Archive for the ‘Mortgages’ Category

30 year fixed mortgage rates shot up to their highest levels in six months last Wednesday.

Fannie Mae mortgage backed securities (they serve as the foundation for mortgage rates) dropped by -231 basis points in just three days.

Many borrowers that had been pre-approved for loans with interest rates in the upper 4’s found out that their new rates could be in the mid to upper 5’s.

We did make a comeback on Thursday and Friday but this still left us -82 basis points worse than Monday’s rates.

The reasons for the deterioration in rates?  It was really a powerful 1-2 combination that set up our perfect storm.  First, foreign investors showed their concerns over our constant barrage of Treasury sales.  As we continue to auction off more and more of our Treasury debt, we naturally must pay a higher rate to borrow that money.  That puts pressure on your mortgage rates.

Also, we received a few economic reports such as Consumer Confidence that pointed to positive economic data.  Any kind of economic data that is positive will lead to higher mortgage rates as long-term investors fear the threat of eventual inflation that is a byproduct of a growing economy.

Obviously, as we slowly climb out of our recession we will start to get more and more positive economic reports which will lead to this very same type of volatility.

The silver lining?  Mortgage rates are still fantastic and borrowers that have been sitting on the sidelines were sent a huge wake-up call.  It is simply not worth the risk to wait for lower rates.  The opportunity cost of missing out on home prices that are artificially and temporarily too low is not worth waiting for lower rates.

The purchase market is about to heat up.  We have great rates, large inventories of homes, and reduced home prices…this all adds up to the right time to buy.

Courtesy of Brian Bagon Crest Mortgage Group

Let’s start with the definition of the word. Amortization comes from the English word amortisen which means to kill, from Wikipedia. Now you understand why you feel like making those mortgage payments every month is killing you! But the meaning is actually to kill the debt even though it feels like a slow death.

The mathematical model of amortization is a calculus function that looks like this:
A=P (1 + i)n / (1+i)n = P*i / 1-(1 + i) – n

Where:
• A = periodic payment amount
• P = amount of principal, net of initial payments, meaning “subtract any down-payments”
• i = periodic interest rate
• n = total number of payments

After all that tedious math what we really care about is how does it affect me?

After you have spent hours looking for your dream house with your favorite Realtor, written the contract, joyously celebrated getting it after beating our those other 3 buyers that wanted it and now you are at the closing table where it will become yours…..and the banks. You are presented with the Truth in Lending Disclosure that tells you that with that $200,000 loan on your $240,000 dream house (20% down payment, 80% financed), that you will pay the bank $231,677 in interest or 116% of the loan at 6% interest to your mortgage company after 30 years. Now we’ve all looked at this on our closing statements, even though we do our best to overlook those incredibly scary figures telling ourselves that we can afford the monthly payment so it’s really not a slow death after all!

Let’s look at the cold hard facts of amortization.

The first monthly payment breaks down like this:
Total payment is $1199.10
Principle is $199.10
and interest is $1000.

If you do the math $1000 / $1199.10, the result is 83.395%, or at the beginning of the mortgage you are paying over 83% in interest! Only at the end of the term or if it is paid off do you realize that the 6% that you were so happy to get is really 83%  amortization-graph

Another fact that most people do not realize is that the halfway mark when your payment is ½ interest to ½ principle is 21 years not 15!

As intelligent adults we really knew all of this but I’ll bet most of us never sat down and did the math to figure out the real cost. The reason I believe that most of us never did the math is because we knew that in order to have a home to call our own we had to incur the debt, (unless our name is Gates). The mortgage companies, while they have served their function and enabled us to own a home of our own, have their sleight of hand magic act to distract us from the real amount of interest we are paying. While we are watching the never ending ads on TV about “how mortgage companies compete and you win so you get the best interest rate”; they are laughing all the way to their bank while they rack up 83% interest! And in order to give you that ‘fantastic rate’ they will only charge you several thousands of dollars of closing costs to do it! There is a reason the tallest most expensive building on the block is the bank!

Well now that we have looked at the ugly truth, what do we do about it?

The shortest and simplest answer is to pay off your mortgage debt in the fastest way possible and save 83%! Keep reading for some strategies to do that.

Some of the strategies for paying down mortgage debt include: bi weekly and debt roll down. But the most sophisticated is a software based on mathematical logarithms that enable you to maximize the power of your current income and potentially pay off your mortgage in as little as 1/3 to 1/2 the time and potentially save thousands of dollars. This program is called the Money Merge Account™ System by United First Financial®.

23
Feb

FHA 2009 Conforming Loan Limits increased

   Posted by: admin

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) increased the maximum conforming mortgage loan limits for mortgages originated in 2009.  The increase affects 250 counties across the US.  Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac maximums will return to their late 2008 levels for these areas.  Several lookup tables are available on the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight.

Loan limits for mortgages originated in 2009 are set under the provisions of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.  Under that legislation, loan limits for 2009-originated loans are set at the higher of the 2008 limits and those that were originally announced for 2009 under the terms of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008.

Success at Home Magazine
Success at Home Magazine

Success at Home Magazine is featuring United First Financial and the Money Merge Account in its latest copy to just hit the news stands this week!  An insightful look at this company and the paradigm shift it represents on the financial landscape.  If ever there was a business that is needed it is the Money Merge Account in these days of economic implosion and increasing consumer debt.  This web based software system acts a financial GPS for finances to show the client the quickest way to being debt free.  As of July, 2008, the total public debt is $9,532,805,153.95 and still climbing! 

Clients of United First Financial have been able to pay down $153 million of principal debt in 2 years!  What kind of future will your children/grandchildren inherit?

If you have debt you owe it to yourself to investigate the Money Merge Account System by United First Financial!

These are the seven stages of an introduction to the  Money Merge Account® system to pay off mortgage and consumer debt to become debt free.  (From personal experience)

1)  Total disbelief; there must be something wrong with it, it sounds too good to be true, why haven’t they heard about it before or the best one is “I can do it myself”.

2)  Rhetorical questions such as:  how does it work, why can’t I do it myself, why isn’t everyone on the program?

3)  Doing an analysis when curiousity gets the best of them.

4)  The client is understandably impressed when they find out how fast they can pay off all their debt, sometimes as little as 1/3 to 1/2 the time.

5)   Fear of moving ahead with a new paradigm shift.

6) Anger at the fact that they realize now what the banks have been keeping well guarded and how easy it is to be your own bank.

After setting up their own personal Money Merge Account system

7)  Enthusiastic about the program.

8)  Starts telling everyone they know about what a great program they’ve found to get out of debt and retire early.

9)  Signs up to become an agent of United First Financial® to help others get out of debt!

“All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as being self-evident.” – Arthur Schopenhauer, (1788 – 1860)

News from the Feds hot off the press regarding loan limits.

The Federal Housing Finance Authority (FHFA), will announce 2009 conforming loan limits for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac by November 7.  The limits will define the maximum loan size of mortgages that can be purchased.

Under Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 , (HERA )passed July 2008, the FHFA was directed to set conforming loan limits each year for the nation as well as for high cost areas.  The rules governing how the loan limits are established differ from the rules set forth in the Economic Stimulus Act of 2008, (ESA) which applies to loans originated in 2008.  Under ESA loan limits for high cost areas were set at 125 percent of local house price medians and the maximum high cost limit was 175 percent of the nation conforming limit ($729,750 in the continental US).  Under HERA, the high cost area loan limits are 115 percent of local price medians up to a maximun of 150 percent of the national limit.  In 2009, if the national limit remains at $417,000 for one unit properties, the max limit in high cost areas would be $625,000 for the continental US.

To determine high cost area limits under HERA for 2009, FHFA will use median home values estimated by the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) of the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).  The FHA median prices will be calculated in the coming weeks by FHA for the purpose of determining its 2009 loan limits.  Information can be found here.