Buyers May Want to Look at FHA Again

If you saw the White House announcement of lower insurance payments on Federal Housing Administration home mortgages this month, you might have wondered: Does this matter to me as a potential homebuyer or refinancer? Who specifically will benefit from the decrease in fees?

The Obama administration estimates that by lowering FHA’s annual mortgage insurance premiums by half a percentage point, as many as 250,000 new buyers will be able to purchase a house.

That’s great news and overdue. FHA almost priced itself out of competition with giant investors Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac by raising its premiums several times in recent years. FHA made itself too expensive and its market share has plunged.

So who is best positioned to take advantage of the new, more consumer-friendly mortgage pricing? Here’s a quick overview.

Start with your FICO credit score. If you’ve got a score between 620 and 719 and you have a down payment of 5 percent or less, FHA is likely to become your first choice in terms of monthly payments. It will cost you less in principal, interest rate and mortgage insurance charges compared with what you’d pay for a “conventional” loan eligible for purchase by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac with private mortgage insurance.

Consider this example using data provided by MGIC, one of the major private insurance underwriters.

Say you want to buy a $220,000 first home with a 5 percent down payment. You’ve got a slightly below average FICO score between 680 and 699. Before the premium reduction, your monthly payment using a 30-year FHA loan at current interest rates would have been $1,225.

The same conventional loan with private mortgage insurance would have cost you $1,168 a month — $57 less than FHA. After the premium reduction, the monthly payment on the FHA loan will drop to $1,138 — $30 cheaper than the conventional alternative.

read more at: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2015/jan/18/tp-buyers-might-want-to-look-at-fha-again/

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

Solar Lender Expanding to SoCal

Disclaimer:  Southern California Appraisal Services does not endorse any companies mentioned in blog posts.  If you are thinking about solar and need some advice you can contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com or contact the CSE energycenter.org they have courses for homeowners considering solar.

Santa Rosa-based lender Ygrene is trying to expand its footprint in the San Diego-area market for green home-improvement loans, taking on three well-established providers.

Ygrene specializes in so-called PACE financing — short for property assessed clean energy — that is paid back through property tax assessments and can be passed on to the next property owner. Property-assessed loans can be spent on a host of energy- and water-conservation upgrades to homes and businesses.

Ygrene is up and running within Chula Vista, where it had 50 projects worth $4.5 million completed or under construction at the end of 2014, but hit a roadblock as it attempted to expand into other jurisdictions, explained Crystal Crawford, a former Del Mar council member and Ygrene’s regional director for Southern California.

She says Ygrene is the only PACE lender in the state offering 30 year solar loans to homeowners. The loan carries an interest rate of 8.49 percent. It also offers loans to businesses.

Ygrene’s interest rate on a five-year loan is 5.99 percent; a 20-year loan is 8.25 percent.

read more at: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2015/jan/29/ygrene-property-assessed-loans/

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

Zillow Estimate Is No Sure Bet

We get this questions all the time from Homeowners: “why was zillows estimate so low, or so off the appraisal?”  The way I explain it to home owner is this.  Zillows takes all the sales in a zip code or area and runs your property address through complicated logarithms and then comes up with an estimate.

First Zillows does not go into your home. You could have completely updated your home, added square footage and so could your neighbors, and they have no way of verifying it.

Second I use La Jolla as an example.  La Jolla has beach front properties, it has multimillion dollar estates, small cottages with no views, homes with no parking etc.  You could go 10 blocks from the ocean which more than likely will have a whole different value range from beach front.  Well Zillows basically takes all the sales data runs it through some “fancy” math and comes up with an estimate.  The computer cannot quantify what a lot of humans find valuable.

This is why real estate appraisers and real estate agents are so important.  Not only can appraisers use the same complicated math that zillows does they also inspect your property, your neighbor’s property and the neighborhood.    Appraisers and Agents are very familiar with the local market and when it comes to home value, selling, and buying it is a very personal, human activity.

Article: Seattle-based Zillow is the most popular online real-estate information site, with 73 million unique visitors in December.

Along with active listings of properties for sale, it also provides information on houses that are not on the market.

You can enter the address or general location in a database of millions of homes and likely pull up key information — square footage, lot size, number of bedrooms and baths, photos, taxes — plus a Zestimate.

Shoppers, sellers and buyers routinely quote Zestimates to real-estate agents — and to one another — as gauges of market value.

If a house for sale has a Zestimate of $350,000, a buyer might challenge the sellers’ list price of $425,000. Or a seller might demand to know from potential listing agents why they say a property should sell for just $595,000 when Zillow has it at $685,000.

Disparities like these are daily occurrences and, in the words of one real-estate agent who posted on the industry blog ActiveRain, they are “the bane of my existence.”

read more at: http://seattletimes.com/html/businesstechnology/2025624176_bizharney08xml.html

disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only