Tag Archives: first time home buyer

Consumer-friendly options open doors for homebuyers

So you say you want to buy a home but you’re locked out of the market because you don’t have enough money for a down payment. Or you don’t have adequate savings to meet lenders’ requirements on financial reserves. Or you have a “thin” credit file that lenders find tough to score and accept.

Pushed by regulators and consumer groups to expand home loan opportunities for first-time and moderate-income buyers, major mortgage players have come out with nationwide programs designed to turn renters who are creditworthy – but don’t have big down payments or closing-cost cash – into home owners.

The newest option, known as the Affordable Loan Solution plan, launched Feb. 22. It allows for down payments as low as 3 percent, no minimum cash reserves, loan amounts as high as $417,000 and, unlike other low-down-payment mortgages, there are no charges for traditional private mortgage insurance. The latter alone can sometimes add hundreds of dollars a month onto buyers’ costs and make ownership difficult to afford, so this is a big deal. For applicants with thin or no credit bureau files, the program allows for consideration of non-traditional forms of credit, such as monthly rent payments, utility bills and the like. There is no minimum required contribution toward the down payment and closing costs, so applicants can supplement their own cash with gifts, such as from parents, or even use grants or secondary financing that is available through some local government agencies. Significantly, applications won’t go through the usual automated underwriting systems that generate instantaneous approval-disapproval decisions. Instead, they’ll be handled the old-fashioned “manual” way, allowing for more individualized evaluation – and verification – of applicants’ situations.

The program is a joint effort of Bank of America, giant mortgage investor Freddie Mac and the Self-Help Ventures Fund, an affiliate of Self-Help Credit Union, a community development lender. Starting Feb. 22, Bank of America began offering these mortgages through its network of 4,800 local financial centers around the country, as well as through its online and call center channels. The bank plans to sell the mortgages to Self-Help, which will provide early-intervention servicing to borrowers who experience payment difficulties. Freddie Mac will ultimately purchase the loans. Self-Help will provide a financial backstop to cover default losses in lieu of traditional private mortgage insurance coverage.

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How to start shopping for your first home

1. “Keep your credit in check.”
Approaching the homebuying process — and it is a process — begins with sizing up your finances. (Spoiler alert: you’re going to be writing some checks!) Your financial footing, including the state of your credit, plays an important part in obtaining a home loan: lenders look at the score on your credit report to determine if you pre-qualify (more on that later). Personal-finance expert suggests looking into your credit score several months before you hit the open-house circuit. She explains that you can pull your credit report for yourself once a year at no cost from each of the three major credit bureaus

2. “Get pre-qualified.”
With your credit in tip-top shape, next you’ll likely want to zero in on the budget range for your home purchase. “Before you even start shopping, you need to know how much a lender is willing to extend [to you] to purchase your first home,” says Quinn, who bought her first home with her husband at age 27. By meeting with mortgage brokers — at your own bank as well as others — and getting prequalified for a home loan will help to clarify that picture. While you may have done your own calculations, “only a lender can give you a truly accurate figure,” Quinn says.

3. “Sign up for email listing alerts.”
OK, your credit is tuned up and you have a price range in mind. We’re guessing by now you’re pretty eager to, you know, go see houses? To scour the inventory like a pro, real estate marketer  suggests seeking out home-search tools online such as email alerts about new listings. In signing up for these notifications you can filter for price, house size, community interior features and more, Fox says. “New homes that match your criteria [are] automatically emailed to you … often multiple times per day.”

read more at: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/11/04/first-time-homebuying-tips_n_8118304.html

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New Housing Bubble? Corporate Buyers Boosting Prices

bubbleDouble-digit home-price gains from San Francisco to Detroit to Miami have some aspiring home buyers racing back into the market.

But buyers, beware.

The housing market may not be as strong as you think.

Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for your home value questions.

Sure it’s tempting to want to lock in a low interest rate and take advantage of lower home prices before they rise further.

But it may make sense to take a breather before you buy a home and wait for prices to drop, as institutional investors might be inflating home prices.

Namely, Wall Street investors are scooping up homes in bulk, and there’s considerable concern this is inflating prices in certain areas of the country—and pricing individuals out of the market in general.

These institutional investors have been spending billions of dollars buying up single-family homes en masse. In 2012, institutional buyers purchased about 138,540 of both distressed and non-distressed homes in the U.S., or about 3% of all sales, according to RealtyTrac. It estimates institutional buyers purchased 32,355 homes in the U.S. in the first quarter of this year, or about

Read more at: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324299104578531132265680630.html?KEYWORDS=House+Sales

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