admin on October 12th, 2008

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admin on October 12th, 2008

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admin on October 12th, 2008

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admin on September 14th, 2008

Home equity losses are increasing the number of foreclosures as millions of Americans are becoming upside down in their houses, and more are joining the ranks daily.

Being upside down in your house can be a nightmare. More homeowners are finding themselves in this precarious position, and by growing numbers homeowners are walking away from the mortgage that just got too high to pay.

Americans are showing a sort of panic in many places over the housing crisis. Foreclosures are increasing. It has turned into an economic crisis that is sending the nation into a recession, if we aren’t already there.

The White House is working on a plan with mortgage lenders on subprime loans, but the time it will take to go into effect and what real substance it will have is paramount to the national economy.

An increasingly large number of homeowners are asking what it’s going to be like next year in their housing market. The growing uncertainty has added growing impatience over the real estate marketplace.

Being upside down is a state of financial bewilderment at first owing more on your home than its worth in today’s housing market. A growing number of American homeowners are facing this reality, and it isn’t going to change any time soon. Housing Predictor forecasts that the national housing market won’t be making a full rebound until at least 2011.

With increasing government actions to abate the series of problems plaguing the industry, the real estate market won’t stabilize until at least 2010, according to Housing Predictor analysts. A record high 18 million homes sit vacant across the country.

Foreclosures are at record all time highs and worsening. Foreclosures have doubled in the past twelve months alone and the number of defaults is increasing. What started as a subprime problem has bleed over into mainstream mortgages and more than the credit markets are impacted. Credit card and auto loan companies report increasing delinquencies.

However, there will be local isolated housing markets that will weather the storm well. There are always real estate markets that are the exceptions to the rule. But the over-whelming majority of housing markets are deflating, many at record rates.

It use to be that by its very nature real estate markets were local in nature driven by local economic and political forces. But the new breed of liberalized mortgage lending, pushed by the greed of Wall Street investment hedge fund buyers has changed the mortgage market in the U.S. Mortgages were sold on Wall Street like commodities to investors before the music stopped, and investors buying the securities realized what was going on and stopped buying the securities in mass.

It isn’t only subprime mortgage borrowers that are in trouble any longer. Conventional loans are becoming the new addition to the foreclosure line-up and there isn’t much many homeowners who are upside down in their house can do to get their home refinanced with falling home values. Some housing markets have already dropped as much as 50% in California and Florida and many others are close behind.

Programs to assist homeowners with their mortgages have been started in California, North Carolina and Ohio among a handful of other states. But the national crisis is worsening and is in desperate need of surgery before the U.S. economy is damaged further.

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admin on September 14th, 2008
BOSTON (MarketWatch) — It used to be a no-brainer. Retire debt-free, without a mortgage, was the age-old advice that no one dared challenge.
Increasingly, however, preretirees are heading into retirement challenging conventional wisdom and asking some tough questions: Should they retire with a mortgage or pay it off? Should they consider paying it down faster or refinancing or just do nothing?
Unfortunately, there are no longer any knee-jerk answers to those questions. In fact, experts say that homeowners who are approaching or in retirement must now lease time on a supercomputer to figure out what to do with their mortgage.
“It’s a basic cost-benefit analysis,” says Louis Llanes, president of Blythe Lane Investment Management in Englewood, Colo. “And it sounds easy, but it’s not. The decision is a function of the person’s portfolio, risk tolerance, tax issues and reinvestment rates. And everyone’s situation is different.”
At least experts say the list of items to consider is the same as it has been. In essence, the cost-benefit analysis involves examining one’s source of funds (where the money to pay down the mortgage is coming from) and one’s use of funds (what the money could have been used for had it not been used to pay down the mortgage).
Also, you’ll need to factor in such things as how long you expect live in the home, your total portfolio value, your current asset allocation, your current property value and mortgage balance, what risk you face if interest rates rise, what income-tax issues you might have and the expected appreciation on your property, among other things.
The easy part is figuring out the potential sources of funds: your taxable accounts, tax-deferred accounts, tax-free accounts, real estate equity, a business or other types of financing. The hard part is calculating what Llanes calls the explicit and implicit costs of using those funds.
For instance, preretirees need to figure out what fees, taxes, penalties and commissions they might have to pay when using these or those funds to pay down a mortgage. What’s more, they have to calculate the implicit costs of such things as idle home equity, lost interest, lost capital gains, lost dividends, lost tax savings and the like.
Preretirees and retirees also need to examine what Llanes calls the monetary and nonmonetary benefits of their money if not used for paying down a mortgage. For instance, preretirees who don’t pay down or pay off their mortgage before retiring may benefit from the tax savings of deducting their mortgage interest or they may need the income they get from their investments.
In other cases, he says, preretirees could use the money they would have used to pay down or pay off their mortgage to fund their lifestyle, take advantage of investment opportunities, provide gifts, buy life insurance or buy long-term-care insurance. Llanes says preretirees who may anticipate needing long-term care, for instance, might be better off using their funds to buy long-term care insurance than paying off their mortgage. “The idea is that you have to look at everything in holistic terms, not in a vacuum,” he says. “And the biggie that everyone ignores is the lost opportunity cost.”
What to consider
Rules of thumb for those who don’t want to crunch the numbers still exist. For instance, those who might consider keeping their mortgage include those homeowners:
  • whose investment portfolio is worth less than their mortgage
  • who have a large investment portfolio (larger than their mortgage), invest 60% of their money in stocks and 40% in bonds, and have a long-term time horizon
“The expected rate of return after taxes from that asset mix would be higher than the cost of the mortgage,” says Llanes.
(One example of how this might play out in real life, he says: There are two homeowners both of whom have a home valued at $500,000 and both of whom have a net worth of $750,000. The only difference is that homeowner “A” has a $250,000 mortgage and a $500,000 nest egg and homeowner “B” has no mortgage and a $250,000 nest egg. Assuming a mortgage rate of 5.4% and a reinvestment rate of 8%, A’s net worth would be more than $800,000 higher than B’s in 30 years.)
And those who are tolerant of risk, that is they think they can earn more on their money than the interest rate on their mortgage, are also candidates to keep a mortgage in retirement.
Meanwhile, those homeowners who might consider paying down or off their mortgage include those:
  • who have a conservative investment portfolio with, say, 40% in stocks and 60% in bonds
  • who can no longer benefit from the mortgage-interest deduction
  • who are risk-averse, that is they think they can’t earn more on their money than the interest rate on their mortgage
Of note, experts say you shouldn’t pay down your mortgage using money from a tax-deferred account such as a traditional IRA or a 401(k) plan.
Unfortunately, rules of thumb don’t apply to all people. In fact, Anthony Webb, an economist affiliated with Boston College’s Center for Retirement Research, says some preretirees and retirees may want to stay liquid just in case they have pay for unexpected medical bills and other emergencies while others who may have a problem with self-control may want to pay down their mortgage so that they won’t fritter their money away. And in still other cases, retirees may want to pay down their mortgage in order to qualify for Medicaid sooner.
Llanes, Webb and others say homeowners of today, unlike those of yesterday, have other questions to consider besides whether to retire with a mortgage or not. For instance, Steve Sass, also of the Boston College Center for Retirement Research, says those who have a variable-rate mortgage might want to consider restructuring their loan to a fixed-rate mortgage.
“A variable rate would seem to introduce a significant risk that should be avoided,” he says.
In addition, Sass says preretirees who are carrying mortgages might also consider downsizing, especially since the proceeds from the sale will be mostly if not entirely tax-free. Plus, they might be able to purchase a new house without needing a mortgage.
Trying to figure out whether to retire debt-free is a difficult task, especially in light of the many variables that come into play and the assumptions, some of which are likely to be wrong, one has to make. But rather than make snap judgments, experts say it may be well worth investing time on a supercomputer before investing your money.
Robert Powell is editor of Retirement Weekly — a service of MarketWatch — author “20 Tips for Retirement Investors” and co-author of “Decoding Wall Street.” He is also developing a personal finance series for public television.

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admin on September 14th, 2008

Did you know that there is a current way to pay off your 30 year mortgage with mortgage cycling in as little as 10 years without refinancing? And in the process you could be building up your equity 10 times faster with mortage cycling then using a traditional bi-weekly mortgage.

Thousands of homeowners across the country are finding out about mortgage cycling, a new mortgage loophole developed recently too build up equity 10 times faster than using a traditional biweekly mortgage.

After over 4 years of development and testing, Craig Romero a senior mortgage analyst shows homeowners how to build up to $14,000 in equity their first year and up to $45,000 equity in only 3 years.

Smart homeowners know that to make their mortgage a positive investment they need to build up their equity fast… while decreasing the amount of interest paid to the bank or mortgage holder.

Mortgage Cycling allows them to do this without changing their current mortgage, refinancing, or using a bi-weekly service. Imagine what you could do with over 20 years of mortgage savings in your bank account? For once you could cheat the banks from taking your hard-earned money and be able to re-invest it into your family.

Homeowners across the country are reporting great results using Craig’s system with numerous testimonials on file showing how he has helped them with their dreams of paying off their 30 year mortgage in 1/3 the time while building up their equity 10 times faster then a bi-weekly mortgage. So powerful are Craig’s techniques that he has recently had his system registered as patent-pending to protect it from copy-cats.

To read further about Mortgage Cycling and how-to save literally thousands of dollars on your home mortgage visit:

http://www.affiliaterevenuesources.com/mortgage-cycling.html

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admin on September 14th, 2008


Increasing The Equity In One’s Home

The equity in your house will reflect any growth in the value of your home. The down payment you make may provide you with some initial equity, but the cost of closing the deal does not. When managing the financial aspects of housing, you can influence the growth of equity in your home, but you cannot control all the changes in equity.

Equity can increase in several ways. First, the value of a house may increase due to home improvements. Also, inflation and local supply and demand for homes may increase value. During times of inflation, the largest portion of the country’s net worth is in home equity. Third, as you steadily repay your mortgage, you are building equity.

When looking at improvements as a means to increase the value of the house, consider carefully what you choose to do. Improvements rarely increase the value of the house dollar for dollar. For example, don’t expect a $10,000 improvement to a $60,000 house to make the house worth $70,000. Improvements are most likely to increase a house’s appraised value if neighboring houses are larger or in better condition. Conversely, if surrounding homes are smaller or have not been kept up, the cost of improvements to your home is less likely to increase its value. It is important that you monitor the condition of the houses in your neighborhood.

You will often hear the term appreciation. Your house is said to “appreciate” when its value increases without any improvements being made. Factors that affect the rate of appreciation include interest rates, inflation rates, house prices, and the state of the local economy.

You can also increase equity through principal repayment. Part of your monthly mortgage payment will repay the borrowed money (the principal). During the early years of a loan, most of your monthly payment will be for interest on the loan. Slowly, over time, a higher percentage of each payment will go toward principal. Many loans have an option that allows you to make extra payments toward the principal in addition to the basic payment. Ask your mortgage company about its policy.
Written by Dr. Francis Graham (Retired)

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admin on September 14th, 2008

Q: I’ve been hearing a lot lately about the benefits of home equity loans. But how do I know how much equity I have in my home?

A: Calculating equity is simple: you take the market value of your home and subtract any outstanding mortgages or liens. So if you have a $100,000 home and have $60,000 left to repay on your mortgage, your equity would equal $40,000.

The amount of equity you have is not constant, however. It changes depending on your home’s value, market conditions and the terms of your mortgage. The simplest way to increase your equity is to pay off your mortgage. The more you pay towards the principal, the more equity you will accrue. In the beginning, most of your payments will likely go toward the interest, so you will build equity much slower in the first couple of years in your new home. You can build equity faster if you shorten the term of your mortgage, as more of your payments go toward principal. Once you have paid off your mortgage, the lien on the title will be cleared and you will own 100 percent of your home.

You can also increase your home’s equity by making improvements that increase its value. Be careful here, however, as renovations rarely recoup their full cost. The best strategy is to make renovations that bring your house up to par with other houses on the block and to avoid souping up your house with upgrades and designer appliances the rest of the neighborhood doesn’t have.

Best of all, your equity may increase without you doing anything. If property values in your area increase, so will your equity, as it is based on market values. Using the above example, if property values in your area increase by eight percent, your equity would equal $48,000. But housing market conditions are affected by a number of things, including interest rates, inflation and the economy. And while houses tend to appreciate over time, it is possible for these conditions to lower property values and result in a decrease in your equity. In a worst-case scenario, this could result in negative equity, where the amount of your mortgage exceeds the value of your home.

Negative equity could also occur if you have an interest-only mortgage. In these cases, your monthly payments may be covering just the interest or only a portion of it. At the end of the interest-only term, you still owe the lender the principal as well as any unpaid interest, possibly meaning that you owe more than the market value of your home.

To help avoid negative equity, make sure at least some of your mortgage payments are paying down the principal and try to buy a home in an area where property values are increasing.

The good news is that national home values generally appreciate by an average rate of five percent per year, and home prices have on the whole increased steadily since 1968, increasing by 8.8 percent in 2004, according to the National Association of REALTORS®. This wealth is readily accessible through home equity loans, which tend to have lower interest rates and may have tax benefits.


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admin on September 14th, 2008

Building home equity is every homeowners goal. Home ownership is a great way to build a person’s assets. Home equity is the difference between the value of the home and the amount still owed on the home. Once a persons pays off their mortgage it is ideal that there is some home equity in the home. Home equity, however, just does not happen. There are ways to build home equity and home owners should try to build some equity on their own.

There are two approaches to increase home equity. The first approach is to increase the value of the home. This approach involves making improvements or additions to the home so the value increases. Such improvements or additions could include getting new siding or adding a pool. This process requires maintenance to make sure that the home stays in great condition. The second approach involves reducing the length of the mortgage so there is less time for the home to age. This can involve paying a larger down payment, making extra mortgage payments or getting a shorter term mortgage. This approach will cost more up front. The approach one takes depends on their own situation. Someone who can not afford to pay more money upfront might look into the first approach as this will allow them to spread out the extra money needed over a period of time. Someone else may find that all the extra work of improvements is too much and the second approach is much easier. It is all a matter of what works best for the home owner as both approaches increase the home equity.

Having home equity offer home owners nice benefits. Home owners can use their home equity to get loans for improvements or other needs. Home equity should be important for every home owner.

Robert Thatcher is a freelance author based in Cupertino, California. He publishes articles and reports in various ezines and contributes on a regular basis to FreeNetPublishing.com

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