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Credit Unions Versus Banks for Home Loans

Thursday, January 5th, 2012

 

Pros & Cons of Credit Unions for Equity Loans

By: Donna Fuscaldo 

Published: December 19, 2011 

Equity loan shopping? Compared with a bank, a credit union can save you money on the fees and interest rate you’ll pay. We sort out the pros and cons. 

But the process and qualifications for the loan will be just as much of a rigmarole as working with a bank. 

Be smart about taking on debt 

Before you take out an equity loan or line of credit from any lender, carefully weigh your long-term financial situation. Ask yourself, and be able to answer yes to, these questions: 

  • Do you have the means to pay back the loan?
  • Are you using the loan for something that will contribute to the value of your home or the future of your family?
  • Will the loan put you in a better financial position in the long run?
  • Are you prepared to lose your home if you can’t pay back the loan?

Advantages of credit unions: You can save money  

So how much lower are credit union interest rates than banks? Over a two-and-a-half year period beginning in May 2009, Bankrate.com says that rates on a $30,000 HELOC averaged 1.2 percentage points less at credit unions than at banks or thrifts. 

“The long-standing advantage credit unions have held, on average, extends to nearly all products,” says Greg McBride, a Bankrate senior financial analyst. “Credit unions typically offer higher average rates on deposits and charge lower rates on loans. The one area where there’s a dead heat between banks and credit unions is in mortgages, owing to the large role played by the secondary market.” (Mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have historically been able to help keep rates lower compared with the private sector.) 

Credit unions can pass on lower rates, waive fees, and amp up the customer service experience because they’re non-profits designed to serve their members rather than answer to profit-demanding shareholders as banks must do. 

In addition, they’re more willing to lend money since they, unlike their traditional banking counterparts, haven’t been bogged down with bad loans made during the housing crisis. Credit unions, which typically hold their loans in their own portfolio instead of selling them to a third party, were often more careful lenders during the boom. 

By the way, being a member of credit union can mean free checking and even dividends; once you make that first deposit, you become a stakeholder.  

Disadvantages of credit unions 

  • Credit unions are typically small institutions, licensed to provide real estate loans only in the state they operate in. Although you may qualify to join an out-of-state credit union, you may not be able to secure a home equity loan or HELOC from that institution if it isn’t licensed in the state you live in. Some large credit unions do provide loans in multiple states.  
  • They may not have the latest banking technology, so expect to make repeat in-person visits for services.
  • Credit unions may not offer all the products and services a bigger bank does.
  • For these reasons, a bank could still win your favor. And because of backlash from customers, banks are increasingly willing to step up their customer service to land new business or keep existing customers. 

Finding a credit union 

Although you needn’t have your mortgage with a credit union to get a home equity loan or line of credit, you do need to be a member if you want to apply for the loan. That means you’ll have to become a member even if you decide not to take out the loan with the credit union. 

You join a credit union based on some affinity — your employer, your house or worship, your geographic area, or because you belong to an organization like the armed services or a union. The Brentwood Baptist Church Federal Credit Union in Texas serves members of the Brentwood Baptist Church, for instance, while transportation workers in Philadelphia and their families are eligible to join the Transit Workers Federal Credit Union. 

Search findacreditunion.com for credit unions in your area. If you qualify, you’ll pay a one-time fee of anywhere from $5 to $25 depending on the institution. Expect to save on: 

  • Fees to apply for the loan will be waived
  • Interest rates over the life of the loan
  • Costs associated with the underwriting process of the loan

Shop around for your loan 

As with any big purchase, make sure to shop around before deciding on an equity loan or HELOC. That means getting rate quotes from banks as well as credit unions. A rule of thumb: Always get at least three estimates before making any moves. 

“Visit Houselogic.com for more articles like this. Reprinted from HouseLogic.com with permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®.”

Avoiding Home Equity Scams in Belmont

Friday, October 28th, 2011

With the lower interest rates we are enjoying, a lot of people are taking the opportunity to refinance their home loans.  Before you refinance your Belmont home, you need to realize it is expensive.  If you are refinancing to lower your payments, that can be a great thing.  I recently refinanced my home and lowered my payments $150 plus I have more going to principle with each month than I did before.  If you are refinancing to “cash out,” be careful.  Go to a reputable lender and avoid the people who send you mailings offering great deals.  Here’s an important article from HouseLogic and the National Association of Realtors that will show you how you can get in trouble with the wrong lender.   Irl Dixon

Avoid Home Equity Loan and Refinancing Scams

By: Donna Fuscaldo 

Published: January 15, 2010 

Home equity loan and refinancing scams can cost you more than money–these scams can cost you your house. 

Loan flipping 

Loan flipping is a scam targeted at homeowners looking to get money back when they refinance a mortgage. This is often referred to as a cash-out refi. Scammers take advantage of this desire to tap the equity in a home to pay for things the homeowner couldn’t otherwise afford.

A cash-out refi in itself isn’t a scam. For some, it’s a smart way to borrow. What is a scam is when a lender, after receiving a few payments, comes back to you with an offer of another refinance, this time to fund a vacation or a new car. The easy money is difficult for some homeowners to turn down.

Many borrowers don’t realize how much they’re paying in fees to refinance. The U.S. Federal Reserve estimates the settlement costs on a typical refi to be 3% to 6% of the loan amount. Loan flippers often charge much more, plus they may quietly roll the settlement costs into the loan to disguise the total charges. Take a day or two to get quotes from several lenders and compare terms.

Loan flipping ultimately leaves you with more debt and more years that you’ll owe on that debt. When the equity finally dries up, you might not be able to afford your higher monthly payments and another refinancing will be impossible. You could be forced to sell your home. 

Equity stripping 

Equity stripping can occur in several ways, but at its heart is a scam artist who gains ownership of your home, borrows against it or sells it, pockets the proceeds, and disappears. You’re often left with a hefty mortgage balance and no place to live.

A telling sign of equity stripping is a lender that offers more loan than you can afford or that encourages you to pad your income on a loan application. Homeowners with low incomes but a good amount of equity built up are prime targets because they otherwise would have a hard time borrowing. According to the U.S. Federal Trade Commission, a lender that’s pushing a home loan with too-high monthly payments is likely counting on foreclosing on the property when you fall behind.

A variation on equity stripping has a scam artist talking you into selling your home at a discount or signing over the deed, perhaps with a promise of securing better loan terms if your name isn’t on it. The scammer promises to let you stay in the home as a renter until the refinancing is finalized, then you can buy back the home. In reality, the scam artist drains equity by borrowing against the house or selling the house, perhaps after evicting you.

According to Consumers Union, don’t agree to a home equity loan if you can’t afford it. A good rule of thumb: Your combined home loan payments shouldn’t exceed 28% of your gross income. The nonprofit publisher of Consumer Reports magazine also warns against signing any documents unless you understand them and turning over you property to anyone without first consulting a trusted adviser. 

Phantom help 

Watch out for unsolicited offers to refinance from companies claiming government affiliations. In particular, don’t be fooled by the use of official-sounding acronyms like “TARP” or official-looking website addresses. Scammers use these to gain your trust. Once they do, they’ll likely try to charge you for access to government assistance. Worse, they might extract enough personal information to commit identity theft.

You never need to pay to find out about legitimate government programs. A housing counselor approved by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development can point you in the right direction. For federal refinancing and loan modification help, check out the Making Home Affordable program. 

New disclosure rules make spotting scams easier 

Many unscrupulous lenders have relied on confusing paperwork to dupe borrowers into paying excessive upfront fees on loans. Others would pull last-minute rate switches at closing. Still others would disguise prepayment penalties, which can prove costly if you ever try to refinance again or retire a loan early.

Balloon payments, which come due at the end of a loan term, can also catch borrowers off-guard. A lender may offer a low monthly payment on an equity loan, but only because the payment is interest-only. The principal is due in one lump sum. Surprised homeowners must scramble to refinance again, tap other assets, or sell.

Disclosure rules that went into effect Jan. 1, 2010, make spotting these types of deceptions easier. All lenders are required to use redesigned Good Faith Estimate and HUD-1 Settlement Statement forms that clearly disclose key loan terms–including interest rates, prepayment penalties, and balloon payments–and closing costs.

The GFE is an estimate of loan terms and closing costs, while the HUD-1 is a final accounting of terms and costs. The redesigned forms, cross-referenced by line number, must be used for mortgage refinancing and home equity loans (with the exception of home equity lines of credit, or HELOCs). The only fee a lender is allowed to collect to issue a GFE is a charge for a credit report, which averages $37.

If you don’t receive the new forms, don’t do business with the lender. If the estimates on the GFE don’t match the final figures on the HUD-1, ask why. Some, but not all, fees are allowed to increase within a fixed range.

“Visit Houselogic.com for more articles like this. Reprinted from HouseLogic.com with permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®.”

Importance of Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac to Belmont NC Real Estate

Thursday, March 17th, 2011

If you have been reading the news lately, you might know that Congress is seriously considering phasing out Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac over a five year period.  This could be devastating to the real estate industry in the long haul.  If these two institutions fall, you will see higher interest rates, even fewer buyers, and a move toward a rental based citizenry.  A little dramatic?  Maybe.  Here is a quote that came out to from the FBR’s Paul Miller.  “We expect the private market share to rise, mortgage rates to increase, and homeownership levels to decrease as the focus shifts to affordable rental housing. Overall, we believe the best-positioned companies in this debate are the large money center banks, like Bank of America  and Wells Fargo, while small servicers could see profit margins squeezed and lower normalized ROEs (return on equity) on new mortgage insurance business being written.”  Irl Dixon

How Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Save You Money

By: Jeannette Bernay 

Published: January 11, 2010 

Homeowners who use Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgages save thousands of dollars in interest payments each year. 

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are federally chartered organizations designed to bring global capital to local communities by purchasing and guaranteeing loans made by mortgage lenders.

As a homeowner, there are several ways you benefit from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. If your loan is owned or guaranteed by one of them, you pay a lower interest rate. And, when the time comes to sell your home, the pool of buyers capable of getting a mortgage is much wider thanks to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. To see how a loan guaranteed by one of the GSEs helps you save money, download our free PDF worksheet.

Homeowners who qualify for a Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac mortgage, called a conventional loan, typically get interest rates that are ¼% to ½% lower than non-Fannie Mae, non-Freddie Mac loans. At times when other mortgage funding dries up, the rate difference between GSE and non-GSE loans has jumped to between 1% and 2%. 

On average, homeowners who have GSE loans save $17,000 over the life of a 30-year loan. Since 30 million Americans have a GSE-backed loan, that adds up to more than $500 billion in savings for U.S. homeowners. 

GSEs stabilize the market

Despite the financial advantage the GSEs create, not everyone supports their mission. Some critics worry that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are taking on too much financial risk by guaranteeing mortgages in the current economic climate. Others believe the GSEs should be purely private entities, functioning without an implied or explicit government guarantee at all.

Falling home prices and rising unemployment have challenged the GSEs. When the subprime mortgage crisis hit and expanded into the prime market, there was a sharp decline in home prices and a sharp increase in mortgage delinquencies and foreclosures. The crisis put extreme financial pressure on both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

By mid-2010, the two companies had required $145 billion of taxpayer support. However, without those funds, the GSEs would have gone under, putting an end to the steady flow of funds into the U.S. mortgage market. 

“Absent the engagement of the government through the GSEs and FHA, what was a bad situation would have been catastrophic for the housing market, and potentially catastrophic for the broader economy,” says Nicolas P. Retsinas, director of Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies and Freddie Mac board member.

Today, the GSEs remain one of the few reliable sources of home mortgage funding, along with mortgages insured by the Federal Housing Administration. In 2010, 80% of U.S. home loans were bought, or guaranteed, by Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. 

Loan limits

Congress sets a maximum Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac maximum loan limit. Homeowners who need to sell find that there are more borrowers for homes priced at or below the GSE maximum loan amount, which is $417,000, or up to as much as $729,750 for some high-cost areas. 

It can be hard for buyers to find lenders willing to lend more than the GSE loan limits because lenders have to hold such loans in their bank portfolio in the current financial situation. Until the recent financial crisis, lenders were able to sell mortgages above the GSE limits to companies that turned them into private mortgage-backed securities.  

Until the summer of 2008, the nationwide loan limit was $417,000, far too low to be of use to many homeowners and prospective homebuyers in California and other high cost areas, says U.S. Representative Brad Sherman (D-Calif.), who has proposed legislation raising the loan limits permanently to $729,750.

“Buyers in high cost areas, such as Southern California, are at an extreme disadvantage simply because of where they choose to work and live,” he says. “For the overall economy to recover, every part of the housing market needs to improve, including high cost areas.”

Higher loan limits can also help homesellers. If the limits correspond to market values, buyers can use less-expensive GSE loans, so the number of buyers who can afford your home increases. With more potential buyers, competition for individual properties increases. With more competition, the value of the property can increase. 

In the final analysis, the benefits of the GSEs outweigh the cost. Their long track record of making mortgages available in all markets benefits homeowners, communities, and the nation as a whole. 

Jeannette Bernay has been in the real estate industry for over two decades. She lives in western Washington State on an 8-acre lot shared with her two horses, two dogs, and three cats.

“Visit Houselogic.com for more articles like this. Reprinted from HouseLogic.com with permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®.”

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