mortgages

Who Are Fannie And Freddie And How Do They Help Homeowners?

November 21, 2007

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mae are quasi-government agencies in that they are publicly-owned, but overseen by the government. The purpose of Fannie and Freddie is to make sure that money is available to homeowners that want home loans. Neither lends to consumers directly, though; you’ll have to talk to your loan officer for that.  Instead, […]

Read the full article →

Where You Find Speculators, You May Also Find Failures

November 14, 2007

This morning, RealtyTrac released its Q3 2007 foreclosure data for the United States. The leading cities for foreclosures are: Stockton, CA (1 per 31 households) Detroit, MI (1 per 33 households) Riverside/San Bernardino, CA (1 per 43 households) Fort Lauderdale, FL (1 per 48 households) Las Vegas, NV (1 per 48 households) Sacramento, CA (1 […]

Read the full article →

Mortgage Rates Fall For ARMs Faster Than For Fixed Rate Mortgages

November 8, 2007

After running neck-and-neck for several months, interest rates for fixed-rate mortgages and adjustable-rate mortgages are finally diverging. Despite pricing worse than its fixed-rate counterpart throughout much of August and September, ARMs are now close to 0.375 percent lower for conforming products sold through Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. This equates to roughly $25 per month per $100,000 […]

Read the full article →

It’s Not Your Imagination : Getting A Home Loan Is More Challenging For Everyone

November 7, 2007

If it feels like mortgage approvals are harder to come by than in years past, that’s because it is. And we’re not just talking about sub-prime mortgages (for which the market has nearly vanished in just 12 months). According to a story on Marketwatch, mortgage guidelines are more challenging for everyone to meet — gold-star […]

Read the full article →

Jumbo Mortgage Rates Shed Some Of Their Risk, Rates Fall

October 11, 2007

As a sign that some normalcy is returning to mortgage markets, the premium attached to jumbo mortgage rates is getting smaller. A “jumbo”-sized loan is one that exceeds $417,000 on a single-family residence, among other criteria. Conforming 30-year fixed rate mortgages and jumbo 30-year fixed rate mortgages tend to move in the same direction over […]

Read the full article →

Making A Choice Of Mortgage Products Is Easier Today Than Most Days

October 11, 2007

In another sign that mortgage markets are a bit unpredictable lately, this morning’s mortgage rates are virtually identical for conforming fixed rate mortgages and conforming adjustable rate mortgages. This is an extremely uncommon market condition; usually, adjustable rate mortgages carry lower rates over their initial fixed rate period (i.e. 3 years, 5 years, 7 years) […]

Read the full article →

Why Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI) Is Suddenly Popular

August 22, 2007

Suddenly, Private Mortgage Insurance is back in vogue.  If only by default. The story background is well-documented in this Bankrate.com article from 2002.  The article is five years old, but it still raises some salient points. What the article doesn’t highlight is that second mortgages such as home equity loans are typically sold to Wall Street, […]

Read the full article →

Why The Mortgage “Crisis” Is Not A “Crisis” For Everyone

August 17, 2007

Another day, another batch of Gloom-and-Doom stories in the news.  Remember to keep a level head — the media’s job, in part, is to sell newspapers and capture eyeballs.  Using the word “crisis” repeatedly is one way to meet that goal. A few facts to keep it all in perspective: There are still BILLIONS of […]

Read the full article →

The Fed Funds Rate Does Not Directly Impact Mortgage Rates

August 14, 2007

It’s been on the news a few times lately, so let’s address a key misconception about the Fed and its relationship to mortgage rates. The markets now anticipate that the Fed will lower the Fed Funds Rate within the next 45 days.  As a mortgage rate shopper, there’s not much reason to be interested.  That’s […]

Read the full article →

The Week In Review (August 6, 2007) : What To Watch For

August 6, 2007

In a week in which several high-profile mortgage lenders closed their doors, not all news was bad. Mortgages rates for home loans bought by the quasi-government groups Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac actually dropped a bit. If you only watched the news, or market commentary on CNBC, though, you likely have the wrong idea about […]

Read the full article →

What If You Got To The Closing Table And The Money Never Showed Up?

August 3, 2007

Several high-profile mortgage lenders, including American Home Mortgage, closed their doors this week and stopped funding loans.  Others dramatically limited their list of “eligible” borrowers. Many buyers and sellers across the country have been stranded at the closing table without funds this week, only adding to the confusion. Because the story is not getting much […]

Read the full article →

The Biggest Banks Are Eliminating The Most Prevalent Sub-Prime Loan

July 24, 2007

Mixed news from the sub-prime sector, depending on how you look at it. Many lenders discontinuing their short-term ARM products. Washington Mutual, Countrywide and Wells Fargo are among the sub-prime lenders no longer offering the 2/28 mortgage product. The “2/28” is a adjustable rate mortgage in which the interest rate remains fixed for two years, […]

Read the full article →

Why Medical Bills Are More Dangerous To Homeowners Than ARMs

July 20, 2007

If you own a home and somebody else depends on your income, consider that the leading cause of home foreclosures is not “adjustable rate mortgages”. As cited many times over (including by a Harvard law professor), the answer is medical bills. Even for the insured, medical expenses can dramatically impact a family’s finances and push […]

Read the full article →

Be Wary Of Opinions That Masquerade As News

June 21, 2007

Is “news” always news, or is it masked opinion? When doing research on mortgages, it’s important to pay attention to the objectivity of your research source. Often, a writer will deploy key adjectives, phrases, and/or images that distort an otherwise factual story. This cartoon from clangnuts.com is a terrific example. It implies that interest only […]

Read the full article →

Saving A Nickel May Have Cost You A Dime

May 25, 2007

This cartoon by Wiley applies to mortgages in 2007 like it did to stock trading in 1999. The least expensive mortgage options aren’t always the least costly.  A quick look at the Sunday paper’s Foreclosure Notice section can verify that. The right loan at a fair price saves far money money than the wrong loan […]

Read the full article →

One Method To Reduce The Amount Of Sub-Prime ARM Foreclosures

May 23, 2007

The graphic at right comes from The Wall Street Journal and it illustrates something that we all intrinsically know: Sub-Prime ARMs foreclose at a faster pace than all other home loan types. When adjustable rate mortgages reach the end of their “fixed rate” period, some homeowners are unprepared for the upward-adjusting mortgage payments and that […]

Read the full article →

The Week In Review (May 21, 2007) : What To Watch For

May 21, 2007

Mortgage rates moved substantially higher last week as traders reacted to Thursday’s Initial Jobless Claims. The amount of new unemployment filing dropped below 4-week trend line is now at its lowest levels in a year. Fewer unemployment claims coupled with increasing employee wages raised fears of inflation and inflation nearly always pushes mortgage rates higher. […]

Read the full article →

Until Bonds Get More Press, You’re Going To Have To Find An Advisor You Trust

April 13, 2007

Unlike the stock market, it’s hard for the average person to know when the bond market is getting turned upside-down. So, looking back at last Friday, when mortgage rates jumped very, very quickly in a short period of time, a lot of people got surprised (and burned). With stocks, we can all turn on CNBC, Bloomberg, […]

Read the full article →

Wealthy Americans Are 25% More Likely To Hold Mortgage Debt

April 11, 2007

Interesting fact of the day: 55.5% of “wealthy” Americans have mortgages on their primary homes vs. 44.6% of the overall population. This doesn’t mean that the wealthy are more indebted than the rest of us; it means that the wealthy are maximizing the tax deductions that the IRS makes available to every homeowner in the […]

Read the full article →

The Week In Review (April 9, 2007) : What To Watch For

April 9, 2007

On strength in jobs and hiring, mortgage rates finished last week at their highest levels in six weeks. It was a slow week last week until Friday when — with the stock market closed for Good Friday and with most bond traders on early vacation — the Non-Farms Payroll report handily beat expectations. This created […]

Read the full article →