Showing posts with label mortgages. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mortgages. Show all posts

Monday, April 13, 2009

Mortgage Refinancing During a Recession


By: Ryan Dennin

Y
ou can’t turn on the news these days without hearing about how bad the economy is or about the recession looming on the horizon. This gloom and doom about the economy is putting many homeowners off refinancing their homes.

If you are in this situation and would benefit from refinancing your first and second to get a lower payment or just want a lower mortgage rate, there are still good deals available even if your credit is less than ideal. Here are several tips to help you refinance your mortgage during this economic recession. To read more click here.

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Congress takes a serious look at reforming the mortgage market


Posted by Yen Ho

Congress is preparing to take up a comprehensive plan that would fundamentally reform the home mortgage market, starting this year.

Had the same rules and standards been in place earlier in the decade, congressional supporters say, it could have eliminated much of the funny-money loans, slipshod underwriting and Wall Street abuses that distorted the market from 2002 through 2006. The boom wouldn't have been as big, and the bust might not have happened.

Read more

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Is buying a toxic mortgage for you?



Posted by Yen Ho

The feds are now buying bad mortgage loans owned by banks, planning to split a portion of the costs with private investors. This brings $500 billion in toxic mortgages up for grabs, with investors taking roughly half the profits.

The bottom line question is this: Are these delinquent loans still collectible? Can the buyers get any money back from the consumers that got the loans in the first place, or sell the home for more than the mortgaged amount? This is the only way to profit on this deal, other than selling off the noncollectable loans at a higher price to other investors down the road (an unlikely notion).


Read more

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Subprime mortgages fueled today's economic crisis



by Katherine Mejia

Subprime Mortgage lending is a major part of the reason why the American economy is in such turmoil today. This crisis has been coming for a long time, maybe because of new laws that were passed when new presidents came in, or maybe the crisis is at the hands of the lenders. People took advantage of the incredibly low interest rates and borrowed money for homes they could not afford. But it might have been the fact that lenders did not worry or care about the effects that this might have on the economy in the future.

We know now that it is too late to prevent the negative effects of subprime mortgage lending. Now it is up to us to get out of this crisis. Many obstacles lie ahead and the economy will eventuall turn around. The time it takes to turn around completely depends on us. A new president or bailouts will not alleviate the situation all on their own. It is up to the average American to learn from this crisis so that in the future such a predicament can be prevented.

There were many early warning signs that this would happen. Those who spoke about it were listened to but were not paid as much attention as they are now that were are waist deep in debt and there is no way to run away from this crisis. As early as 2004 many professionals were warning subprime lenders that in a not so distant future, borrowers were going to default on their loans. The fact that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, who were the biggest lenders until they were taken over by the treasury, were handing out loans to people with insufficient credit fueled this crisis as well as where the money was coming from. Both lenders were lending money with borrowed money creating a massive amount of debt that caused some of the biggest names in finance ( Lehman Brothers, Bear Sterns) to come crumbling down.


But it is not the lenders who will suffer the most from what has happened. It is the borrowers who are losing their homes all around the country the ones that are paying the consequences. Tax payers are also paying the consequences unfairly. While wall street calls itself the “biggest loser” it is a system that will recuperate when investors feel safe enough to take risks. But the average citizen is left hanging paying for bailouts and becoming homeless because of the situation they were put in due to greed and irresponsibility.

Sources:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/06/09/AR2008060902626.html

http://money.cnn.com/2007/08/10/markets/subprime_losers/index.htm

http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/reference/timestopics/subjects/m/mortgages/index.html

Subprime: The "new" homeless in the US



A BBC News report on how the subprime mortgage crisis has left many americans homeless.

Provided by Katherine Mejia

How Credit Scores Impact Mortgage Applications

This video shows Victor Benoun, President of The Mortgage Source explaining how credit scores impact mortgage applications, and how to improve your credit worthiness.



Posted by Andrew Moran