The best
moves in mortgages 2.
Have we saved enough for a down payment? During the credit and housing
boom, people routinely bought houses with no money down. Piggyback loans were
the norm as homeowners avoided mortgage insurance. Now substantial down payments
have made a comeback, and so has mortgage insurance. A few
low-down-payment programs are still available, all courtesy of the federal government.
The Veterans Administration guarantees mortgages with no down payment, and so
does the Department of Agriculture's Rural Housing Service. There are restrictions
on who is eligible for those loans, where the loans are available and for how
much. More people are eligible for Federal Housing Administration-insured
mortgages, which require down payments as low as 3.5 percent. Outside
of those federal loan programs, most lenders require significant down payments.
The requirements vary by lender, the type of dwelling and where it is. A few creditworthy
people might be able to buy houses with 5 percent down, but a 10 percent minimum
is more common. Mortgage insurance companies won't insure loans
on Florida condominiums, so lenders require down payments of at least 20 percent.
For jumbo mortgages in California, many lenders require a 30 percent down payment. On
top of that, the lender will want to know how you got the down payment money.
Is it from personal savings? Was all or part of the money a gift from family?
If some of the money was given to you, the lender will want to make sure you have
enough savings and income to handle temporary financial setbacks. 3.
Is this the right time in our lives? Homebuyers, especially first-timers,
should aim to own for the medium to long term. House prices have room to fall
further in many -- if not most -- markets, and it could take years for prices
to rebound. In short, it's a bad idea to buy a house with the intention of selling
it in two or three years. Doing so could be a money-losing proposition, especially
after factoring in the costs of real estate commissions and taxes. 2009
smart moves: Refinance the mortgage Elements within the housing industry
flew a trial balloon in December 2008 to gauge public support for using the Treasury
to cut mortgage rates to 4.5 percent. There was one catch: The low rates supposedly
would be for purchases, not refinances. Nevertheless, mortgage
rates have dropped to levels not seen since the refinancing boom of 2003. The
low rates sparked a refi boomlet in late 2008, but lots of homeowners were frozen
out because their homes had lost equity. About two-thirds of
homes have mortgages. Of those, an estimated one-sixth are underwater -- in other
words, the owner owes more on the mortgage than the house is worth. These borrowers
can't refinance unless they have enough money saved to make up the difference
-- and then some, because they need a bit of equity, too. According
to First American CoreLogic, almost one-quarter of mortgages nationwide were in
the category of "near negative equity" in October 2008. These loans were not underwater
(yet), but the owners had 5 percent equity or less. Such borrowers might have
trouble refinancing because of the paucity of their equity. The
squeeze caused by falling home values will have a relatively big effect on homeowners
with good credit who got adjustable-rate mortgages sometime in 2004, 2005 and
2006. These are the people who will have an incentive to refinance out of their
ARMs and into fixed-rate mortgages (a process that Quicken Loans chief economist
Bob Walters calls "dis-ARMing"). |