Aug 19

This just in from the Franklin County Save our Homes taskforce:

Struggling to pay your mortgage? Have an adjustable rate mortgage or a balloon? Not sure what your mortgage means? Realizing that your lender didn’t escrow and now you have a big property tax bill? Worried about foreclosure?

The Franklin County Save our Homes Taskforce in cooperation with the county treasurer is holding a Borrower Outreach Day on Saturday, September 13, from 10-1. This event will be at Memorial Hall, Board of Elections (Downtown) at 280 East Broad Street in Columbus.

If you are worried about making your next monthly loan payment for any reason, you will have the opportunity to:

  • Meet with servicers/lenders privately
  • Learn about refinancing
  • Learn about foreclosure prevention, legal rights, loss mitigation, and credit counseling.

For more information, please contact:
The Franklin County Treasurer’s Office at 614-462-7503

This event may help you if you are concerned about your mortgage status.  If you need help understanding your home mortgage in Ohio, call us today at 888-818-1850. We are committed to building the wealth of our clients. We want you to succeed in homeownership!

Aug 14

Did you know that Ohio families need no-money-down loans?

The number one incoming search term for this website is 100LTV and 100% loans. People are really looking hard to buy a home with no down payment. No problem, right? There’s 100%, 80/20 split loans, FHA, and the list goes on.

Unfortunately, that’s wrong! Most of these loan products have dried up in the last 12 months – FHA with down payment assistance (DPA) being the only survivor.

Here’s how it works. Sally Buyer wants a home but has no savings. So she writes a contract on a home that includes a line about qualifying for an FHA mortgage. In that negotiation, Sally offers to pay 3% more than list price for the home if John Q. Seller will “donate” 3% of the purchase price of the home plus $400 to a certain “charity.” John Q. Seller agrees because Sally Buyer seems solid and this is a full-price contract – a sale! Sally Buyer also signs an agreement with the “charity” to accept a 3% “gift,” contingent on the sale closing and the seller donating.

These non-profit organizations have been under fire for years because DPA is a loophole that allows home purchases with “no skin in the game” while inflating home prices. But legal challenges from the assistance providers themselves have kept the life support on.

Under the Housing and Economic Recovery Act (HR 3221) recently passed into law, DPA programs will no longer be available as of October 2008. That’s right: no more AmeriDream, Nehemiah or other “charity” gifts to get you an FHA mortgage with no money down!

Using down payment assistance is entirely normal, and many of our clients have used it to good advantage. But it should be remembered that what can help a single family may be a recipe for disaster when it becomes common practice across the country. Mortgages with down payment assistance go into default and foreclosure at nearly three times the rate of those borrowers with some money out of pocket, according to FHA.

And while some groups are trying to save DPA, the solvency of the banking system and FHA is at risk now, so it’s understandable that they would try to stop the bleeding. Especially when you consider that we - the taxpayers - are ultimately holding the bag when it comes to bailing out banks or funding HUD and FHA through our tax dollars.

Nevertheless, this is going to be a blow to our mortgage company, as well as a blow to the entire market here in Ohio.  Maybe it’s smart given the rise of foreclosures.  But 0-down loans are 64% of our FHA purchases, or 13% of total business. So yeah, it hurts when 13% of your company revenue goes whoosh!

If you are looking to buy a home, now is your chance to find a no-money-down loan! You don’t have to be a first-time buyer.  Call before it’s too late!

Aug 7

If you’ve dodged the dust-up between John McCain and Paris Hilton, you probably heard this week that the Federal Open Market Committee left interest rates untouched last Tuesday. That means the Prime Rate remains at a low 5.0%. What does it mean for mortgage rates? What does it mean for you?

For those who’ve followed the gurus Greenspan and Bernanke, you’ll remember that when the Fed announces a decision on Discount and Fed Funds rates, the decision is less important than the accompanying policy statement. These statements are short reviews of the Bank’s view on the economy and inflation – and therefore give clues to future monetary policy decisions.

Those opaque statements are what move mortgage bond markets, and thus mortgage rates. You can read the whole thing in less than 30 seconds right here.

A policy decision for the status-quo does signal to investors that market forces are in balance – or at least rates cannot be safely lowered. Because the Fed talks of an economic slowdown with no end in sight, rates will be stable to lower until inflation picks up. To further illustrate this, consider that one year ago, Prime Rate was at 8.25%.

The immediate result of the current decision was for stock markets to rally and rates to rise.
If there is good news here, it’s that slow economic times mean mortgage rates will not be rising significantly. I’d say that perspective is here for another 6-12 months at least.

If there is bad news here, as the economy slows and foreclosure rates rise in Ohio, credit standards will continue to tighten and the cost of financing will creep up. Tight credit standards – like the end of down payment assistance and 100% financing programs – will be discussed in the next few posts about the new Housing and Economic Recovery Bill (HR 3221).

Jun 25

I had the privilege this morning hearing Steven Anderson talk about Thriving Under Pressure. You’d think I went because the mortgage industry is under tremendous pressure as brokers and lenders sort out who’s on first. There’s a natural tension in mortgage lending that’s accentuated when times get tough. Who drives the industry: the small businessmen and women that find and retain clients, the massive banks that control the regulations and capital, or the US taxpayer that gets to bailout every industry when times get tough? (If you are laughing at that last option, you pass the test.)

Actually, that’s not the main reason I went.

I accepted Tom Broadbent’s invitation because I am challenged by balancing work hours, home life, and volunteering with several organizations. Just like you, I would guess.

Learning to deal with stress benefits every American because, as Steven Anderson said, “We humans are smart enough to kill ourselves.” Specifically, in today’s economy, we need tools to deal with more and more stress from the financial side of our lives. Not only do we run into the aggravation of minding passwords for dozens of bill paying sites, but most Ohio families don’t have enough money to go around each month. There are urgent decisions like enrolling your children in another sport or paying down debt that we all carry.

Here are two important lessons I took away from the seminar that I thought could help you in managing your personal finance.

  1. Learn the difference between Acute Stress and Chronic Stress. Making important decisions and dealing with short term problems is acute stress and is actually healthy. Planning and pushing through these experiences stretch you mentally, and can engender that team spirit that many families lack. Chronic stress, on the other hand, is the nagging burdens we carry around. These are nearly always caused by poor choices - either long-term debt like credit cards that we enter thoughtlessly or rashly, or the avoidance of major decisions in our household economy. Make good and decisive choices and your life will be better and longer.
  2. Learn the difference between Stress and Anxiety. Stressors are external circumstances that pressure us - like a cucumber seed we can squirt one way when pressured and become anxious, or move right and choose our physical response. Anxiety is the internalizing of stress. Anxiety often gives rise to introversion, depression, and attempting to control others - obviously none of which are beneficial. Using stress to one’s advantage includes a plan to deal with it rather than allowing anxiety and its negative consequences.

The reason I write about this in a personal finance and mortgage blog is WAY too many people these days are allowing poor choices to dictate decisions with long-term consequences - like paying their mortgage on time.

More and more Ohio homeowners with a mortgage are walking away from their homes. Surprisingly, this is not an issue that only affects the low-to-moderate income neighborhoods. Hundreds and hundreds of above-average wage earners have invested in above-average homes with very little skin in the game, while even more Ohio families have bought homes that are at or just beyond the limit of their budget. In either case, floating these purchases becomes impossible with the smallest stressor.

Bottom line is making the hard decisions with an eye to the risks of the future is critical to long term homeownership and overall financial success for Ohioans. If you are having trouble making your mortgage payment, call me and let’s talk about the options. Call your lender. Call someone who isn’t afraid of telling you the truth - I will, even if it means a hard decision for you or a non-profit moment for First Ohio Home Finance. We’re in this together, and we’ll only get out of it together - using all the resources we have.

Thanks to Integrated Leadership’s Steven Anderson and Precision Printing’s Tom Broadbent for today’s inspiration!

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