Maybe this month I will not make my mortgage payment. Then, skip January and February too, and then I’ll be 90 days late so I can qualify for the homeowner’s assistance that was just passed through Congress. At that point, my mortgage payment will be reduced to 31% of my gross monthly income (good news if I lost my job). My rate will be set as low as 3% for five years, and amortized for as much as 40 years. Apparently there are 2.2 million borrowers that would benefit from this just like me. DO NOT GET ME WRONG here, I am all for helping out those in need. Those that have had the misfortune of a real estate market gone bad, a layoff , etc. Sometimes, however, the consequences are hard to process in my brain. I pay my bills, and , if I get laid off, I would work at Wal Mart if I had to , or wait tables, or something, in order to feed my family. Where does the buck stop between those of us that are ‘taking a bat for the team’, and those that will manipulate the system to benefit themselves? We saw it happen with FEMA assistance after Katrina (remember that?), and we will see it again. How will we be able to differentiate between those people that are really in need, or looking for a handout? Didn’t we all at some point benefit from (a) subprime, (b) stated income (c) high debt to income ratios, etc…………Are the people that foreclosed the ones that had those types of loans? Probably. But we will never know.
In the last couple of weeks, I have advised several people to contact HOPE NOW, the non profit agency that was formed in June 2007, to help persons renegotiate with their lenders. They have helped 2.5 million people avoid foreclosure since then. Even if temporarily. When you do foreclose, your credit will be affected. You will not be able to obtain another conventional loan for 5 years, or an FHA loan for 2 (FHA loans are limited to $270,050, currently). If you do a short sale, you will still fall into the same category. You are settling for less than the owed amount. In leiu of foreclosure. It is like a collection. So where will all these people go? They will be renters….time to buy a rent house! IT is a great time right now to be an investor…….If you can get the loan.
INVESTORS, in my opinion, have been hardest hit by the credit crunch. Maximum 4 properties financed, 20% down (rate is MUCH better if you do 25%), and full documentation of income. There are a lot of investors that do not meet that criteria. Who will buy these homes? The answer is, the investors that have cash, or form investment groups where they have multiple partners to qualify on the application. Or hard money for 14% and 5 points origination. Seriously. Hopefully some smart and savy financier will invent a product to service this segment of the market to allow these homes to be bought. That could be why much of the inventory is sitting there. In the past, the programs available allowed for investors to gobble up properties at a record pace. They balanced the market. Or did they? I have been searching for statistics on how many foreclosures were investment properties. I have not found it yet. But will keep you posted. So would we have been in this situation before now, or ever, had they never been able to get 0% down, stated income on an investment property? It sounds preposterous, doesn’t it?
Lastly, I would like to comment that RATES ARE DOWN THIS WEEK! The mortgage market continues to stay steady, and loans are definitely available. If you have CASH, CREDIT AND INCOME, you will have no problem at all. The key word is proof , proof, proof. Sometimes I wonder how we even deviated from that?
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