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
Unsold home inventory shot up 5.9% in February to 3.75 million while the average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage was 6.16% in February according to Freddie Mac.
Existing-home sales 3.9% rise in sales for February. It would take 6.7 months to sell off the excess inventory of homes at the current real estate sales pace.
Subprime woes have left the housing industry in an adjustment phase with borrowers with poor credit defaulting on mortgage loans. Estimates suggest it will cut housing demand by 100,000 to 200,000 units annually.
“Mortgage borrowers continue to refinance their mortgages at a higher frequency than historically would have occurred given the rise in mortgage rates over this year,” said Frank Nothaft, Freddie Mac vice president and chief economist.
“But the wide proliferation of adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) originated in the past few years that are nearing their first interest-rate adjustment provides borrowers an incentive to refinance into a lower-cost ARM or fixed-rate mortgage. In addition, borrowers who might have considered a prime rate home equity loan for a home improvement or other need are turning to cash-out refinance options now that the prime rate is above 8 percent.
The Cash-Out Refinance Report also revealed that properties refinanced during the third quarter of 2006 experienced a median house-price appreciation of 33 percent during the time since the original loan was made, down from a revised 34 percent in second quarter 2006. For loans refinanced in the third quarter of 2006, the median age of the original loan was 3.4 years, about two months older than the median age of loans refinanced during the second quarter of 2006.
- http://originatortimes.com
The Student Loan Program works by participating banks in the Federal Family Education Loan Program guaranteeing a return that is 2.34 percentage points over the market rate on commercial paper to banks. It’s a sweet deal for banks.
Student loans are risky loans, but not for banks. When the student defaults, the government reimburses lenders for up to 98% of the principal and accrued interest.
New federal student loan originators totaled $69 billion in the 2005 – 2006 school year. First year projections for the US just to send a rocket to the moon in order to build a base are estimated to run over $104 billion. That expense is projected to increase with construction and re-supply shipments.
Enter alter reality
Privately built and financed, SpaceShipOne Wins $10 Million Ansari X Prize in Historic 2nd Trip to Space (The Ansari X Prize is a $10 million purse for the first privately built vehicle that could safely haul a pilot and the equivalent weight of two passengers to the edge of space — then repeat the feat within two weeks.)
SpaceShipOne technology is currently owned by a Paul Allen company called Mojave Aerospace Ventures (MAV). Allen is a Microsoft co-founder and for $20 million, bankrolled the design and building of SpaceShipOne.
Instead of wasting fuel to send up tons of metal into the stratosphere, they simply sent an airplane to the stratosphere, pulled a lever that tilted back the wings and lit the rocket fuse that propelled it into outer space; simple, energy efficient. That leaves NASA’s government bureaucracy bogged down with expensive antiques and primitive concepts funded by taxpayers paychecks.
Enter Sir Richard Branson and his Virgin Galactic Enterprise – SpaceshipOne. Virgin Galactic is the world’s first off-the-planet private airline. Business plan: 50 passengers a month for space flight, paying $190,000 each. Core product: a two-hour flight beyond Earth’s atmosphere, wrapped in a three- day astronaut experience. Time frame: 2009.
Private enterprise will insure commercial space flights that will let ordinary individuals go into outer space with resorts projected showing up in about 25 years. Lunar resorts? You bet, they'll be no vacancy rate until the next ship.
NASA could be disbanded and scarce money be spent on a free US education for anyone that wants it.
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.
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.