Category Archives: Mortgage Information

Home Financing Gets Reprieve From Surging Rates

Homebuyers are getting a break from escalating mortgage rates, a pause that may at least temporarily support a housing market that is showing signs of cooling down, according to data released Thursday.

The average rate for the popular 30-year fixed-rate mortgage has climbed about 1 percentage point since early May, recently hitting the highest level in two years, making monthly loan payments more expensive and cutting some plans to buy a home.

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But that rate dropped in the latest week, following the Federal Reserve’s decision not to start tapering its assets purchases that have kept long-term rates low. For the week that ended Sept. 26, the 30-year-mortgage rate averaged 4.32 percent, the lowest rate since late July, down from 4.5 percent in the prior week. The average 15-year rate decreased to 3.37 percent from 3.54 percent,

“These low rates should somewhat offset the house price gains seen the last number of months and keep housing affordability elevated,” said Frank Nothaft, chief economist for Freddie Mac.

The drop comes as there are signals that higher rates are taking a toll on the housing market. A gauge from the Mortgage Bankers Association shows that loan applications to purchase a home have dropped about 9 percent since early May. Data released Thursday showed that pending sales of homes — this is a forward-looking indicator for housing because sales typically close within two months — fell in August for a third straight month, thanks to higher interest rates and home prices, among other factors, according to the National Association of Realtors.

Read more at: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2013/sep/27/tp-home-financing-gets-reprieve-from-surging-rates/

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Marketing Tool – Taking Over a Seller’s Loan

Homeowners with a mortgage insured by the Federal Housing Administration or the Department of Veterans Affairs should consider using their loan terms as a marketing tool when it comes time to sell.

Mortgage loans from both government agencies include a little-known feature known as assumability. In other words, the buyer of a home financed with an existing F.H.A. or V.A. loan may be able to take over, or assume, the seller’s loan, under the same terms, rather than take out a new mortgage.

Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com they have VA and FHA certified appraisers that can answer your appraisal questions.

During periods when interest rates are rising, homes offered for sale with an assumable, lower-rate mortgage may have extra appeal for certain buyers.

“You could now have a seller saying, ‘I have a great house to sell you and a great mortgage to go with it, which is better than my neighbor, who only has a great house,’ ” said Marc Israel, an executive vice president of Kensington Vanguard National Land Services and a real estate lawyer. “It’s a very clever idea.”

The savings for buyers assuming a loan extend beyond a lower interest rate. Assuming a loan is cheaper than applying for a new one because there are fewer settlement fees. An appraisal is not required (though a buyer may want to obtain one anyway). And in New York, borrowers assuming a loan do not have to pay the hefty mortgage recording tax a second time, Mr. Israel said.

Read more at: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/22/realestate/taking-over-a-sellers-loan.html?_r=0&adxnnl=1&ref=realestate&adxnnlx=1379780189-lYijZBwT98cqscrTA/oVkw

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Help For Jobless Homeowners

California homeowners who receive jobless benefits can get mortgage aid through a $2 billion government program.

Keep Your Home California offers as much as $3,000 a month to qualified residents for up to 12 months. The benefit previously ended after nine months and was recently extended.

The extension can be particularly helpful to property owners whose unemployment aid will run out by year’s end, state officials said.

Funded by federal money, Keep Your Home California provides financial relief to households at risk of slipping into the foreclosure process. The goal is to catch homeowners up on mortgage payments, help them relocate after a short sale and cut their mortgage principal.

Unemployment aid has been the most-used aspect of Keep Your Home California among San Diego County homeowners. More than 80 percent of the 2,200 San Diegans who have benefited from the overall program to date received unemployment aid — representing $23.6 million of help. Statewide, that share is lower, at 68 percent.

Program qualifications include having a hardship, having a mortgage balance of $729,750 or less, not being in the foreclosure process. For a full list, click here. Want to talk to someone at Keep Your Home California? Call (888) 954-5337.

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