Sep 9

By now, surely you’ve heard of the nationalization of our industry. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were “seized” by the Federal government and put into “conversatorship” over the weekend as it became apparent these secondary markets for the mortgage industry had come to the point of bankruptcy.

Short-term, that means mortgage rates are heading lower – MUCH lower. The loans on your home and mine are now backed by the full faith and credit of the United States Treasury now. What seems like zero risk means that more investors will buy mortgage bonds and rates will continue to decline.

An interesting facet of this bailout, though, is that the “solution” is having the opposite effect as the intended purpose of the grand vision for Fannie and Freddie to improve the lives of average Americans. Peter Schiff doesn’t pull any punches in a recent column:

The original idea that gave birth to Freddie and Fannie, which is to make housing more affordable to average Americans, should now be seen as farcical. Their new goal is to keep housing prices high. Absent Freddie and Fannie, housing prices would fall sharply and the mortgage market would stabilize. Americans would once again be able to buy affordable houses with mortgages they could actually repay –just like their grandparents did. Instead they will keep overpaying for houses, burdening themselves with excessive payments in the process, and ultimately sticking taxpayers with the bill when they default.

What’s your opinion?

Regardless of our second guessing of massive policy decisions, this is an excellent time to refinance your home. Call us if your mortgage rate on your first or second loan is more than 6.5%! We’ll give you the straight scoop every time.

Dec 13

This is a critical question because so many loan officers are NOT keeping up with the changing mortgage environment, but still issuing bland letters that indicate a borrower simply needs to come to closing. The pre-approval process is much more thorough than pre-qual. Read the rest of this entry »

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