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It may be cold outside, but lenders and
home sellers will give buyers a warm welcome
By Bankrate.com
Try
to picture what it's like being a mortgage lender or Realtor right
now. The phone isn't ringing. Homes aren't hitting the market. The
wind howling outside is nothing compared to the boss howling inside
about those last few loan files that haven't been closed yet. Shouldn't
buyers feel some pity?
Heck no, according to real estate experts. Now's
the time for mortgage hunters in many parts of the country to pounce,
they say, because only the most eager sellers and lenders try to
get deals done at this time of year. As a result, price cuts, closing
cost incentives and other bonuses await buyers brave enough to withstand
the wind chill.
"The holidays slow people down. They slow the
Realtors down. They slow the lenders down," says Terry
Eilers, a Browns Valley, Calif., author who wrote How
to Buy the Home You Want, for the Best Price, in Any Market.
"If you really want a deal in Alpena, Mich.,
go out and buy your home in January because you can't find the sign
sticking out of the snow. They're desperate at that time."
How slow can it get?
Just how slow can things get? It varies over time depending
upon the state of interest rates, employment, stock prices and other
economic measures. But year in and year out, all of the real estate
indexes show the same thing -- a significant drop-off in lending
and housing activity during the December-to-February period in most
areas.
"The home buyer season is more spring and summer,"
says Bud Carter, senior director of residential finance at the Mortgage
Bankers Association of America in Washington. "Business does slow
down a little bit, particularly in the winter."
Buyers can benefit from the decline in activity
in several ways. On the home pricing front, they can save a few
dollars because there aren't as many bidders chasing property. The
lack of competition encourages some sellers to accept lower bids
and prevents others from pitting several interested parties against
one another. Because people who sell at this time of year tend to
be those who really need to, buyers will often find they have even
more clout.
"If you want to make the deals, that's the time
to look," Eilers says.
Of course, financing a home can be trickier
than getting a good price for one. But winter holds some pleasant
surprises there as well, especially this year.
Doling out the perks
Consider that buyers traditionally have been able to find more
closing cost coupons, fee discounts and other bonuses this time
of year. That's because brokers and lenders have less traffic coming
through their doors. But late 2000 has been much quieter than late
1998, when super-low interest rates spurred record numbers of homeowners
to refinance. As a result, companies are even more inclined than
usual to dole out the perks.
"There's no question around the country you're
going to see lower closing costs or lenders trying to kind of keep
their factories humming," says Brad Church, president of Wachovia
Corp.'s mortgage division. The bank is headquartered in Winston-Salem,
N.C.
"They're perhaps going to subsidize their rates
and prices a bit and your closing costs might be $250, $500 less."
Borrowers will find the lender's office much
less harried than the mall this time of year, too, according to
Church. Loan officers can take applications with less hassle and
process paperwork in less time, allowing consumers to close more
easily.
"With volume down, we're not going through the
refi craze, so we're able to take care of our customers better,"
he says.
Seasonal benefit does
vary
Still, the seasonal benefit for buyers varies by location.
In South Florida, for instance, there are many more people -- and
potential house hunters -- milling about between December and Easter
because that's the tourist season. Ski resort towns and regions
with red-hot growth, such as Silicon Valley or the Greater Boston
metropolitan area, may not see much slackening either. Even places
that consumers might think would cool off with the weather don't
because of localized market phenomena.
"Here in this area of Montana, we're the fastest-growing
area in the state," says Bob Evans, a broker with Real
Estate Brokers of Montana in Bozeman. "The demand is high here
and it's somewhat of a seller's market in most price categories."
In many places, though, buyers who shop around
the holidays can find the perfect Christmas present without Santa's
help -- especially since this winter's shaping up to be positively
Grinchlike for lenders.
"There are some companies in the last couple
of years that have done very well from an income standpoint but
are finding it's very difficult to work in this kind of environment,"
says Alan Cohen, a branch manager with Irwin
Mortgage Corp. in Indianapolis.
"They may be looking for year-end numbers or
are looking to generate some income, so it's not uncommon that you'll
see coupons for closing costs or other types of incentives," he
adds. "It's geared toward a slump in sales."
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