Archive for the ‘Mortgages’ Category

Why You Must Stop Paying Rent And Buy Your Own Home

Tuesday, April 3rd, 2007

Renting has two major problems:  The rent can go up every year …and.. You pay hundreds of dollars every month and you never have anything to show for it except a pile of rent receipts.  In this report, I will show you in real dollars how you can benefit by owning a home. Maybe no one’s ever explained it to you in detail before, or you didn’t “get it”. Well, if you stick with me though this discussion, I think the light will go on for you. Visit our mortgage loan center now for this must have info.

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The Trouble with ARMs

Thursday, August 31st, 2006

It seems that rising interest rates and the recent housing boon are creating a lot of trouble for people with Adjustable Rate Mortgages (ARMs) all over the country.

During the real estate boon going on for the past few years, people had been taking out a large number of ARMs at extremely low “teaser” rates, sometimes half that of a traditional 30-year fixed mortgage. The lending companies offered these rates in order to encourage loan purchase during the hot market.

The low rates offered an alluring way for poorer Americans to get into a booming housing market, and many leapt at the chance. About a quarter of outstanding home mortgages nationwide carry adjustable interest rates, and the nation’s homeownership rate has climbed to a record 70 percent.
Last year, 43 percent of all mortgages taken out were adjustable or otherwise alluring at first, but given to drastic long term changes — such as those that require only the interest of the loan be paid for the first two years.

Now it seems those changes are coming to fruition, and it’s leaving many people high and dry. But rates have been climbing for two years, in some cases to nearly double what they were in 2003 or 2004. Unfortunately for homeowners who bought during those years, this is the time that those low introductory low rates on adjustable mortgages are set to expire.

That means homebuyers who were once paying just over 3 percent interest are suddenly facing rates that are at 5 or 6 percent and still climbing. As interest rates rise, late payments, also known as delinquencies, are becoming more common.

-John Grady

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