Offered at $299,000

Classic Four Square Colonial home.  Features include an eat-in kitchen, formal dining room, living room and den.  The full, partially finished basement has both outside and inside entrances.  In-ground Pool.

Listed by Steven Monzeglio,  you can find out more information and view additional photographs by clicking here:  16 Edwards Street

Offered at $559,000

Exquisite 3,000 sq. ft. Victorian in the Country Knolls development.  This home features gleaming hardwood floors throughout.  Large master bedroom with an abundance of closet space, master bath with Jacuzzi tub.  The incredible yard offers an oversized deck and a brand new 24 x 44 heated in-ground pool with waterfall and surrounded by brick pavers.  The private, treed property also offers  new gazebo.  This home must be seen!

Listed by Kevin Loiacono, view more information and additional photographs here:  5 Frontier Trail

Offered at $329,000

Great location and low taxes for this Cape style home.  Great starter or downsizing home.  Walking distance to Main Street and Moriches Bay.  New kitchen, freshly painted and new carpeting.  New deck overlooks wooded backyard.

Listed by Steven Monzeglio, you can find out more information and view additional photographs by clicking here:  6 Terry Place

Offered at $169,000

Great piece of property in a residential area.  Over half an acre of property on an established street.  Street survey available.  Ornamental plantings currently on the lot are excluded.  Education is provided through the Center Moriches School District.  Visit the district website, with the link provided above, for more information.

Listed by Cindy Hassan, you can view additional photographs here:  Reeves Road

Offered at $269,000

Upper unit condo located at the Rock Hill Golf Course.  This mint 2 or 3 bedroom and 2 bath home has an open floor plan with cathedral ceilings and sliders that lead out to the deck.  Private location.

Listed by Steven Monzeglio, find out more information and view additional photographs here:  24 Vista Drive

Offered at $364,900

Mint 4 bedroom Ranch home on 1 acre of property.  The kitchen, with ceramic tile, offers a cathedral ceiling.  Fenced backyard with heated in-ground pool and large cedar deck.

Listed byKevin Loiacono, view additional photographs and more information here: 14 Georgann Road

Offered at $739,000

Waterfront contemporary home with deeded beach and boating rights.  Private 3 boat dock with electric, water and retaining wall.  Professionally landscaped.  Secluded front courtyard with garden.  Backyard with large wood deck and heated in-ground pool surrounded with pavers, Large country kitchen with new stainless steel appliances, granite countertops, glazed cabinets, porcelain tile floors and crown moldings.  Additional features include hardwood floors,  Florida room with slate floors and partially finished basement.

Listed by Kevin Loiacono and Ken Bowman, you can find out more information and view additional photographs here:  39 Pine Edge Drive

Offered at $328,000

This beautiful upper unit, with views of the pond, offers a kitchen with tile floor and raised oak cabinets, living room with vaulted ceilings, custom fireplace mantel, Bose stereo system and a lovely terrace overlooking the pond.  A must see!  The Greens at Hampton Vistas development offers community Tennis, Pool and Playground.

Listed by Kevin Loiacono you can find out information and view additional photographs here:  15 Lakeview Drive

Offered at $599,000

This immaculate detached Patio House is located in the Harts Cove waterfront community.  This home offers a custom kitchen with beautiful tiled floors, granite countertops and stainless steel appliances.  Additional features include skylights, crown molding, recessed lighting, hardwood floors and a wood burning fireplace.  Community amenities include pool, tennis courts and a boat slip.  The attached patio is accessible through glass sliding doors.  Backyard overlooks a corral.

Listed by Kevin Loiacono, you can find out more information and view additional photographs by clicking here:  One Thoroughbred Court

nytlogo152x23

The New York Times

 By BOB TEDESCHI

Published: June 5, 2009

THE subprime mortgage crisis has had at least one positive outcome: many unscrupulous professionals who steered unsophisticated borrowers into risky loans went out of business.

Some of those people have since returned to the industry, lenders and mortgage brokers say, only this time they are involved in loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration, which are also often sought by less sophisticated borrowers.

Now the F.H.A. is tightening its review of mortgage professionals who are permitted to originate its loans. Some longtime F.H.A. mortgage brokers say the efforts will help spare borrowers some of the abuses of the subprime era.

Among other things, brokers who help originate F.H.A. mortgages will be required to obtain approval in advance from the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development, of which F.H.A. is a division. In the past, nonapproved brokers could refer applicants to approved lenders and charge the borrower a fee.

Additionally, people convicted of making fraudulent loans cannot take part in the F.H.A. program. Previously, though companies were penalized by the F.H.A. for such behavior, the individuals responsible could simply switch employers.

William Apgar, the senior adviser to the secretary for mortgage finance at HUD, said that some of these individuals were probably among the roughly 1,500 new mortgage professionals who have obtained licenses to make F.H.A. loans in the last two years. (There are 13,500 in all, according to Mr. Apgar.)

“These folks know how to scam people,” he said, “and they’re now trying to scam people in a new way. But these guys haven’t just invaded F.H.A. They’re in every corner of the world.”

The new requirements for F.H.A. lenders, as well as more than $400 million in additional financing, partly for mortgage-fraud investigations, Mr. Apgar said, will help mitigate fraud among F.H.A. lenders.

F.H.A. loans are similar to subprime loans, because they are typically made to borrowers who have difficulty qualifying for prime loans — people with less money for down payments and those with damaged credit.

A frequent choice for first-time home buyers, F.H.A. loans carry competitive interest rates — late last week, for instance, the rate on a 30-year fixed-rate loan was 5.5 percent — but borrowers must pay a monthly insurance premium. (On a $400,000 loan, the insurance is $183 a month.)

Borrowers with low credit scores or low cash reserves rarely considered F.H.A. loans over the past decade, partly because of the insurance fees, but also because they could easily get other subprime mortgages with no or low down payments and with interest rates initially much lower than for F.H.A. mortgages.

The problem was that many of those loans were adjustable-rate mortgages, or ARMs, whose interest rates often spiked in the first few years. Now that these “exploding ARMs,” as they were known, have vanished, subprime borrowers are again flocking to F.H.A. loans.

Of the mortgages made in the past 12 months, about 20 percent have been F.H.A. loans, compared with about 2 percent in 2006, according to HUD.

Richard L. Tracy Jr., a board member of the Connecticut Society of Mortgage Brokers and an F.H.A.-approved lender, said the agency’s recent measures “will go a long way toward getting out the marginal players.”

Still, Mr. Tracy said, borrowers who seek F.H.A. mortgages should ask lenders how long they have been approved to offer such loans. “And they should go to the Web site of their state banking departments to verify the lenders’ licenses,” he said.

The federal government, he added, also maintains two online lists of lenders who can no longer participate in the F.H.A. program. The “Limited Denial of Participation and Debarments” lists are available on HUD’s Web site, at www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/lender/ldp_abou.cfm.

Mr. Apgar of the F.H.A. said prospective borrowers might also try “Neighborhood Watch,” a another Web site set up by HUD that, among other things, lists sanctions and other enforcement actions taken against lenders. That address is https://entp.hud.gov/sfnw/public/.

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