Thursday, July 23, 2009

When Taxpayers Welcome Taxes - marijauna

Steven D. Levitt, Freakonomics

It’s not often that you see a quote like this.


Referring to a new tax that will fall squarely on the shoulders of his business and just a few others, Steve DeAngelo said in a CNN article,

  And we decided to step up to the plate and make a contribution to the city in a time of need.

Remarkably, DeAngelo is not just willing to pay this new tax, he actually led the effort to get the tax approved. His business will now have to pay $350,000 in additional taxes next year because of the new tax.

Why is DeAngelo so eager to pay these taxes? I’m almost certain it is not because he is an altruist.

The real answer, I suspect, is that he is generating $19 million a year in revenues selling in a market (medical marijuana) that is barely legal. And DeAngelo probably suspects that taxation will increase the likelihood that his business remains legal, for two reasons.

to see the rest of the story

Friday, July 10, 2009

A dog rescuer's answering machine

A RESCUERS ANSWERING MACHINE: Hello: You have reached ___-____, Tender Hearts Rescue. Due to the high volume of calls we have been receiving, please listen closely to the following options and choose the one that best describes you or your situation:

Press 1 if you have a 10-year-old dog and your 15-year-old son has suddenly become allergic and you need to find the dog a new home right away.

Press 2 if you are moving today and need to immediately place your 150 pound, 8-year-old dog.

Press 3 if you have three dogs, had a baby and want to get rid of your dogs because you are the only person in the world to have a baby and dogs at the same time.

Press 4 if you just got a brand new puppy and your old dog is having problems adjusting so you want to get rid of the old one right away.

Press 5 if your little puppy has grown up and is no longer small and cute and you want to trade it in for a new model.

Press 6 if you want an unpaid volunteer to come to your home TODAY and pick up the dog you no longer want.

Press 7 if you have been feeding and caring for a "stray" for the last three years, are moving and suddenly determine it's not your dog.

Press 8 if your dog is sick and needs a vet but you need the money for your vacation.

Press 9 if you are elderly and want to adopt a cute puppy who is not active and is going to outlive you.

Press 10 if your relative has died and you don't want to care for their elderly dog because it doesn't fit your lifestyle.

Press 14 if you are calling at 6 a.m. to make sure you wake me up before I have to go to work so you can drop a dog off on your way to work.

Press 15 to leave us an anonymous garbled message, letting us know you have left a dog in our yard in the middle of January, which is in fact, better than just leaving the dog with no message.

Press 16 if you are going to get angry because we are not going to take your dog that you have had for fifteen years, because it is not our responsibility.

Press 17 if you are going to threaten to take your ten year old dog to be euthanized because I won't take it.

Press 18 if you're going to get angry because the volunteers had the audacity to go on vacation and leave the dogs in care of a trusted volunteer who is not authorized to take your personal pet.

Press 19 if you want one of our PERFECTLY trained, housebroken, kid and cat friendly purebred dogs that we have an abundance of.

Press 20 if you want us to take your dog that has a slight aggression problem, i.e. has only bitten a few people and killed your neighbor's cats.

Press 21 if you have already called once and been told we don't take personal surrenders but thought you would get a different person this time with a different answer.

Press 22 if you want us to use space that would go to a stray to board your personal dog while you are on vacation, free of charge, of course.

Press 23 if it is Christmas Eve or Easter morning and you want me to deliver an eight week old puppy to your house by 6:30 am before your kids wake up.

Press 24 if you have bought your children a duckling, chick or baby bunny for Easter and it is now Christmas and no longer cute.

Press 25 if you want us to take your female dog who has already had ten litters, but we can't spay her because she is pregnant again and it is against your religion..

Press 26 if you're lying to make one of our younger volunteers feel bad and take your personal pet off your hands.

Press 27 if your cat is biting and not using the litter box because it is declawed, but you are not willing to accept the responsibility that the cat's behavior is altered because of your nice furniture.

Press 28 if your two year old male dog is marking all over your house but you just haven't gotten around to having him neutered.

Press 29 if you previously had an outdoor only dog and are calling because she is suddenly pregnant.

Press 30 if you have done "everything" to housebreak your dog and have had no success but you don't want to crate the dog because it is cruel.

Press 31 if you didn't listen to the message asking for an evening phone number and you left your work number when all volunteers are also working and you are angry because no one called you back.

Press 32 if you need a puppy immediately and cannot wait because today is your daughter's birthday and you forgot when she was born.

Press 33 if your dog's coat doesn't match your new furniture and you need a different color or breed.

Press 34 if your new love doesn't like your dog and you are too stupid to get rid of the new friend (who will dump you in the next month anyway) instead of the dog.

Press 35 if you went through all these 'options' and didn't hear enough. This press will connect you to the sounds of tears being shed by one of our volunteers who is holding a discarded old dog while the vet mercifully frees him from the grief of missing his family.

~Author Unknown, but much appreciated

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Mortgage Originations Ready to Explode

By: Tom Kerr | May 06, 2009

Mortgage originations may soon hit a whopping $3.1 trillion, mostly because of a huge surge in mortgage refinances that are expected to continue to boom. With mortgage rates at all-time lows, millions of savvy American homeowners are taking full advantage of them.


The Mortgage Bankers Association now reports that the Federal Reserve's plan to buy up more than a trillion dollars' worth of mortgage assets from the credit markets is actually working. As mortgage rates plummet to levels that haven't been seen in decades, the number of mortgage originations is soaring. 

With house prices at bargain basement levels, Americans have been anxious to get back into the real estate market. They have, however, been naturally skeptical and cautiously tentative as the economy struggles with a global crisis. But a concerted government effort is starting to pay dividends as mortgage rates are dropping, banks are easing credit restrictions, and lenders are seeing a big spike in mortgage refinancing.

New buyers now have 8,000 new reasons to take the leap, because President Obama has created an emergency tax benefit worth $8,000. The savings are available to so-called new homebuyers, which the IRS defines as those people who haven't owned a home within the past three years. Lots of people are in that category these days, even if they used to own a home before the markets peaked. This special tax break doesn't have to be repaid like some of the other tax incentives proposed last year. As tax season coincides with the arrival of springtime-which is the busiest time of year for real estate sales-motivated buyers are starting to shop with real determination to purchase a house and save some cash.

Mortgage refinance explosion

Meanwhile, the volume of mortgage refinances is also going up significantly, and is now at a level that hasn't been seen in about five years. Millions of American homeowners are in a rush to convert their existing loans into more affordable ones at historically cheap mortgage rates before those rates begin to climb back up again, which will likely be soon.
Mortgage originations create busy underwriters

The increased number of mortgage originations and mortgage refinances has caught many lenders off guard and understaffed. Stringent lender guidelines and regulations are essential in order to avoid another mortgage crisis; but with that kind of oversight comes painstaking underwriting that takes time and is labor intensive. Technological enhancements and upgrades are being implemented at many major lending institutions to help speed up the underwriting process, and mortgage companies are hiring more staff. Bank of America CEO Ken Lewis told reporters that his bank, for example, recently added 5,000 new employees just to handle the renewed activity.  

Officials at Fannie Mae also agree that the mortgage business is robust, and they anticipate that the volume of mortgage refinances will continue to grow as more homeowners find out that they're eligible for attractive loan modifications under President Obama's new Making Home Affordable program.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

NY Times says allure grows for Reverse Mortgages

By ELSA BRENNER
NY Times, Published: May 1, 2009

RETIREES everywhere whose savings have shriveled in the credit crisis are turning to reverse mortgages to meet their expenses — and in places like Westchester County, where high property taxes also weigh heavily on their shoulders, such loans have become more popular.

For owners 62 or older faced with bad timing, and perhaps hoping for eventual improvement in their portfolios, it can be sensible to stay put, making use of a reverse mortgage to borrow against the equity in the home tax-free, with no requirement to pay the money back as long as the borrower lives in the home.

Describing many of his clients as “house rich and cash poor,” Mr. Krooks explained that this situation affords Westchester retirees “a much-needed, day-to-day income stream to meet their expenses.”

According to the federal government, the volume of reverse mortgages increased 24 percent in March compared with February , setting a national monthly record of 11,261 reverse-mortgage loans. And as the market for them booms, the profile of those using them is expanding, Mr. Lamoreaux said. “It used to be just the 75-year-old widow,” he added, “but that’s not so anymore.”

Nowadays, the loans are becoming more popular both with recent retirees and the very elderly — though the motivations are very different.

Mr. Lamoreaux cited the example of clients of his in their 60’s “who had lived large when they were younger,” owned a vacation home and had taken out two or more mortgages on their primary residence to finance their children’s education. As a result, they had few resources left to carry them through retirement, especially with their investments depleted.

Another couple he counseled had been looking forward to retirement in the next few years and had planned to sell their home in northern Westchester and move, permanently, to their vacation home in North Carolina. Then, last month, the husband was laid off by his company as part of a cost-cutting measure.

The couple faces a new reality: the value of their home has plummeted from its peak two years ago, and the monthly payments on their seven-year interest-only mortgage are about to go up — just as their income is evaporating. They are candidates for a reverse mortgage to help refinance their debt and buy them time to regroup and consider their options.

Another couple, in their late 80s, recently told him their reason for needing a reverse mortgage: “We’re not supposed to be alive to need money to live now, but here we are.”

to learn more, call me Bill Hendrick at 303-440-6900 or email bhendrick@yourloanteam.com

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Reverse Mortgage - Suze Orman finally gets it right


Suze Orman video - after bad-mouthing Reverse Mortgages, Suze comes out and explains why using a Reverse Mortgage is better than selling stocks at the bottom!



for more info on Reverse Mortgages, contact:



Bill Hendrick

Home Savings of America

Boulder, CO



303-440-6900



bhendrick@yourloanteam.com

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Now That Home Affordable is in Action, a Few Tips

By: Alison Paoli, Zillow PR Coordinator April 21, 2009

As more details emerge about President Obama’s Home Affordable Refinance plan - which was started to help more homeowners refinance into loans with lower monthly costs - we’re finding many people still have questions about how it’s supposed to work, so we wanted to provide you with some more tips. We went right to the experts: three of our friends in the mortgage industry, Justin McHood, John Paunan and Dan Green (who has some of his own tips for refinancing).

Over the last few weeks, we’ve delved into who should qualify for the Home Affordable plan and updated Zillow users on when and how the plan should work. And just last Friday, a reader named Stan commented in the original Home Affordable refinance blog post, saying he got approved for a refi under the plan.

But for those of you who still aren’t sure how to proceed, read on.

One of the best pieces of advice we heard so far was to think of the Home Affordable Refinance program as a typical refinance, but with new loan-to-value parameters (homeowners who owe between 80% and 105% of their home’s value qualify).

There may still be appraisal and fee requirements, but they could vary based upon the individual lender. And, yes, refinancing is a long, drawn-out process; the borrower needs to be patient. While this program is not a quick ‘n easy fix for all, it may help those who have been unable to do a traditional refinance, would like to get a lower rate on their mortgage or would like to refinance out of that adjustable-rate mortgage.

Steps and Tips

1. Check to see if your current mortgage is owned by Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae (if not, you’ll have to pursue a traditional refinance):
a. Fannie Mae’s lookup tool
b. Freddie Mac’s lookup tool

2. If you do have a Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac loan, start gathering the required documents:
a. Most recent pay stub
b. Most recent bank statement
c. Two years’ worth of W-2s and tax returns
d. Most recent mortgage coupon/stub
e. Information about any second mortgage you may have on your home
f. Account balances and minimum monthly payments due on all of your credit cards
g. Account balances and monthly payments on all your other debts such as student loans and car loans

Some lenders may ask for more documentation, but this is a basic list to get started.

3. According to the public relations director at Freddie Mac, if your loan is held by Freddie Mac, you will only be able to refinance through your current servicer or an affiliate. Your servicer is responsible for collecting your monthly loan payments and crediting your account. A servicer also handles your escrow account, if you have one. To find out who your servicer is, look at your most recent mortgage coupon/stub. Call your servicer to find out if they are part in the Home Affordable Refinance program.

4. If your loan is held by Fannie Mae, you have a choice: you can go to your servicer, or shop around for the best rate and find a broker or loan officer that can meet your needs. It’s important to shop around because some lenders may require a minimum credit score while others don’t, and the fees will vary from lender to lender.

5. For loans held by Fannie Mae you can use Zillow Mortgage Marketplace to get immediate, anonymous quotes from thousands of mortgage professionals.

6. Once you find a lender you like and trust, be prepared to sit tight and wait it out. Since the program is brand new, it could take some time for lenders to run at full efficiency.

Red Flags:

During your search for a lender, here are a couple of red flags to be aware of:

1. Beware of mail and e-mail solicitations. If it seems too good to be true, it probably is. In fact, anytime you get a direct mail piece or a telemarketer makes you an offer, be sure to do your research online about the offer, the company and the person.
2. Ask your provider if the lender is placing any price adjustments or extra conditions for approval on your loan. In layman’s terms, ask if they are increasing your interest rate above the base rate for any reason and why. If so, you may want to shop around further.

for more information, please contact Bill Hendrick at bhendrick@yourloanteam.com

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

How to nab a low-rate home loan


Getting a new loan can save you a bundle, but cautious lenders will make you jump through hoops. These strategies can help.


April 17, 2009



(Money Magazine) -- On paper it seems like the perfect time to refinance. The average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage recently hit a 20-year low when it fell below 5% in mid-March. And the Fed has said that it will spend $300 billion to buy back government-backed Treasury bonds; that will probably keep loan rates low for months to come.


But wade into the mortgage market, and you may quickly feel as if you're trying to grab a dollar in a game-show booth where the money is blowing around: Those ultralow rates are right in front of you, yet maddeningly elusive.



Lenders, grappling with deadbeat homeowners and shifting regulations, have pared back on mortgage products and upped credit requirements. Still, you have a good incentive to try: If you took out a mortgage two years ago, when rates were in the mid-sixes, you stand to drop your rate nearly two percentage points, saving almost $300 a month on a $300,000 loan. Here's how to navigate the roadblocks.


Figure out if you qualify. Nowadays, credit score and equity are king. To land the best rates, you'll probably need a credit score of at least 740, and 20% equity. "Banks are looking for reasons not to lend you money," says Mark Miskiel of Lighthouse Mortgage in Sedona, Ariz.


If you don't have 20% equity, a refi isn't out of the question - President Obama's housing package allows homeowners who owe as much as 105% to receive government-backed loans. To qualify for that program, however, your original mortgage must be held by one of the government-sponsored entities, Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae; you must prove that you can keep up with payments; and you'll get stuck with fees that tack 0.25% to 3% onto your rate.


Get rid of the HELOC. Home-equity loans and lines have become the enemy of would-be refinancers. Before you can close on a new loan, your home-equity lender must agree to "subordinate" the secondary loan (meaning that your primary lender will get repaid first in the event you run into financial trouble). That can take at least a month, says Bob Moulton of the Americana Mortgage Group in Manhasset, N.Y.



One way to speed up the process is to do a consolidation refi through your home-equity lender. If that's not possible, aim to submit the subordination paperwork as you start shopping for a primary mortgage. And know that other lenders may add up to 0.25% to your rate to cash out the secondary loan.


Know where to look. No matter how stellar your credit, you won't get a great rate without doing some serious shopping. That's because every bank is using different standards for underwriting loans, so while you may look like a risky borrower to one, another may welcome you with open arms. In general, says Keith Gumbinger of mortgage data firm HSH Associates, you're likely to get the best rates from small local banks and credit unions.



Unfortunately, if you need a jumbo loan (typically $417,000, but it can go up to $729,750 in high-cost areas), you can kiss those super-low rates goodbye. While jumbos normally run about half a percentage point higher than smaller ones, today the spread is a point and a half.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

New reverse mortgage limits give seniors lifeline


April 17th, 2009


Boston Globe journalist Tom Kelly writes that while job cuts and dwindling investment accounts continue to plague wage-earning households, many seniors continue to wonder how long their once-healthy retirement funds will provide them with the cash needed for their leisure years.
He points to reverse mortgages and how some good news arrived recently for older homeowners who continue to make mortgage payments on their primary residence.

"This is a great opportunity for seniors to tap into additional funds to offset losses they may have experienced in the current economic environment," said Sarah Hulbert, president of Senior Financial Corp., a reverse mortgage lender. "There are a great number of seniors in homes valued significantly over the old limit of $417,000 limit who will be able to maintain or enhance their standard of living through the implementation of this new loan limit."


Darryl Hicks, vice president of the National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association, a nonprofit trade group based in Washington, D.C., said there is anecdotal evidence that reverse mortgages are helping seniors to avoid foreclosure, but the organization has no hard data to support the claim. NRMLA expects even more activity with the new loan ceilings as seniors look for ways to escape high monthly mortgage payments.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Colorado provides additional help for first-time homebuyers


The Colorado Housing and Finance Authority rolled out a mortgage program Tuesday that advances a new federal tax credit for first-time homebuyers so they can purchase a home more easily.

Under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, first-time homebuyers who purchase a property before Dec. 1 can receive 10 percent of the price, up to $8,000, back as a tax credit.
The catch is that many potential buyers don't have enough money to cover the down payment to buy a home and obtain the credit. But if they could qualify, they could, in theory, find a way to make a purchase and get the credit.

CHFA's JumpStart program breaks the trap by lending up to $6,000 or 3.5 percent of a home's purchase price, whichever is less, to cover closing and down-payment costs.
That second mortgage comes with no interest and no payments due until June 30, 2010. CHFA also will provide a 30- year, fixed- rate first mortgage to qualified borrowers.

"First-time homebuyers will be able to leverage the future benefit of the federal tax credit by working with CHFA to access the dollars needed to buy a home today," said U.S. Rep. Ed Perlmutter, D-Colo., who helped unveil the program.

Borrowers are expected to use their tax credit to repay the second mortgage before the June 30 deadline. If they don't, the loan becomes payable over 10 years at 8 percent interest.
"If you don't plan to pay off the second mortgage with the tax credit, then CHFA JumpStart isn't for you," said Karen Harkin, CHFA's director of home finance.
Buyers must also contribute $1,000 of their own money and take a homebuyer education course.
CHFA expects the program to help as many as 1,250 families this year, but Harkin said CHFA would do its best to help as many people as are qualified. "We will find funding for every homebuyer who wants to participate," she said.

The offer, for now, is for a limited time. Perlmutter was noncommittal on whether Congress would renew the first-time home purchase credit for next year.
He said it would depend on the condition of housing markets, with no decision likely until later this year.

Aldo Svaldi: 303-954-1410 or asvaldi@denverpost.com

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Pediatric Brain Tumor fund raiser


My buddies Chris and PJ are putting on their annual fundraiser for Pediatric Brain Cancer at the Wits End Comedy Club in Westminster on Saturday May 2. For more details go to: http://www.firstgiving.com/chrisspanos

It's a great cause and the comedy is always a hoot. See you there!

Boulder 2nd in quality of life

http://www.bizjournals.com/specials/pages/242.html

Boulder ranked 2nd in quality of life. Not sure I'd want to be in #1, Provo UT

Friday, April 3, 2009

The Depression is Over

Posted By: Tom Brennan

If the definition of a bull market is a 20% rally off the bottom, Cramer said Thursday, then we are definitely in a bull market right now. The Dow and S&P 500 are up 23% and 25%, respectively, from their recent lows. Add to this joyous trend President Obama’s endorsement of the markets, and you can see why Cramer thinks we are waking from our long(ish) national nightmare.

From the G20 meeting in London, the president called the markets “the most effective mechanism for creating wealth,” a noticeable shift for Obama. In the very recent past, he’d shrugged off the importance of stocks. But he now seems to realize how important they are to Americans’ 401(k)s, 529s, IRAs and retirement accounts. Wall Street liked what it heard, and that’s at least part of the reason why the Dow jumped 216 points today.

This follows a string of bold actions from Washington that is crucial to our emergence from a depression. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke took interest rates to zero percent and lent money to investors willing to enter the asset-backed paper market. As a result, mortgages rates are down and housing and auto loans are picking up.

Treasury Secretary Geithner has played his part as well. He’s offering cheap money to any hedge fund willing to buy banks’ toxic assets. Well, Cramer said they are detoxed assets now, thanks to the secretary. The very collateralized debt obligations that so damaged the financial sector’s balance sheets are no longer a problem. Nor do we have to worry about bank nationalization anymore. The government is on board, willing to do whatever’s necessary to save both the markets and the economy.

The depression, which Cramer said started when Lehman Brothers
was allowed to go under, is over. Of course, that doesn’t mean we’ve escaped the recession yet, though. There’s a good chance Friday’s unemployment number will look dismal. Still, the Mad Money host is positive. He thinks it’s time to start buying stocks. Just wait for a pullback, though. Investors shouldn’t pile in after such a big move in the market.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

How to have a Stress Free refi

Four steps to a stress-free refi
By Holden Lewis • Bankrate.com



Continuing low mortgage rates helped keep alive a refinancing boomlet in mortgage offices across the United States. Whenever refinancing is hot, it makes two things more likely -- delays at the lenders' office and anxiety in borrowers' stomachs.

"People want to know, 'How do I get my loan file at the top of the stack?'" says Lori Vella, vice president for Washington Mutual.

Here are four things you can do to gain an edge over other refinancing applicants and to make the loan process run more smoothly:

· Know why you want to refi;
· Provide paperwork promptly;
· Lock long;
· Keep in touch, but not too much.

Know the 'why' of your refiThe first step, figuring out exactly why you want to refinance, is key. "'Because rates are low' isn't the sole reason to refinance," Vella says.

Getting a home loan is like buying a vehicle: You have many choices, and only some of them are right for you. When you go to an auto dealer, the salesperson wants to know whether you want to haul stuff, have fast 'n' furious fun, or feel like a master of your domain. Depending on your priorities, the salesperson might recommend a sedan, pickup truck, sports car or sport-utility vehicle.

Likewise, different mortgages meet a variety of needs. Do you want to refinance so you will have the lowest possible monthly payment? (That's a trickier question than it appears.) Do you want to get rid of mortgage insurance? Do you want to pay off the loan quicker? Do you want to get cash by borrowing more than you currently owe? Do you want to brag about your low rate and make your friends and neighbors jealous?

It helps if you can guess how long you'll live in the house.

"The more prepared the consumer is, the more that we can give them a tremendous amount of advice and counsel," says Doug Perry of Countrywide Mortgage. "Lenders are very eager to provide a great deal of advice to narrow down the mortgage products as a means of accomplishing financial goals."

Perry, who is first vice president of consumer markets, says Countrywide has more than 80 mortgage products, consisting of various fixed- and adjustable-rate loans for an assortment of periods. Most brokers and lenders can offer dozens of mortgage products, just as an auto dealer offers dozens of models and trim levels and colors.

Many homeowners want to refinance to get the lowest possible monthly payment, but that goal is not as straightforward as it seems. The lowest possible payment would come from an interest-only loan, but that type of mortgage is a good fit for only a few.

A mortgage that adjusts monthly or annually will sport a rock-bottom rate -- that is, until short-term adjustable rates rise above today's long-term rates. There are "hybrid ARMs" -- adjustable-rate mortgages that have a low introductory rate that lasts three, five, seven or 10 years, then adjusts annually thereafter. Those mortgages work for people who are pretty sure they will move in about three, five, seven or 10 years.

Perhaps you want to lower your monthly payment, but don't want to start anew. Just ask the lender to amortize the new loan for the remaining length of the current loan. For example, if you are three years into a 30-year mortgage, you can ask the lender to set up the refinanced loan so that you're scheduled to pay it off in 27 years. Or you can refinance your home loan to pay it off in 15 or even 10 years.

Bring your papers, please

When you apply, ask your lender for a list of exactly what documentation and information you must provide. This step separates the fast customers from the laggards.

"If I were a consumer -- which I am -- and I wanted to make sure that my transaction got preferential treatment, or among the best treatment, I would make absolutely sure as a consumer that I understood completely what was expected of me," says Mike Rich of IndyMac Bank emphatically, "then I would spare no horses in getting whatever documentation that was requested by the lender to that lender as expeditiously as possible.

If you're applying in person, you can bring in the bank statements, pay stubs, tax returns and other paperwork when you apply, and if you're missing a critical document, you can rush home and get it. Not so if you apply over the phone or the Web, as IndyMac's consumer customers do.
When you work with a remote lender, try faxing or e-mailing scanned documents if you can, Rich recommends. Send bulky documents by overnight courier. Make sure you have the correct name and address of the person who is to receive the papers.

Vella says refinancing customers often forget two critical pieces of information. First, they sometimes forget to bring in their hazard insurance documents. At the least, borrowers should have the name of their insurer and the policy number. Second, many lenders want to verify the last two years of each borrower's employment. That means that if you have taken a job with a new employer in the past two years, you need to bring the address and contact name and phone number of your previous employer.

Perry hastens to point out that some lenders, including Countrywide, allow current customers to apply for refinancing with little paperwork.

Get the right loan lockMany lenders are telling refi customers that their loans will take up to 60 days to close. Other lenders stretch their estimate to 90 days. If you want to lock at today's low rates, make sure the lock extends at least up to the lender's estimate of how long it will take to close the loan.

"A consumer needs to know what is being guaranteed with the rate lock," Vella says. If you lock for 30 days and the lender takes 60 to get to closing, you don't really have a rate lock. "I would recommend that the borrower not lock in less than 60 in this rate environment because it is taking longer to close," Vella says.

It is taking a long time not only because loan offices are busy, but also because appraisers are swamped and so are title agents and title attorneys. Reserving a table in a title office is like booking a reservation at Manhattan's hottest restaurant: It's hard to get in, and you might have to settle for a less-than-ideal time of day.

Stay in touch, but don't pester

With the delays and the worries over paperwork, borrowers get antsy when they haven't heard from their lenders in a while. They want to know what's going on with their loan. "To call every few days probably doesn't make things go any faster," Vella says diplomatically.

She suggests that you discuss with the lender or broker how often you want to be contacted, even if it's just to hear that the lender is waiting for the appraiser to visit the house. If you want a phone call every Friday, say so, Vella says. If you want a phone call every time something significant happens, say so.

Ask for a timeline of the loan -- a document that spells out when each step is expected to be completed. "It relieves stress on the part of the borrower," Vella says.

Rich says "the best of the best of the loan officers" give their customer's timeline routinely, without being asked.

Getting a timeline from the lender might not get your loan closed before your next-door neighbors who applied on the same day, but it helps you understand what's taking so long -- and that can be the difference between a stressful and a stress-free refi.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

How big a Mortgage can you afford?

How big a Mortgage can you afford?


This is a good link at CNN Money to tell a prospective home buyer how much they could afford!

bhendrick@yourloanteam.com

Fed's Move to Lower Mortgage Rates May Backfire On Market

CNBC

The Federal Reserve's latest moves to push down mortgage rates quickly raised expectations about helping the housing recovery, but it may be months before the impact is entirely apparent and the effects may not all be positive, say people in the real estate and housing industries.

First and foremost, there is general skepticism about the how much impact government intervention will have in the marketplace, as well as concern about the potential for unintended consequences.

"It's wrong to place too much hope on what the Fed would be able to accomplish in pushing rates lower," says economist Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research. "There's a limit to what they can realistically do."

That's apparent in what some call the inevitable bounce back in rates since the Fed's announcement at the March 19 FOMC meeting that it would increase its planned purchase of GSE and MBS debt as well as finally begin buying longer-term Treasuries.

The yield on the 10-year note went from roughly 3.00 percent down to 2.50 percent, but has slowly climbed back to around 2.75 percent. Thirty-year mortgage rates, which track the 10-year yield, have moved accordingly.

"Rates are historically low, but the expectation is that interest rates should be much lower than they are," says Manhattan Mortgage Company CEO Melissa Cohn.

That sort of criticism highlights the difficulty of the Fed's mission, and though the significant drop in mortgage rates in the past six months has been welcome in almost all quarters, it is hardly a magic bullet for the multi-faceted housing market

For one, Cohn and others have seen a greater increase in refinancing activity that in loans for home sales.

The Mortgage Bankers Association last week increased its forecast for loan originations in 2009 by 40 percent to $2.8 trillion, more than any year since 2005 and the fourth highest on record. Some 71-percent of that, however, will be refinancing. Home purchase origination's will be almost 4-percent lower than last year.

"For the purchase market, it is still an issue of the economy," says Jay Brinkman, chief economist and senior vice president of the mortgage industry trade group. "I don't think rates were an impediment even before the Fed's move."
Refinancing does not a housing rebound make, although it certainly increases the chance of keeping a homeowner out of foreclosure. That and other forces continue to put a drag on housing.
Right now, the single-family market is still in the doldrums, though many measures point to a possible bottom.

Thus far this year, existing single-family homes are off an average of 6 percent from 2008 and prices are down 15 percent from the previous year, according to the National Association of Realtors.

On the bright side, inventory has been below a 10-month supply for three months and the NAR's affordability index now stands at a whopping 175 vs. a meager 107 in 2006, when house prices peaked in most parts of the country.

According to NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun, every 1-percent decline in mortgage rates typically generates an additional 500,000 home sales.

The average rate on a 30-year mortgage was more than 6-percent in the fall of 2008, while last week it was as low as 4.85 percent, according to Freddie Mac, so that could mean a lot of sales in the pipeline.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

The Truth About Money

5 great reasons to carry a big, long mortgage

Reason #1: Mortgages don’t lower home values.
Your house will grow in value (or not) whether or not you have a mortgage. In fact, most people discover that, over time, their mortgage balance falls while their home value rises – creating substantial wealth they never expected.

Reason #2: Your mortgage is the cheapest money you’ll ever buy.
Most people need to borrow money during their lives, so why pay 18% on credit cards when you can borrow at much lower rates.

Reason #3: Your mortgage is the best way you can lower your taxes.
Interest you pay on personal loans, auto loans and credit cards is not-tax deductible, but for most of us, interest you pay on mortgage loans is fully tax-deductible, making the cheapest loan you’ll ever get, even cheaper. Imagine borrowing money for a net cost of just 3%! You can do it with a mortgage loan.

Reason #4: Get the cash out of the house – while you still can.
The main reason people turn to borrowing is because they have little or no income. But if you ever suffer a job loss, major medical, or other financial crisis, you could find yourself unable to get a home loan. That’s because lenders don’t like to lend money if you are already in financial difficulty. That’s why you should get a big mortgage now, before you need it – and while you still can.

Reason #5: Your mortgage becomes even cheaper over time.
Depending on the loan you choose, your payment never rises – but your income likely will. That means today’s mortgage payment becomes increasingly easy to pay over time!

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

NY Times says Reverse Mortgages can be a great tool

Over the weekend, the New York Times published an article about how more retirees are exploring reverse mortgages as they face declining income, falling home values, and dwindling savings from Wall Street’s meltdown. In The Reverse Gear, journalist Vivian Marino writes that as mortgage financing gets increasingly tougher to obtain, reverse mortgages continue to look more appealing.

“Many seniors have been able to use reverse mortgages to avoid delinquency or foreclosure, and to help fund their retirement,” said Regina M. Lowrie, a former chairwoman of the Mortgage Bankers Association and the chief executive of Vision Mortgage Capital in Montgomeryville, Pa.
One of the bright spots of the article comes from Martin Shenkman, a New Jersey based attorney who specializes in estate and tax planning.

Shenkman considers reverse mortgages “a great tool, when the right circumstances exist.” He even acknowledges that the reverse mortgage industry has come a long way in attracting business and burnishing its reputation, which was full of stories from years past of lenders preying on the elderly.

Friday, March 13, 2009

HECM's (Reverse Mortgages) can now be used to purchase a home!

What is HECM for Purchase?

HECM for Purchase allows seniors, age 62 or older, to purchase a new principal residence using loan proceeds from the reverse mortgage.

What is the purpose of the program?

The program was designed to allow seniors to purchase a new principal residence and obtain a reverse mortgage within a single transaction. The program was also designed to enable senior homeowners to relocate to other geographical areas to be closer to family members or downsize to homes that meet their physical needs, i.e., handrails, one level properties, ramps, wider doorways, etc.

GENERAL OVERVIEW

What is HECM for Purchase?

HECM for Purchase allows seniors, age 62 or older, to purchase a new principal residence using loan proceeds from the reverse mortgage.

What is the purpose of the program?

The program was designed to allow seniors to purchase a new principal residence and obtain a reverse mortgage within a single transaction. The program was also designed to enable senior homeowners to relocate to other geographical areas to be closer to family members or downsize to homes that meet their physical needs, i.e., handrails, one level properties, ramps, wider doorways, etc.

PROCESSING

Is the fixed interest rate eligible in a HECM for purchase loan?
Yes.

PROPERTY

What property types are eligible?
Existing one-to-four unit properties where construction has been completed and the property is habitable as evidenced by local jurisdiction issuance of certificate of occupancy or its equivalent.

Can a lender take application on a property that is under construction and not habitable?
No. The lender may only take application once the Certificate of Occupancy or its equivalent has been issued.

What property types are ineligible?

Cooperative units
Newly constructed residences where a Certificate of Occupancy or its equivalent has not been issued by the appropriate local authority
Boarding houses
Bed and breakfast establishments
Existing manufactured homes built before June 15, 1976; and
Existing manufactured homes built after June 15, 1976 that fail to conform to the Manufactured Home Construction Safety Standards, as evidenced by affixed certification labels (e.g., data plate and HUD certification label) and/or lack a permanent foundation as required in HUD's Permanent Foundations for Manufactured Housing Guide.

FUNDING

Are gifts an acceptable source of funding?

No. Prospective mortgagors may only use their own money or money obtained from the sale of assets. FHA prohibits the use of loan discount points, interest rate buy downs, closing cost assistance, builder incentives, gifts or personal property given by the seller that would benefit financially from the transaction.

What would be an "allowable FHA funding source" for gap financing of the equity portion?

A withdrawal from the mortgagor's savings or retirement account would be an acceptable funding source.

How is the maximum claim amount and principal limit calculated?

For HECM purchase transactions only, The maximum claim amount will be the lesser of the appraised value, sales price or FHA mortgage limit for a one family residence.

Is seller financing permitted?

No.

MISCELLANEOUS

Does FHA have special eligibility requirements for first-time homebuyers?

No. FHA encourages all first-time homebuyers to meet with a reverse mortgage counselor that offers pre-purchase counseling to educate themselves on the responsibilities of becoming a homeowner. Prior to signing a sales contract, FHA encourages a home inspection of all properties that will serve as collateral for HECM for purchase transactions. The inspection serves two purposes, to determine the magnitude, if any, of repairs and/or rehabilitation the home as well as helps the buyer to negotiate the purchase price in situation where a home requires repair or rehabilitation.