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RE/MAX Preferred Professionals
2916 Stockton Hill Road
Kingman, AZ
928-718-7629

Archive for February 2010

Trying to Refinance? There’s Still Hope!

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Government-backed programs can help with refinancing for homeowners who don’t have equity in their property.

Homeowners whose mortgage balance exceeds the current property value know the futility of trying to refinance. Refinancing options for so-called “underwater” mortgages are limited because most lenders require some equity in the property — ideally about 20 percent.

However, borrowers should not give up hope. Options do exist, especially via the government’s Making Home Affordable program.

First option: HARP
If you meet certain criteria, your underwater loan may be eligible for a refinance through the federal Home Affordable Refinance Program, or HARP. The program allows qualified borrowers to refinance a loan that is from 105% to as high as 125% of a home’s value.

However, not every underwater loan qualifies for HARP. First, you must not be on the road to foreclosure: Any delinquent payments in the past 12 months will automatically disqualify you from eligibility.

Second, either Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac must own the loan. You can find a loan lookup tool and other calculators at the government’s Making Home Affordable Web site.

Your ability to take advantage of HARP will depend on payment history and other factors including credit score, the structure of the current home financing and specific lender guidelines.

“Can it help everyone? No,” says Jason Bonarrigo, senior mortgage banker with Wells Fargo Home Mortgage of Boston. However, Bonarrigo has closed several HARP loans and says it’s worth investigating eligibility.

“If refinancing through HARP can shave $300 or $400 off a monthly mortgage payment, it can sometimes make a difference between keeping and losing a home down the road,” he says.

Second option: HAMP
If you not only have an underwater mortgage but also have missed payments, you may qualify for HAMP, the federal Home Affordable Modification Program, available through mortgage lenders.

To qualify, you must demonstrate financial hardship that puts your mortgage in imminent danger of default. The mortgage must be owned by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac or by others signed up with the U.S. Treasury to qualify for HAMP. (Call your loan servicer to find out if it is participating.)

While the program provides government incentives of up to $1,500 to lenders to process these modifications, the ultimate approval rests with the lender.

“HAMP is not a refinancing program, it’s a change to the contract terms … but it can lower your payments for up to 60 months,” says Michael Goldstein, a bankruptcy attorney and partner at Goldstein and Clegg in Lynnfield, Mass.

Beginning in the sixth year, a borrower’s mortgage rate may begin to increase, but no more than 1 percentage point a year until it reaches “the market rate at the time the modification agreement is prepared,” according to the Making Home Affordable Web site.

Lenders offer several different types of modifications, says John Walsh, president and founder of Total Mortgage Services in Milford, Conn.

“(The mortgage company) could amortize your current mortgage to a longer term, a lower interest rate or forgive some of the principal balance of your loan,” he says.

While a modification may be a good option for some, there are strict qualification guidelines, Walsh says. For example, the home must be a primary residence, the mortgage must be less than $729,750, the current monthly payment must be more than 31 percent of your current gross income, and you must be able to demonstrate you are having difficulty making the payments.

The loan modification also has a trial period of 90 days, after which the lender reassesses the borrower’s situation to see if he or she qualifies for the long-term modification.

Economy Expands… Foreclosures Rise?

Friday, February 12th, 2010

About 1 in every 7 home loans was either past due or in foreclosure at the end of the third quarter. Here’s what you need to know about the continuing mortgage crisis.

Moving Upstream: The MBA report provides an inside look into the evolution of the foreclosure crisis. Initial problems in the mortgage market were largely rooted in subprime loans and other exotic products. But with the national unemployment rate hitting 10.2 percent in October, the eroding labor market has emerged as the most fundamental factor behind the mortgage crisis. A job loss, after all, can prevent even borrowers with sound credit histories from paying the mortgage.

Regional concentrations: Regional concentrations of problem loans are striking. Nevada, Florida, Arizona and California — four states at the center of the housing boom and bust — accounted for 43 percent of all third-quarter foreclosure starts.

Shadow inventory: The figures are a discouraging development for a housing market that has demonstrated recent, if tentative, signs of stability. While the National Association of Realtors’ existing home sales report shows that the backlog of unsold properties has decreased in recent months, future foreclosure sales will ensure that a steady supply of discounted homes hits the market in coming years. “We continue to believe that nearly 6 (million) foreclosed homes will enter the market over the next three years, which will keep inventory of existing homes elevated,” Michelle Meyer, an economist at Barclays Capital, said in a report. “Foreclosures remain the biggest hurdle to the housing recovery.”

Hole in the rescue: It’s important to note that mortgage delinquencies continue breaking records in the face of Uncle Sam’s sweeping effort to keep struggling borrowers in their homes. Although the initiative has put more than 650,000 borrowers into trial loan modifications, there is growing concern that the Obama administration’s initiative isn’t well-suited for today’s housing crisis. For example, although unemployment is the key force behind current delinquencies, borrowers who can’t make mortgage payments because of a job loss can’t participate in the program. Observers in growing numbers have called this a key shortcoming of the Obama administration’s housing rescue. “It increasingly appears that (Uncle Sam’s housing rescue) is targeted at the housing crisis as it existed six months ago, rather than as it exists right now,” a congressional oversight panel said in a report released Oct. 9. In addition, the effort does not sufficiently address the issue of borrowers who are significantly underwater, meaning they owe more on their mortgage than their home is worth, Zandi says.

Modifying modifications: Because of these issues, “it is important for policymakers to consider how to modify the modification program so that it can work better,” Zandi says. One possibility could be through programs that allow struggling borrowers to relinquish ownership of their property but remain there as renters. Similar efforts have been launched at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Reversing the trend: Mortgage delinquency rates aren’t expected to stabilize until the labor market does. Newport expects the unemployment rate to peak in the first quarter of 2010 at roughly 10.5 percent. But even after the unemployment rate peaks, don’t expect delinquency rates to shoot back to earth immediately. “The (delinquency) rate is going to stay up there for quite awhile because the job market is going to be really weak for a while,” Newport says.

~Original post by Luke Mullins of U.S. News & World Report

Today’s Mortgage Rates

Friday, February 12th, 2010

Wells Fargo Home Mortgage reports Today’s Mortgage Rates as of 02/12/2010 01:00 PM Eastern

Product

Interest Rate

APR

Conforming 1and FHA Loans
30-Year Fixed

4.875%

5.065%

30-Year Fixed FHA

5.500%

6.245%

15-Year Fixed

4.250%

4.573%

5-Year ARM

3.875%

3.564%

5-Year ARM FHA

3.875%

3.401%

Larger Loan Amounts in Eligible AreasConforming and FHA.1
30-Year Fixed

5.125%

5.264%

30-Year Fixed FHA

5.250%

5.924%

5-Year ARM

4.250%

3.652%

Jumbo1 Loans – Amounts that exceed conforming loan limits1
30-Year Fixed

5.750%

5.895%

5-Year ARM

5.000%

3.930%

Today’s Mortgage Rates

Monday, February 1st, 2010

According to Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, these are the Mortgage Rates as of 02/01/2010.

Product

Interest Rate

APR

Conforming 1and FHA Loans

30-Year Fixed

4.875%

5.065%

30-Year Fixed FHA

5.500%

6.245%

15-Year Fixed

4.250%

4.573%

5-Year ARM

3.875%

3.564%

5-Year ARM FHA

3.875%

3.323%

Larger Loan Amounts in Eligible AreasConforming and FHA.1

30-Year Fixed

5.125%

5.264%

30-Year Fixed FHA

5.250%

5.924%

5-Year ARM

4.250%

3.652%

Jumbo1 Loans – Amounts that exceed conforming loan limits1

30-Year Fixed

5.750%

5.895%

5-Year ARM

5.000%

3.930%

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