low mortgage rates

April 16, 2007

Option ARMs Subprime Loans

Option ARMs remain a viable option in the mortgage environment. Despite the many  problems in the mortgage market, lending brokers are still willing to make risky loans - including those that allow borrowers to make monthly payments that don't even cover the interest (so-called 'option ARMs'). Also , as reported in  Money New York, still is surprisingly still widely available are 'no-doc' loans, which require no income verification, and mortgages with no downpayment according on the CNN Money report on Apr 14, 2007

Spread the word

del.icio.us Digg Furl Reddit Ask BlinkList blogmarks Blogg-Buzz Google Ma.gnolia Netscape ppnow Rojo Shadows Simpy Socializer Spurl StumbleUpon Tailrank Technorati Windows Live Wists Yahoo! Help

Permalink • Print

March 9, 2007

Mortgage Woes Dump 500,000 Home On The U.S. Market

Rising subprime mortgage defaults can add 500,000 homes to the U.S. real estate inventory according to a Bloomberg morning report.  Speculation looms for New Century as they consider bankruptcy. In the meanwhile, new mortgage lending is halted at New Centrury.

Spread the word

del.icio.us Digg Furl Reddit Ask BlinkList blogmarks Blogg-Buzz Google Ma.gnolia Netscape ppnow Rojo Shadows Simpy Socializer Spurl StumbleUpon Tailrank Technorati Windows Live Wists Yahoo! Help

Permalink • Print

December 7, 2007

Mortgage Scams

One of the largely unreported white collar crimes in the mortgage business is that loan officers inflate the income of marginal buyers so they are approved to buy a home they can not possibly qualify for.

Greed on the part of the buyer for supposedly inflated home valuation and greed on part of the mortgage lender for a juicy commission. The bank regulators looked the other way, the mortgage higher ups tacitly approved the practice and now with a declining real estate market buyers are bailing out in droves. Foreclosures are rampant.

Unsuspecting investors buy these mortgage obligations from brokers assuming they bought a sound investment. For instance Goldman Sachs , one of the top sellers of C.M.O.’s (collateral mortgage obligations) for the past few years sold about $100 billion to unsuspecting investors.

With the real estate decline, the bubble popped and everyone is looking for a scapegoat.

The real cause is the mortgage scams and lack of enforcement in inflating mortgage applications at the entry level. With the interest only mortgage obligations, greed on part of all parties involved perpetuated the fiasco.

Spread the word

del.icio.us Digg Furl Reddit Ask BlinkList blogmarks Blogg-Buzz Google Ma.gnolia Netscape ppnow Rojo Shadows Simpy Socializer Spurl StumbleUpon Tailrank Technorati Windows Live Wists Yahoo! Help

Permalink • Print • 2 Comments

May 10, 2007

Mortgage Rates, Home Sales and Trends

Mortgage rates have remaind stable due to the Federal Reserve not raising interest rates. The pre-owned single family home sales market is soft this seaon. Subprime lending and adjustable rate market find many battling foreclosure because of greed for home ownership and premium interest rates. Consumers with poor credit and financial flaws put themselves and their banks in risk.

Prices are going raising as the cost of living goes up. Property values shrinking, wages and the job market is still decent. The burden of local, state and the federal government are spending money like drunken sailors and it's only the American fighting attitude that keeps the working guy/gal able to continue. We all know that consumer inflation is far higher than the 2.1 percent official CPI inflation rate. Politicians are “cooking” the books. Eventually the markets will self-correct, but will we ever get spend-thrift politicians?

Spread the word

del.icio.us Digg Furl Reddit Ask BlinkList blogmarks Blogg-Buzz Google Ma.gnolia Netscape ppnow Rojo Shadows Simpy Socializer Spurl StumbleUpon Tailrank Technorati Windows Live Wists Yahoo! Help

Permalink • Print • Comment

December 28, 2006

Home Prices Outlook and Mortgage Risk Factors

Forecasts imply that even if there is a housing recovery, home prices will raise very much. The national median existing home price is making an annual decline. Dampening demand, the national inventory of unsold homes now stands at 7.4 months. A year ago the supply was 4.5 months. Home sellers need to trim prices further as incentive to buyers. The prevailing buyers market is alarmingly close to making the statistic of the first time since the Great Depression that there was a annual national median home price decline.

Mortgage risks are compounding the problems. The Center of Responsible Lending said that 2.2 million subprime home loans have failed or will end in foreclosure. The report said that 19% of subprime mortgages originated in the past two years will end in foreclosure. That is almost one in five subprime loans.

Most loans are not subprime. The MBA (Mortgage Bankers Association in Washington DC) says that recent foreclosure data indicates a 1.05% foreclosure rate with a 3.86 percent jump for subprime loans.

Some agency is twisting the truth. Nevertheless, a home for most families is the greatest financial asset a family has and losing it has a huge impact.

Spread the word

del.icio.us Digg Furl Reddit Ask BlinkList blogmarks Blogg-Buzz Google Ma.gnolia Netscape ppnow Rojo Shadows Simpy Socializer Spurl StumbleUpon Tailrank Technorati Windows Live Wists Yahoo! Help

Permalink • Print