A New Way To Finance Your Home Improvements: HERO Program

heroThe HERO Program (Home Energy Renovation Opportunity) provides property owners in California a new way to finance a wide variety of home improvements to conserve water and save energy including: solar power, energy efficient HVAC, windows, roofing, water capture systems and artificial turf.

Will energy efficiency add value to your home?  Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for your value questions.

HERO works closely with property owners and contractors to ensure
that consumers are paying a fair price, work is done to the
consumer’s satisfaction and we’re available to assist with any
disputes that may arise.

The repayment of HERO Financing is included in your property tax bill, which is delivered and collected by the County. You will see a line item titled HERO Financing on your property tax bill. If you make property tax payments through an impound escrow account, your lender will adjust your monthly payment to include the amount due for HERO Financing.

get more info at: https://www.heroprogram.com/

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

Many Home Equity Loans are Facing a Reset Point

A decade ago, when home values were soaring, many homeowners financed all sorts of spending using home equity lines of credit, often borrowed in addition to a mortgage.

Many of these credit lines have a 10-year draw period, during which borrowers may use the money as needed and make interest-only payments. After the draw period, the loans typically become regular installment loans, with terms of 10 to 20 years — meaning the principal must be repaid as well.

As a result, many borrowers face what could be a significant increase in monthly payments this year or during the next several years.

Maria Giordano, a onetime trauma nurse who is now a full-time real estate investor in Phoenix, says she expects the $400 monthly payment on the equity line of credit on her suburban home to nearly double after the loan resets in 2017. She took out the loan in 2007, she says, to pay for renovations and a new patio. She was reluctant to sell the house after the real estate downturn, but has decided to put it on the market now and pay off the debt, since property values have rebounded enough to create significant equity.

For borrowers like Ms. Giordano who have equity in their homes, the looming reset is less threatening than it might be. If they don’t want to sell, but have good credit, they can try to refinance the loan at current interest rates, which are now quite low, either as a new line of credit or as part of an overall refinancing package that replaces their first mortgage and home equity line with a single home loan.

But Daren Blomquist, vice president of RealtyTrac, which compiles housing data, says not everyone will be so fortunate. RealtyTrac recently estimated that about 3.3 million home equity credit lines totaling $158 billion and originating between 2005 and 2008 were still open and were scheduled to reset between 2015 and 2018. For those loans, the average increase in monthly payments was estimated to range from $138 for loans resetting in 2016 to $161 for those in 2018. More than half — about 1.8 million loans — were on homes that were seriously underwater, meaning the borrower owed more in total debt than the home is worth.

For underwater borrowers, refinancing may be difficult — especially if they have less-than-stellar credit.

read more at: http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/15/your-money/many-home-equity-loans-are-facing-a-reset-point.html?_r=0

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

Cool Inventions for the Home funded through Kickstarter

butter

Founders: Sacha Pantschenko, 30, Craig Andrews, 49 and Norman Oliveria, 27

Location: Sydney, Australia

Crowdfunding​ target: $38,000

Funds raised: $360,286

ButterUp​ provides a solution to the age-old problem of spreading cold butter straight from the fridge.

Using a line of holes at the knife’s edge, butter is grated into thin ribbons that can be easily spread straight onto bread.

“We started on designing a better container without much success, until one morning the idea came about to integrate a spreading blade with a grater,” Pantschenko says.

‘Having never managed something at this scale and learning how to managing every facet of the process from prototype to customer enquiries has been a very steep learning curve.”

Butter-Up was originally priced at $12 each. Those interested can register to pre-order via the product’s website.

see all at: http://news.domain.com.au/domain/real-estate-news/mindblowingly-cool-inventions-for-the-home-from-kickstarter-20150501-1muz19.html