Short Sale process can have a significant impact on foreclosures, which remain at record high levels. RE/MAX hopes that a standardized, national Short Sale process will soon be in place to promote a lasting housing recovery.

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Dave Liniger, co-founder of RE/MAX International, recently requested, via his blog on RE/MAX Mainstreet, ideas on how to stimulate the market. My reply to his question, which was published on his blog, follows:

Part of the issue here is everyone seems to think they have the best idea to get us out of this problem. If every RE/MAX Associate pushed his or her own idea, nothing would get done. If every REALTOR pushed his or her own idea, nothing would get done. NAR has had a plan in place since mid-October and, regardless of whether we think it’s perfect or can be improved, we need to get behind it. NAR has struggled to get anything through the short lame duck session of Congress. We need to act so Congress acts quickly when they reconvene in January. Here’s their plan:

1. Remove the requirement in the current law that first-time homebuyers repay the $7,500 tax credit, and expand the tax credit to apply not only to first-time buyers, but also to all buyers of a primary residence.

2. Revise the FHA, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac 2008 stimulus loan limit increases to make them permanent. The Economic Stabilization Act, enacted in February, made loan limit increases temporary, and subsequent legislation reduced the loan limits and made them permanent. This has broad implication for homebuyers in high cost areas.

3. Urge the government to use a portion of the allotted $700 billion that was provided to purchase mortgage-backed securities from banks to provide price stabilization for housing. The Treasury department should be required to use the newly enacted Troubled Assets Relief Program to push banks to:

-Extend credit down to Main Street, making credit more available to consumers and small businesses;

-Expedite the process for short sales;

-Expedite the resolution of banks’ real estate owned (REOs) properties.

4. Make permanent the prohibition against banks entering real estate brokerage and management, further protecting consumers and the economy.

Contact your members of Congress today via: http://takeaction.realtoractioncenter.com/campaign/4pointplan?rk=A1LyIoSqTI_IW

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