2/25/2023

Avoid Real Estate Wire Transfer Hack

Avoid Wire Transfer Hacks




 





Story about how to avoid having your wire transfer stolen when buying real estate. It take hard work to save up thousands of dollars to buy your dream home. Be careful. Take your time. Don't let your account become a ghost town.

Question from a Borrower:

"A hacker got into my real estate agent's account and posed as my title company last year in which, I dumbly, wired money too.  My first heads up should of been that the first wire bounced back, but went ahead and sent another one.  By the time the real title company has alerted me that they had not got the funs, I was about to take off for a trip (literally on the plane)  At the time, my agent was able to call the bank (WellsFargo) and alert them of the fraudulent account of which they then found and closed.  Since then both my outgoing bank (which I used to initiate the transfer and tried to do a recall) and WellsFargo - the receiving bank - have been sort of a dead end.  Wells Fargo refuses to talk to me as they are saying they are 'protecting' their customer" Mike


My answer::: 

Mike the cause of the hack is probably your own actions. There are many things you should not be doing with money to purchase real estate. Privacy and secrecy are vital to holding control of your funds for down payment and closing costs.

Here are some guesses as to where you failed:

When you start the transaction you fail to call escrow/attorney to verify the bank account number and routing to wire. This account number rarely changes. 

Fail examine an incoming email address. If you attempt to reply you note the email is similar but off by a number or dot. Email is suszy.que@fatco.com and the incoming is suszy.que@mfatco.com   Similar but wrong person.

You use same password for accounts and email or simple guessable passwords. I'm not a believer that dual sign in does anything to protect you. The bad guys probably can spoof your phone number as well.  Refuse to allow banks to use voice identification I believe this is not secure. Post notice on large account to not allow wire transfers, no Zelle, no ACH without me personally walking into the bank or brokerage with my identification. 

You text private transactional information. Never text your agent or Realtor instructions. Never text social security number, date of birth, account number. Twenty years ago I told my children they were not allowed to enter their real date of birth in MySpace and Facebook. Those fake DOB show up in credit reporting today. Use a fake DOB for social media and entities that don't need your exact information.

You give your date of birth, social security number freely without caution. Who really needs this information? Your electric company stores all your information waiting to be hacked. Ask them in writing to take it down. 

You have not checked sites that verify what information about you is online. Some of these sites are free, some are also bad guys. In writing ask for them to take it down, using your junk email.

Chance of getting the funds back after ten days .001% Sorry it's a very bad batting average.

You signed the agreement to wire twice. Wire fraud is VERY COMMON.  

Why was the money in Realtor's account? NEVER give authority to someone else to handle the transfer.

Do not do the following mistakes:

You announce on a public forum you are doing a transaction, 

You have credit pulls and you use the same email address with lender and settlement/attorney. ANY decent lender knows not to send your correct email to order a mortgage credit report as your information is sold and picked off by other lenders and fraudsters, but yours gave away the keys. Use a trusted lender not an online call center. Verify the Lender's NMLS license in the state where the transaction is in process. Bigger Pockets has many lenders posting who are not licensed and answer questions with questionable information. 

You email through realtor IDX website, 

You don't have a secret personal email that you change the complex password often. Change the passwords during the transaction.

You use your junk email with Realtor and settlement agent, 

When you start the transaction you fail to call escrow/attorney to verify the bank account number and routing to wire. This account number rarely changes. 

What should you be doing?

Check, double check, do not be rushed, things can close tomorrow.

Work with people who know you. 





You give your date of birth, social security number freely without caution.







2/24/2023

Good News FHA MIP Cost Goes Down


 










The monthly FHA MIP premium will drop 30 bps for loans funded after 3/20/23. 

The monthly MIP cost will drop by $121 for a $500,000 purchase with 3.5% down.

 

This was a long time coming. Former HUD Secretary Julián Castro 

had scheduled the cut to take effect in 2017, as FHA’s capital reserves

 were above the 2% statutory levels needed. 

The change was rescinded by the incoming administration on January 20, 2017.

 

FHA’s capital reserves today are above 11%,


When do you hear prices go down?

Still wishing eggs and gas prices decreased...

 

Good news for FHA buyers!

 


2/08/2023

For Lease Luxury 517 Emerald Bay Laguna Beach


For lease $20000 
517 Emerald Bay Laguna Beach 4450 square feet single family house
Guard gated community
private beach

Lavish gardens topiary roses
Entertaining outdoors overlooking the ocean

(949) 784- 9699

2/02/2023

How To Hold Title Vesting for Mortgage or Buying a Home








Congratulations your offer is accepted and you received the statement of information from

your escrow officer, settlement agent or real estate attorney. The purchase contract just has your first and last name. There are several choices how to hold title of the property. Your mortgage company or the bank if you are getting a loan will have something to say about how you hold title.

Here are several choices explained

I want to hold title as Queen Mary Smith. This probably will not work unless you have legal identification to prove this.



Really now, the first thing to consider is are you married?

Single means you never were married

Married means you are currently legally married

Unmarried means you were married and may be divorced or widowed.


  • Sole ownership: only one person owns the house
  • Community property: two or more persons own the real estate Some states are not community property states
  • Community property with right of survivorship: real estate bought during marriage or domestic partnership belongs equally to both partners. Each spouse owns 50%. Community property with right of survivorship may only be used by married couples in community property states (like California). Community property with right of survivorship is better from a capital gain tax standpoint in that the entire property (not just the half belonging to the deceased spouse) receives a step up in basis on the first death. This allows for a double step up if the remaining spouse continues to hold the property until his or her death. The problem with community property with right of survivorship is the same problem as joint tenancy–if all property owners die, the property must go through probate.
  • Joint tenants with right of survivorship: the spouse who survives (or domestic partner) automatically assumes full ownership of the property upon the death of the other title holder. There is a so-called “right of survivorship,” which means that when one dies, the property automatically transfers to the survivor without the necessity of probating the estate.
  • Tenants in common: 2 or more people the owners do not have a right of survivorship. Each owns a fractional share. They can sell their percentage share. Tenancy in common is a way that multiple related or unrelated people choose to take title to property. Ownership interests do not have to be equal and the interest can be specified in the deed. With tenants in common, upon the death of an owner, that owner’s interest is controlled by his or her will, or in the absence of a will through intestate succession, which means the State probate code tells you who gets the property.
  • Living Trust: Revocable sets Trustee(s) who have the power to sell or mortgage and beneficiaries who will inherit. This avoids probate which I believe is very important. There are also Irrevocable Trusts which cannot be changed.
Caroline Gerardo
NMLS 324982
American Financial Network, Inc
NMLS company 236341

(949)  784  -9699
This is my personal opinion not legal advice
If you need legal advice about how to hold title for a property you own or
real estate you are buying feel free to call me and I will provide a referral for free