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Equity Credit Lines and Second Mortgages are Making a Comeback

WASHINGTON — Using your home as an ATM no longer is a financial option, but the tools that allowed owners to pull out massive amounts of money during the boom years — equity credit lines and second mortgages — are making a comeback.

Want to take that money and add value to your home?  Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for your value questions.

Banking and credit analysts say the dollar volumes of new originations of home equity loans are rising again, significantly so in areas of the country that are experiencing post-recession rebounds in property values. These include California, Arizona, New Mexico, most of the Atlantic coastal states, the Pacific Northwest, Texas and parts of the Midwest.

Not only have owners’ equity positions grown substantially on a national basis since 2011 — up an estimated $1.7 trillion during the last 18 months, according to the Federal Reserve — but banks increasingly are willing to allow owners to tap that equity. Unlike during the credit bubble years of 2003-06, however, they aren’t permitting owners to go whole hog: mortgaging their homes up to 100% of market value with first, second and even third loans or credit lines.

Now major lenders are restricting the combined total of first and second loans against a house to no more than 85% of value. For instance, if your house is worth $500,000 and the balance on your first mortgage is $375,000, you’d probably be limited to a second mortgage or credit line of $50,000.

Contrast this with 2007, the high-point year of home-equity lending, when many lenders offered “piggyback” financing packages that allowed 100% debt without private mortgage insurance. A buyer of a $500,000 house could get a $400,000 first mortgage and a second loan of $100,000.

That ultimately didn’t work well for the banks. During the third quarter of 2012 alone, according to federal estimates, banks wrote off $4.5 billion in defaulted equity loans, often in situations in which homeowners found themselves underwater and behind on both first and second loans.

In such a situation, second mortgages become essentially worthless to the bank since in a foreclosure, the holder of the first mortgage gets paid off first. On underwater foreclosures, the second loan holder is left holding the bag.

Read more at: http://articles.latimes.com/2013/apr/19/business/la-fi-harney-20130421

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