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Choose an FHA loan!
May 5th, 2008 9:44 PM

FHA loans

There are lots of good reasons to choose an FHA loan, especially if one or more of the following apply to you:

If you are a first-time homebuyer, you don't have a lot of money to put down on a house, you're worried about qualifying for a loan or you don't have perfect credit.

If any of these things describe you, then an FHA loan may be right for you. Why? FHA-insured loans offer many benefits and protections that you won't find in other loans including:

Lower cost: FHA loans have competitive interest rates because the Federal government insures the loans for lenders. Always compare an FHA loan with other loan types.

Smaller down payment: FHA loans have a low 3% down payment and the money can come from a family member, employer or charitable organization as a gift. Other loan programs don't allow this.

Easier qualification: Because FHA insures your mortgage, lenders may be more willing to give you loan terms that make it easier for you to qualify.

Less than perfect credit: You don't have to have perfect credit to get an FHA mortgage. In fact, even if you have had credit problems, such as a bankruptcy, it's easier for you to qualify for an FHA loan than a conventional loan.

MK Mortgage Group LLC can provide you with the options you need to get a home.


Posted by L. Michael Trenkle on May 5th, 2008 9:44 PMPost a Comment (0)

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What You Need to Know About Refinancing Your Home
April 8th, 2008 9:18 PM

If your loan is among the $1 trillion in mortgages scheduled for payment increases by the end of the year. You need to take action, and the sooner the better. If you've still got some equity in your home and the ability to handle a larger payment, you may be able to switch to a smarter loan. Rates are low enough that it is not unusual to save money, even when going to a fixed rate mortgage. If your situation isn't as good, quick action can contain the damage to your personal finances.

It is very important to know where you stand with your mortgage. Get your mortgage documents that you signed at your last refinance or when you purchased your home and look them over for when your payment is scheduled to adjust.

You also need to find out whether you would face a prepayment penalty for refinancing your loan. Prepayment penalties unfortunately are common on loans extended to people with troubled credit, and until they expire, they can make a refinance more difficult to justify financially.

As interest rates inch up, your choice might not be so clear. Much depends on how long you expect to be in your house.

Your options will be dictated in large part by your credit score, particularly if you don't have much equity in your home or can't document your income with tax returns or other proof. You generally need a score of 700 or better to get the best rates and terms. If your scores are 660 or below you'll face more scrutiny from lenders and have a tougher time getting a loan.

This is very different from a year ago when lenders were falling over themselves to give no-down-payment and no-equity loans to borrowers with credit scores below 620 and income they couldn't or wouldn't prove.

Someone with credit scores in the 700’s who is able to document his or her income and who wants a loan for 95% or less of the home's value has plenty of options. People with challenged credit who want a 100% stated-income loan have fewer options than in the past.

Refinancing to a different loan will be tough, if not impossible, without at least some positive gap between what your home is worth and what you owe. Online home-value estimators such as Zillow, RealtyTrac and Domania can get you started, but you may get a more accurate figure by talking with a good mortgage broker or real-estate agent.

If you can refinance, your next step is deciding whether you should. What you should do next depends on the specifics of your situation. If your current, fully indexed rate is significantly higher than the rate you could get with a new refinanced loan, it is time to refinance, assuming there's no prepayment penalty.

The fact of the matter is that fixed rates, though higher, still are near generational lows, the gap between fixed and adjustable rates isn't great enough to justify going with an adjustable loan's greater risk. That's true for folks with good credit as well as for those with troubled credit.

As interest rates inch up, your choice might not be so clear. Much depends on how long you expect to be in your house.

The best advice is to speak to a licensed qualified mortgage profession, like those at MK Mortgage Group and see if it pays to refinance your loan. MK Mortgage Group is here to help and not just sell a new loan. Call anytime for free professional advice without pressure.


Posted by L. Michael Trenkle on April 8th, 2008 9:18 PMPost a Comment (0)

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How to Not Offend A Seller When Making A Low Offer
March 27th, 2008 1:38 PM

Do your homework and you might be able to make an aggressively low offer that a seller will accept -- or at least counter.

Home sellers are not automatically turning up their noses at offers that come in far below their asking prices these days as prices stagnate and the inventory of homes for sale remains elevated in many markets.

But buyers who ask for deep discounts still risk offending sellers to the point where they ruin any chance at making a deal. So before making an aggressive offer, some homework is in order. Further, buyers need to effectively explain why the price of a home should be lower.

There's a danger of them taking it too personally, When you're making the offer, if you justify that offer with outside data, then it's much less likely to be perceived as being an insult or (to the buyer) not as serious.

Here are some guidelines on how and when to make an aggressive offer for a home:

Certain sellers are going to be more willing than others to negotiate a low offer, and there are several clues that might indicate more leeway on price. For instance, if the sellers have already purchased another home and that sale has closed, they're likely to be more willing to make a deal.

And certainly if the property has been on the market for a long time, sellers will be interested in entertaining any offers.  The nuggets of information a buyer's agent gets can be clues as to what kind of offers they'll consider. Overall local market conditions also play a role. The housing market in many parts of the country are sluggish, and many homes have been on the market for a year or more.

When putting together an aggressive offer, create a cover letter explaining exactly where that number came from.

In addition to citing comparable sales in making the offer, it also could be important to include details regarding the amount of inventory in the immediate surrounding area, a good buyers agent can assist in this.

If just the relative values of the houses that sold, were looked at in many markets, you might end up paying too much for that house because the values will continue to fall in some areas. If there is two years' worth of inventory, in any specific market, you should be buying 5%, potentially 10% less than what houses have sold for in the past year in the neighborhood.

Buyers may even personally write a letter to the sellers to make their point, as they did when the market was hot and they aimed to stand out from the crowd. That way, they can detail what they like about the house but express their fear of future dropping values.

That's still not to say the seller will respond positively.

The difficulty we're having in the market right now is sale prices are not dropping much, things are just staying on the market longer. Buyers read about how terrible the market is sellers don't want to budge because they're reading that prices aren't falling.

A word of warning to buyers making very low offers, is that the seller might refuse to negotiate. On a super-aggressive offer, there's maybe a one-in-ten chance there will be a positive response.

Still, there's that potential for a seller to counteroffer, especially if there hasn't been many other bids. Sellers are beginning to think of a low offer, not as an insult but as a sign of interest.

It begins the dialogue regarding the purchase of a house. Also, not all hope is lost even if a seller doesn't bite immediately.

Sometimes after time elapses, the seller comes around and decides to negotiate. Or new information -- such as the sale of a comparable home at a lower price -- can nudge a seller to give an offer, even an aggressive one, a second look and open the negotiation process.


Posted by L. Michael Trenkle on March 27th, 2008 1:38 PMPost a Comment (0)

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Banks Are Cutting Back but MK Mortgage Has Options Most Lenders Don't!
March 21st, 2008 8:48 AM

Just when consumers and the U.S. economy need banks to lend more freely, the mortgage industry is making it harder to borrow — even for those with good credit.

Mortgage insurers, whose backing is required for borrowers who can’t afford the traditional 20 percent down payment on a home, have already flagged nearly a quarter of the nation’s ZIP codes where they refuse to insure some home loans.

That encompasses a wide variety of neighborhoods: McMansions in Scottsdale, Ariz.; luxury Miami condos; 1960 ranch houses in Flint, Mich.; and early 20th century kit homes in Metuchen, N.J. and condominiums in Las Vegas.

The entire states of California, Florida, Arizona, Michigan, Ohio and Nevada — which have seen the highest foreclosure rates and the worst price declines — are blackballed on some mortgage insurers’ lists.

Banks that have lost billions because of bad bets during the housing boom are now reverting to strict lending standards not seen in nearly 20 years, according to industry data and interviews with lenders.

For new home buyers and those seeking to refinance, it can mean higher down payments and a higher bar for credit scores, among other requirements. The toughest restrictions are in markets where home prices are falling, though regions where property values are rising are not immune.

Luckily for all of us in Colorado, MK Mortgage has the ability to lend to those who may not have 20% down. MK Mortgage Has built exceptional relationships with several lenders. These lenders are willing to work with a select number of brokers, nationally, to lend more money and provide fantastic financing opportunities that do not require mortgage insurance or the risks of adjustable loans.

We’re in the midst of an epic, broad, sweeping change in the mortgage industry, But this does not mean the end to several good opportunities, if you know who to talk to when looking for a mortgage.


Posted by L. Michael Trenkle on March 21st, 2008 8:48 AMPost a Comment (0)

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5 Reasons to Buy Today!
March 19th, 2008 5:16 PM

5 REASONS TO BUY

1. Prices in the neighborhood you are interested in are relatively stable. Either they are holding their own or increasing, or the pace of decline is slowing significantly. If you have to move and don't like apartments, the small penalty you pay for missing the bottom may not mean much, although many experts agree that we are near if not at the bottom of the housing crisis in many parts of the country.  We are especially lucky in Colorado, as for most of the state values have held steady or even shown small gains.

2. You plan to stay in the home for more than five years. If you can stick it out that long before selling, economists say you’ll probably ride out any downturn and come out ahead on price, especially considering that economic experts forsee the housing issues turning around by the end of 2008.

3. Your rent rivals a mortgage payment. If you can afford to buy, it can give you one bonus that renting can't: the mortgage-interest deduction on your taxes.

4. You've found the right house in the right area for you. The schools are great. You love the area and know it would be hard to find another house like the one you have your eye on. In a better market, you would most likely have much more competition for that home.  As you have probably heard before, this is a buyers market.  As such you can negotiate much better terms for your new hom than you could have just a couple of years ago!

5. You've built equity in your house and are moving to a place where homes are cheaper. In your new market, your money will go a lot further.


Posted by L. Michael Trenkle on March 19th, 2008 5:16 PMPost a Comment (0)

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Foreclosure 'crisis' is overblown
March 5th, 2008 7:39 AM

 

A recent list of year-end mortgage foreclosure rates in 100 top metropolitan areas drew a lot of attention. Released by RealtyTrac, a company that compiles data on home foreclosures, the list showed the number of foreclosure filings in each metro area, the percentage of homes being foreclosed and the percentage change from the previous year.

Though the report had some dismal news -- such as the nearly 4.9% foreclosure rate in the Stockton, Calif., area -- a close look at the data also provides some reassuring information. It tells me, for instance, that the foreclosure crisis is a regional problem, not a systemic one. It could become a systemic problem, of course, but we're a long way from that now.

This news will disappoint the gloom-and-doom crew and all those seeking the excitement of financial upheaval. But it may be time to temper our worry and take a closer look at some of the year-over-year foreclosure statistics:

  • Though the national rate of foreclosure increased by a whopping 79% between December 2006 and December 2007, the rate was still only 1.033%. Because about 30% of all homes are owned mortgage-free, this means that for all the noise about a crisis, only seven-tenths of 1% of all homes were in foreclosure.

  • In the top 100 housing markets, the average foreclosure rate was somewhat higher -- 1.38% -- and it was up 78% over the previous year. But if you rank-ordered the list of the top 100 areas, only 34 had foreclosure rates above the group average. Fifty-one areas had rates of 1% or less.

  • Foreclosure rates actually fell in 14 of the 100 areas. More important, many of the areas with the highest increases in foreclosure rates were rising off rates that were tiny. The Bethesda, Md., area, to offer the most extreme case, saw foreclosures rise 1,288% -- to a rate of 0.682%. In other words, foreclosures there were virtually nonexistent the year before. Today they are still well below the national average. The same can be said for the Albany, N.Y., area (up 638% to 0.25%), the Baltimore area (up 544% to 0.73%) and the Providence, R.I., area (up 354% to 0.41%).

Another pattern emerges if you cross the foreclosure rates with the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO) index of home prices. It shows that the top 10 foreclosure areas in America are areas of extreme price change -- changes far from the national average of 46.92% over the past five years. (See the table below.)

Seven of the top 10 foreclosure areas had experienced major price spikes in the past five years. Three of the top 10 foreclosure areas had experienced price increases that were dramatically lower than the national average. That pattern continues when you examine the top 25 foreclosure areas.

Another pattern emerges if you cross the foreclosure rates with the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO) index of home prices. It shows that the top 10 foreclosure areas in America are areas of extreme price change -- changes far from the national average of 46.92% over the past five years. (See the table below.)

Seven of the top 10 foreclosure areas had experienced major price spikes in the past five years. Three of the top 10 foreclosure areas had experienced price increases that were dramatically lower than the national average. That pattern continues when you examine the top 25 foreclosure areas.

A tale of two extremes:
Metro area Foreclosure rate, December 2007 Year-over-year increase of foreclosures 5-year home-appreciation rate

Detroit/Livonia/Dearborn, Mich.

4.92%

68.15%

-0.92%

Stockton, Calif.

4.87%

271.3%

65.07%

Las Vegas/Paradise, Nev.

4.23%

169.11%

88.33%

Riverside/San Bernardino, Calif.

3.83%

186.14%

107.80%

Sacramento, Calif.

3.12%

272.54%

56.9%

Cleveland/Lorain/Elyria/Mentor, Ohio

2.97%

112.43%

9.36%

Bakersfield, Calif.

2.96%

244.82%

113.82%

Miami

2.72%

106.13%

114.98%

Denver/Aurora, Colo.

2.64%

27.19%

10.83%

Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

2.63%

110.05%

94.29%

National average

1.03%

79.21%

46.92%

Average of top 100 metro areas

1.38%

78.23%

Not available

Sources: RealtyTrac, OFHEO

The seven areas with the top price appreciation for the past five years averaged a stunning 91.6% increase, nearly double the national average. The national average, in turn, was about triple the inflation rate for the period.

Small wonder the foreclosure rate is booming as well. Anyone who bought in the past few years with a 5% or 10% down payment has a good chance of being upside down as froth comes off the market. In those areas the problem is about irrational price spikes and the hazards they bring to homeownership.

Some would call this "a Cadillac problem" -- a great problem to have, like having more boats than you have water-skiers. Though 5% of the homeowners may be losing their homes, most of the other 95% probably feel significantly richer.

How much richer? Try this. Suppose you paid three times your income for a house and it nearly doubled in value over five years. What does that mean? It means your net worth grew by nearly three years of income. Try achieving that with your 401(k) plan. Even if you bought halfway through the surge, your gain is likely to be well more than one year of income. However you cut it, the change compares quite favorably with working and saving.


Posted by L. Michael Trenkle on March 5th, 2008 7:39 AMPost a Comment (0)

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Now Is The Time!
January 25th, 2008 8:04 AM

Homeowners facing resets on their adjustable-rate mortgages or hoping to refinance into less-burdensome loans may be the biggest beneficiaries of the Federal Reserve's surprise rate cut this week as mortgages continue to get cheaper.

As many as 2 million homeowners face ARM resets this year and declining interest rates hold out the promise of at least limiting the sticker shock of higher payments on loans linked to Treasury indexes used to calculate many adjustments.

Lower rates also will make it easier for homeowners to qualify for refinanced loans, mortgage professionals say.

 

"For anyone on the margin, this will provide some relief," said Richard Musci, vice president of Charles Schwab Bank. But he warned that for those already struggling or already behind on credit payments "the die has been cast."

The Federal Reserve's emergency interest-rate reduction of three-quarters of a percentage point brought the central bank's key lending rate down to 3.5% from 4.25%. It was the most aggressive one-time cut in more than two decades, and its bombshell nature underscored the Fed's worries that credit conditions for consumers and businesses are at a breaking point.

"Whenever you lower rates, it can't hurt the consumer," said Bernard Baumohl, managing director of the Economic Outlook Group. "The Fed never promised it could change things dramatically overnight. There's a certain timeline with a cut in rates of nine months to 18 months when the economy feels the benefits."

'Consumers should be able to afford more'

While mortgage rates are not specifically tied to the rates the Fed controls, they have dropped significantly in the last three weeks and may be drop further.

"Mortgage rates already have fallen and they still are falling," said Dave Loyst, vice president of retail lending at Stearns Financial in San Diego. "Every deal is a struggle, but we're still doing loans. I think this rate cut absolutely is going to help the real-estate market."

"This definitely will help the mortgage situation," Loyst said. "With rates falling, more people are able to qualify for refinancing and more people who were left out from buying homes before will be able to do so now."

Consider what's happened since September's rate cut for creditworthy Schwab borrowers. On Oct. 7, a 5-1 adjustable-rate mortgage of $350,000 carried a 6.52% interest rate, assuming a 20% down payment. (A 5-1 ARM gives borrowers a fixed interest rate for the first five years and then converts to a loan that adjusts annually after that.)

The rate this week for that same loan was 5.04%. That translates into an annual mortgage payment that's $5,100 cheaper, Musci said.

"This is the affordability piece," he said. "Consumers should be able to afford more (of their living and discretionary expenses) at these lower interest rates."

Get the paperwork started

Richard DeKaser, chief economist at National City Bank, encourages consumers to go for it now. "This doesn't apply to all cases, but for those who have an adjustable-rate mortgage and good credit this is probably a very good time to lock in some fixed rates for the long term."

But he warns that credit-lending standards are much tighter than they were two or three years ago when many borrowers took out their current loans, with full documentation of income required on nearly all loans.

"Don't go out and borrow money for the sake of borrowing money. But if consumers can consolidate and lower some credit-card debt, it probably makes sense to do so," he added.

Musci said those who want to refinance should get the paperwork started and look for lenders that offer a "float down" option that gives the borrower a one-time chance to lock in a lower rate should mortgage rates continue to fall in the wake of any additional Fed cuts.

"Even though it costs money to refinance, rates have gone down so much that you're probably locking in rates at the bottom or close to the bottom," Musci said.

Even though mortgage rates may be low, some homeowners may have trouble refinancing if the value of their house has fallen, as has been the case in many parts of the country. But home-price patterns vary by locale.

In Boston, for example, home prices are starting to inch up again after falling sharply, but in Bakersfield, Calif., more fallout is expected. So borrowers will need to monitor their property appraisals.

 


Posted by L. Michael Trenkle on January 25th, 2008 8:04 AMPost a Comment (0)

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The Mortgage Market and You
January 17th, 2008 7:39 PM
The Truth About the Mortgage Market

Denver, CO – Subprime mortgages have now been credited for bankrupting well over 110 lenders and seriously damaging operations at many major mortgage firms. They've reportedly wiped out 5 hedge funds, tens of thousands of jobs, and have led to millions of foreclosures with millions more on the way. And, as if that weren't enough, subprime mortgages are also blamed for massive volatility in the stock, bond, credit, futures, and real estate markets here in the US and around the globe. Some say losses in the mortgage securities market alone could reach hundreds of billions of dollars this year.

This means that, for any Americans looking to buy, sell, or refinance a home, they are confronting a very different market from the one that existed just 6-12 months ago.

How did this happen?
The recent real estate boom was fueled by a period of record home appreciation and historically low interest rates. Banks, in order to compete, loosened guidelines and began offering more funding to more borrowers through riskier, non-conforming or "exotic" mortgages.

These ideal lending conditions persisted for several years, supported by high demand, historical real estate data, home prices, and massive trading volume/profits on mortgage-backed securities and other financial instruments on Wall Street.

Then, in 2006, a slowdown in real estate led to a deterioration of home values, an increase in inventories, and ultimately to today's tightening of credit guidelines, leaving many investors unable to sell or refinance out of their existing positions. Many Americans who had tapped into their equity were suddenly tapped-out and overextended as home values fell. Foreclosures followed in record numbers and a re-valuation of mortgage bonds and other financial instruments created the credit/liquidity domino effect we're now experiencing.

Unfortunately, it's going to get a lot worse before it gets better. According to the latest estimates, over 2 million subprime and Alt-A adjustable rate mortgage (ARM) holders will face payment increases of up to 30%-100% when their loans reset in the next 2 to 18 months. These loans make up less than 40% of the total mortgage market, but the negative effects, as we have seen, of increased foreclosure activity can have a ripple effect throughout the industry and around the globe.

What does this mean to you and your mortgage?

Sellers: If you're planning on selling your home, be prepared for an even smaller pool of qualified buyers. While some experts predict a settling of this credit crisis over the coming year, tightened credit guidelines and diminishing mortgage products could knock out as many as 15%-30% of potential qualified buyers. Now is not the time to sit and wait for the best possible price. Have a serious talk with your real estate agent. Having experienced buying/selling transactions in your area, he or she can help you price your home accordingly. He or she can also help ensure that your buyers are pre-approved and stay pre-approved throughout the entire transaction.

Buyers: Get pre-approved by your mortgage professional. While there are a lot of great deals out there, getting credit is becoming tougher and tougher, and it's taking longer and longer to complete a transaction. Remember, what you qualify for today could change tomorrow in a volatile market. For those looking to refinance, keep this in mind. There is no time to delay! Communicate with your lender. Don't do anything that could negatively affect your credit, and make sure you get all your documentation in on time.

ARMs Borrowers: If your ARM is scheduled to reset in the next 2-18 months, you need to schedule an appointment with a mortgage professional right away. Whether your ARM is subprime, Alt-A, or even if you have a pre-payment penalty, don't let a default or foreclosure situation sneak up on you. Did you know that your monthly payments can increase anywhere from 30% to 100% once your loan resets? At the very least, give yourself the peace of mind of knowing what your adjusted payment will be.

Borrowers with less-than-perfect credit: Each week it seems lenders are shedding more and more mortgage products. Many lenders have stopped offering No-Doc loans and are reducing all forms of Stated-Income loans. While it might be challenging, borrowers with credit issues need to see a loan expert. Often they have credit repair resources and other strategies to help you reach your financial goals.

Finally, there's an important concept to embrace: all markets, while cyclical in nature, are self-correcting, be it credit, real estate, stocks, or bonds. For the last 6 or 7 years, real estate was booming and riding high. The correction we're experiencing now – while it seems harsh and could get much worse – is, in a sense, "natural" and directly related to the extremely loose guidelines and perhaps overzealous lending and leveraging during the boom cycle.

Posted by L. Michael Trenkle on January 17th, 2008 7:39 PMPost a Comment (0)

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