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goingdown1 e1268322763986 Fed decision keeps mortgage rates at record lows

The Federal Reserve’s plan to reinvest principal payments on some bonds into mortgage-backed securities is already contributing to the nation’s record low mortgage interest rates, Bankrate said Thursday.

Bankrate said the Federal Open Market Committee seems to be taking direct aim at mortgage rates by shifting $400 billion from short-term holdings into long-term government bonds. The program, which begins Oct. 3 and runs through June, will involve longer-term Treasury securities with remaining maturities of six years to 30 years, and will be financed through the sale of shorter-term Treasurys with maturities of three years or less.

“This program should put downward pressure on longer-term interest rates and help make broader financial conditions more accommodative,” the FOMC said in a statement following its two-day meeting.Analysts also said anemic economic growth and European debt fears are keeping investors on the sidelines.Rates are unlikely to increase until mortgage refinancing and purchasing activity picks up, Bankrate said.

“In order to get the most economic impact out of low mortgage rates, the pool of prospective refinancers needs to be expanded. Deeply upside-down homeowners, those with second liens or mortgage insurance, and lender concerns about buyback liability are all formidable impediments to refinancing,” according to the firm, which aggregates rate data from across the country.

The Freddie Mac primary mortgage market survey showed the average rate for a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage remained unchanged this week at 4.09%, while the 15-year, fixed rate dropped one basis point to a new record low of 3.29%.Meanwhile, the five-year, Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgage averaged 3.02%, up from 2.99% last week and down from 3.54% a year ago.The one-year, Treasury-indexed ARM averaged 2.82% this week, up from 2.81% a week earlier and down from 3.46% last year.

“A sluggish economy and investor concerns over the European debt markets left mortgage rates largely unchanged this week,” said Frank Nothaft, vice president and chief economist for Freddie Mac.

“Manufacturing activity in both the New York and Philadelphia regions contracted in September,” he said. “Moreover, the Federal Reserve board reported that households lost nearly $150 billion in net worth in the second quarter, representing the first quarterly decline in a year.”

Bankrate data show the 30-year FRM at record lows for the fifth consecutive week. The average rate for a traditional mortgage fell to 4.29%, from 4.32% last week, while the 15-year FRM declined to 3.42% from 3.44%.

In addition, the 5/1 ARM decreased to 3.05% from 3.07% last week.

As of this week 10 Year Treasury Bond hit 1.76 Yield “An All Time Low”!!!!  What does this mean?  It means Mortgage Rates will hit Record Lows Today so please get the word out to your clients.  Though our Stock Market is struggling, along with our economy, the positive side is that it has created Record Low Rates that will not be around forever.  The Home Affordability Index is at “LOWS” not seen in Decades.  Now is the time to buy a home,  especially if you are renting. My website has a great rent vs. own calculator to help you with buyers  

If you study the different markets in the Southern California  Rent vs Own is getting to be very close.  Even with FHA Financing (with as little as 3.5% down) I have seen property payments for Lower than Market Rents on Homes. And VA’s new lower funding fee makes it even better, too.

If you have Family, Friends, Neighbors, Co-Workers, and your Client Database that are not aware of what is happening please get the word out.  

Can you imagine getting into a home with rates at 4% for 30yr fixed or well into the 3’s for hybrid-arms or 15yr fixed? !!!! “Don’t miss the Boat”!  You and your buyers might regret it at a later time…!

Click here to get loan information before the rates go up. To get started on viewing homes, condos, investment properties, pre-foreclosures, bank owned foreclosures (REO’s) or thinking of selling your property, please contact me today for free counseling at (619) 540-5811.

New Pro-Property Search. We will setup a customized search for you by our professional REALTOR® Team. Sit back relax and shop at home! We will make changes to your Pro-Property Search any time you like, just let us know. Have fun!

By the way…if you know of someone who would appreciate the level of service in real estate we provide, please call me or have them go to www.CountyProperties.net/ and I’ll be happy to follow up and take great care of them.

Most of the news lately about real estate has been dismal: Home prices are swooning, foreclosures ballooning.

There is, however, one bright spot: the rental market, where demand is up and rents are rising. That’s partly because those foreclosures have turned more than 4 million former homeowners into renters, but also because many other prospective homeowners, worried about losing their jobs or housing prices falling a lot further still, are reluctant to buy now.

As with many investments, the best time to get in is when most others are sitting on the sidelines. To figure out whether you can benefit by investing in rental property, here’s what you need to know.

THE CASE FOR BUYING NOW

Many factors make this a great time to invest. Mortgage rates are at a 40-year low, and homes in many areas are ultra-cheap. Meanwhile, demand for rentals has risen in more than 500 cities, according to recent Census data. That, in turn, has enabled landlords to charge more. Hotpads.com, a real estate research firm, reports that rents nationwide jumped 11.6% in 2010, to $1,320 a month.

You’ll need that rental income to tide you over until home prices bounce back; in fact, the typical investor today plans to hold for 10 years, according to a survey by the National Association of Realtors.

Send The Help Desk your real estate questions.

If you can hang on that long, you’ve got a good shot at solid gains, especially if you’re financing the home purchase. “Whereas leverage is dangerous when buying stocks, it can be a good long-term strategy with real estate,” notes real estate investor and Columbia University adjunct finance professor Marshall Sonenshine.

The big catch: “Can you afford to hold the property that long and not need the equity for your kid’s college fund?” says Sonenshine. Or whatever other pressing need might crop up.

You’ll also face some tough financing rules. Most banks now require a down payment of at least 20% to 25% and evidence you have enough cash to cover six months’ worth of mortgage, tax, and insurance payments.

HOW TO FIND A GOOD DEAL

Investment real estate is like produce: It’s best bought locally. “Buy something you can get to in 10 minutes,” says Seattle real estate investor Bill Snyder.

Familiarity with the neighborhood also limits nasty surprises like a noisy bar or a nearby development competing for renters.

Work with a local realtor who has experience with rentals and can help you assess how attractive a given home will be to tenants.

And while prices on multifamily dwellings haven’t dropped as much as they have on single-family homes, don’t ignore plexes: Intake from a few rents instead of just one will boost your cash flow; a single vacancy won’t hurt as much; and you could benefit from economies of scale for things like appliances and painting. But stick to buildings with four units or fewer to avoid stricter financing requirements, such as a bigger down payment and higher mortgage rates.

Once you’ve identified candidates, crunch the numbers. The goal: to make sure your rental income will at least cover your loan payments, plus a 20% cushion to handle repairs, vacancies, and property management.

To figure out what you’ll garner in rent, ask sellers for recent leases, says Snyder, and double-check their numbers by perusing sites like Rentometer and Craigslist for similar rentals in the neighborhood.

Assume your mortgage rate will be at least a half-point higher than rates on owner-occupied properties. Factor in insurance and property taxes, and bank on a 5% vacancy rate. Otherwise, one empty month can kill you.

KNOW WHAT YOU’RE IN FOR

Brush up on your people skills: Owning rentals also means responding to tenant complaints, like the 2 a.m. phone call about a broken toilet. Want to palm off the grunt work? You can hire a handyman (around $45 an hour) or a management company (8% to 10% of monthly income plus a half-month’s rent for filling vacancies), but the luxury will eat into cash flow.

To find your own tenants, creative ads on Craigslist are your best bet. Run credit and reference checks (National Tenant Network, at ntnonline.com , can help). And invest in small touches to make your place stand out, such as cool lighting fixtures or antique door hardware. Those will pay off when it’s time to sell too.  

 We will setup a customized search for you by our professional REALTOR® Team click New Pro-Property Search.. Sit back relax and shop at home! We will make changes to your Pro-Property Search any time you like, just let us know. Have fun! or self search.

Economy vacillates mortgage rates free fall

by Arnie Levine on August 6, 2011

in Finance,Latest News

Mortgage rates fell sharply this past week, hitting record lows, as bond yields declined and signs of a weakening economy dampened consumer sentiment further, according to Freddie Mac’s latest Primary Mortgage Market Survey.

The 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage hit its lowest level of 2011, coming in at 4.39% compared to 4.55% last week and 4.49% a year ago. The 15-year FRM hit a historic low of 3.54%, down from 3.66% last week and 3.95% last year.

In addition, 5-year, adjustable-rate mortgages also reached a historic low of 3.18%, down from 3.25% last week and 3.63% last year.

The only mortgage rate that rose is the 1-year Treasury-indexed ARM, which hit 3.02%, up from 2.95% last week and down from 3.55% last year.

Bankrate also said mortgage rates plunged to a nine-month lows as a flurry of economic worries increased the odds of a double-dip recession.

The firm said these worries “had investors flocking into the safety of U.S. Treasury securities — their safe-haven status assured — which fueled the decline in mortgage rates.”

Based on Bankrate’s analysis, the 30-year FRM fell to 4.54%, down from 4.74% a week earlier. The 15-year FRM and 5/1 ARM fell to 3.83% and 3.34%, respectively.

County Properties, 25 years of brokerage experience, trust and a Member of the local Better Business Bureau! We offer free counseling in real estate regarding; home values and information on options of selling vs. Foreclosure.

Click here to get loan information before the rates go up. To get started on viewing homes, condos, investment properties, pre-foreclosures, bank owned foreclosures (REO’s) or thinking of selling your property, please contact me today for free counseling at (619) 301-0200 .

New Pro-Property Search. We will setup a customized search for you by our professional REALTOR® Team. Sit back relax and shop at home! We will make changes to your Pro-Property Search any time you like, just let us know. Have fun!

300px Mortgage debt FTC stops bogus mortgage loan modification business

Solutions

Under a settlement with the Federal Trade Commission, a federal court banned three men and their company from the mortgage modification business and ordered them to pay nearly $19 million for consumer refunds. The defendants allegedly deceived distressed homeowners with phony claims that they would negotiate with lenders to modify their mortgages and make them more affordable.

The FTC sued First Universal Lending and its owners in November 2009 as part of Project Stolen Hope, a continuing federal-state crackdown on mortgage foreclosure rescue and loan modification scams. As alleged in the FTC’s complaint, the defendants encouraged homeowners to stop making mortgage payments, saying lenders would not negotiate unless they were at least a few months behind in their payments. After charging consumers up to $7,000 in up-front fees, the defendants often did little or nothing to help them, the agency charged. The court subsequently halted the defendants’ operation, froze their assets, and ordered them to disable their Web sites and computers.

In addition to imposing a judgment of more than $18.8 million against the defendants, the settlement order bans them from the mortgage relief services business. It also permanently prohibits the defendants from misrepresenting material facts about any good or service, violating the Telemarketing Sales Rule, selling or using customers’ personal information, failing to properly dispose of customer information, and collecting payments from their customers.

The defendants are First Universal Lending LLC, Sean Zausner, David Zausner, and David J. Feingold, an attorney in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida.

The FTC asks people to report foreclosure rescue and mortgage modification scams to FTC.gov or by calling 1-877-FTC-HELP. The FTC makes those complaints available to federal, state, and local law enforcement through the Consumer Sentinel Network.

The Commission vote approving the proposed consent judgment was 5-0. The FTC filed the proposed consent judgment in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida. The consent judgment was entered by the court on May 25, 2011.

NOTE: This consent judgment is for settlement purposes only and does not constitute an admission by the defendant that the law has been violated. Consent judgments have the force of law when approved and signed by the District Court judge.

The Federal Trade Commission works for consumers to prevent fraudulent, deceptive, and unfair business practices and to provide information to help spot, stop, and avoid them. To file a complaint in English or Spanish, visit the FTC’s online Complaint Assistant or call
1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357). The FTC enters complaints into Consumer Sentinel, a secure, online database available to more than 2,000 civil and criminal law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad. The FTC’s website provides free information on a variety of consumer topics. Like the FTC on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.

If you have equity in your home, we will sell your home and get top dollar in this challenging market, got to County Properties Marketing Homes. If you do not have enough equity, and you must sell your property as a short sale we have the expertise to do so also and close escrow in 45-60 days or less. Learn more about mortgage relief options and how to take advantage of our FREE REALTOR (R)  CONSULTATION .  or go to www.ShortSaleRealtors4U.com

More questions we can help you, at County Properties, 25 years of brokerage experience, trust and a Member of the local Better Business Bureau! Want to know what your home is worth? Click here for a free market evaluation !

County Properties is not associated with the government and our service is not approved by the government or your lender.” “Even if you accept this offer and use our free service your lender may not agree to change your loan.

By the way…if you know of someone who would appreciate the level of service in real estate we provide, please call me or have them go to www.CountyProperties.net and I’ll be happy to follow up and take great care of them.

For the clearest sign yet that U.S. housing reform is floundering, just take a look at the latest proposal. Two lawmakers, with industry lobbyists in tow, are heralding a union of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac , which would leave the government still in charge. Even more than other ideas floating around, it would preserve the status quo. It only goes to show just how weak the political will is for a real fix.

The full details are still forthcoming but early reports hardly inspire much confidence. The newly created Frannie, as it were, would look a lot like the old government-sponsored entity framework. It would buy mortgages, package them into tradable bonds and, most significantly, come with a government guarantee. After pumping more than $160 billion into Fannie and Freddie, Uncle Sam should be seriously questioning guarantees, not embracing them.

Since being seized by the government three years ago, Fannie and Freddie have become even more important to U.S. housing. By propping up the market, this has terrified the real estate industry and consumer groups into thinking the disappearance of the GSEs would herald yet another downturn in home prices. That fear isn’t without merit. Fannie and Freddie, together with the Federal Housing Administration, are guaranteeing roughly nine out of 10 new mortgages and back roughly half the $10.6 trillion market.

But the debate needs to be far less myopic. Wringing out excesses, for one, will mean demand for home loans won’t return to the go-go days of yesteryear. That means the private sector could eventually shoulder a bigger share. Proposals should pave the wave for transferring risk back to where it belongs — the homeowner, the lender and other investors. Uncle Sam has already done more than his fair share.

The duration of the debate over Fannie and Freddie makes the path of least resistance — especially for politicians worried about re-election and other front-burner issuers like the deficit — ever more appealing. The proposal, from Representatives Gary Miller of California and Carolyn McCarthy of New York, crystallizes just what can happen when a crisis fades from view and indecision persists for too long. Few expect Congress to enact any legislation on U.S. housing reform until at least 2013 anyway. Sadly, that should make selling the status quo even easier.

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Rep. Gary G. Miller (CA-42) and Rep. Carolyn McCarthy (NY-04) are expected to introduce a bill tomorrow to merge Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and restructure the company into a government-held corporation.
The legislation will propose that the merged company purchase mortgages and sell them to investors as securities that are government-backed. The new company wouldn’t operate for profit-making purposes and wouldn’t have shareholders.
Under the proposal, a five-member board would govern the corporation, and it would be regulated by the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which would ensure that its market share didn’t exceed 50 percent of the mortgage market.

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Prudently underwritten loans with down payments of at least 20% to 25% don’t need a guarantee. “They only need the guarantee if they’re going to embark on low down payments,” he says. “That’s where the debate gets stalled.”

Click here to get loan information before the rates go up. To get started on viewing homes, condos, investment properties, pre-foreclosures, bank owned foreclosures (REO’s) or thinking of selling your property, please contact me today for free counseling at (619) 301-0200 .

New Pro-Property Search. We will setup a customized search for you by our professional REALTOR® Team. Sit back relax and shop at home! We will make changes to your Pro-Property Search any time you like, just let us know. Have fun!

Lenders' data mining goes deep

by Arnie Levine on July 23, 2010

in Finance,Latest News

lienholder lender1 150x150 Lenders' data mining goes deepMortgage makers are going beyond tax returns and bank statements to determine whether you’re a good risk. They’re checking such things as where you have pizza delivered and where you shop online.

That pizza you had delivered the other night could mean the difference between whether you are approved for a mortgage or rejected. Really??

There’s a big stretch between making a house payment and paying for a pizza. But it’s not what you pay for carryout that matters, at least not in the eyes of lenders. It’s where the food was delivered.

Ordering takeout proves that you live where you say you do, and that helps lenders uncover the crook who claims to live in the property he is trying to refinance when he really lives hundreds of miles away. Or expose the 35-year-old who says he has a $1,200-a-month apartment when he really lives rent-free with Mom and Dad.

When you order food online, you become part of a vast database that lenders might tap to help them determine whether you are a good risk. Moreover, all sorts of these data reservoirs exist, and none of them is off-limits to lenders who are coming off the worst financial debacle since the Great Depression.

“If the data is available and it can be obtained legally, I’m going to test it,” says Alex Santos, president of Digital Risk, an Orlando, Fla., analytics firm that works with lenders and investors to build better underwriting mousetraps. “If it is inexpensive and makes my credit model better, I’m going to use it.”

Digital Risk is just one of numerous risk-management companies that are continuously probing for ways to help clients quantify their risk, prevent fraud and otherwise ensure the quality of their loans. And they’re going to extraordinary lengths to do so.

For example, they might peek into your online-buying habits. After all, the reasoning goes, someone who buys his shirts from a Brooks Brothers catalog may have more disposable income than someone who shops at JCPenney.

“At least that’s a theory we can test,” Santos says. “We’re looking for any type of data source that you can plug into a computer. It takes only a month of trial and error to determine whether the information can help [determine credit risk] or not. We have a hypothesis, push a button, and the computer tells us whether the data is predictive or not.”

This sort of data mining goes way beyond your credit score, that financial snapshot that measures your ability and willingness to repay your debt. And, Santos says, “there’s a tremendous amount of this kind of analytics going on right now.”

Lenders are still checking credit histories, not just when you apply for a mortgage but also a second time a day or two before the loan closes. But your credit score — known as a FICO score for the name of the company that created the scoring formula — is now considered “too broad.” Consequently, it has moved down in the hierarchy of tests that lenders are using to make certain that someone isn’t hoodwinking them.

First and foremost, lenders are pulling copies of your tax returns directly from UNCLE SAM. DON’T BE ALARMED.

You give the lender permission to do that when you sign Form 4506-T. The idea here is to make sure that you haven’t altered the copy of your last two years’ tax returns that you provided when you signed your loan application. Lenders want to know if you might have exaggerated how much you earned.

Form 4506-T isn’t new. But a few years ago, at the height of the housing-market bonanza when home loans were easy to come by, many lenders failed to use it. Now practically everyone is going straight to the federal tax collector to compare the returns you provided with those on file with the IRS.

Lenders also are going to great lengths to verify employment and assets. Not only are they calling the name and work number you provided on your application, but they also are seeking confirmation in writing from your employer about what you earn, your position and how long you’ve worked there.

It’s the same for your bank accounts. Rather than being satisfied solely with the copies of the bank statements you provided, lenders are going directly to your bank to secure another set of those statements to make sure the numbers line up.

Lenders are no longer taking the appraiser’s word for how much the property you want to buy or refinance is worth, either. Now, they are employing automated valuation models as a second line of defense to be certain the appraiser’s estimate is on the money.

Lenders also are searching for other undisclosed liabilities by running your Social Security number through a huge database known as Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems.

Since 1997, more than 63 million mortgages have been registered on the MERS tracking system, each with a distinct 18-digit identification number. So, if you have another mortgage that you “forgot” to tell your lender about, this check will probably find it.

As long as it does not distinguish between race, religion, age and other “protected” classes, anything is fair game.

The Los Angeles Times

County Properties, 24 years of brokerage experience, trust and a Member of the local Better Business Bureau! We offer free counseling in real estate regarding; home values and information on options of selling vs. Foreclosure.

Click here to get loan information before the rates go up. To get started on viewing homes, condos, investment properties, pre-foreclosures, bank owned foreclosures (REO’s) or thinking of selling your property, please contact me today for free counseling at (619) 301-0200. Email: Arnie@ County4.com

By the way…if you know of someone who would appreciate the level of service in real estate we provide, please call me or have them go to www.CountyProperties.net/ and I’ll be happy to follow up and take great care of them.

Unbelievable! Home buyers must take advantage of these low rates and affordable home prices! fixed interest rates home loans1 300x129 Do you think we have reached our lowest interest rate for mortgages?

“Mortgage rates slumped to record lows this week, Freddie Mac confirmed Thursday, with lenders on average offering 4.69% on a 30-year fixed-rate loan.

The average rate on the 30-year loan fell from 4.75% last week, dropping below the previous record of 4.71% set in December. As recently as early April, the average was at 5.21%.

The latest move down had been expected after Treasury yields — which usually influence the direction of home-loan rates — fell this week to their lowest levels in more than a year on concerns about the durability of the economic recovery.
Freddie Mac’s survey, which the mortgage giant has been conducting since 1971, asks lenders what rates they are offering — and the upfront fees required to obtain those rates — for well-qualified borrowers who have at least a 20% down payment for a home purchase or that much equity in a property being refinanced. Actual rates negotiated by solid borrowers are often slightly lower.

Upfront fees on 30-year fixed-rate mortgages this week averaged 0.7% of the amount borrowed.

Rates also hit record lows on 15-year fixed-rate mortgages and so-called 5-1 hybrids, which have a fixed rate for five years before turning adjustable for the remaining 25 years.”

The Los Angeles Times

GREAT TIME TO BUY!

Don’t miss your opportunity to purchase a home at this time with LOW interest RATES and LOW home PRICES! Call today to get started, (619) 301-0200 or visit our website www.CountyProperties.net.

Click here to get loan information before the rates go up. To get started on viewing homes, condos, investment properties, pre-foreclosures, bank owned foreclosures (REO’s).
County Properties, 24 years of brokerage experience, trust and a Member of the local Better Business Bureau! We offer free counseling in real estate regarding; home values and information on options of selling vs. Foreclosure.

By the way…if you know of someone who would appreciate the level of service in real estate we provide, please call me or have them go to www.CountyProperties.net/ and I’ll be happy to follow up and take great care of them.

Builder confidence in the market for newly built, single-family homes rose one point in August to 18, its highest level since June 2008, according to the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI), released Tuesday. “Home builder expectations have been buoyed by the success of the first-time home buyer tax credit and its anticipated boost to buying activity leading up to the Nov. 30 expiration date,” said NAHB Chairman Joe Robson. “The question is what happens after that — whether there will be enough momentum to keep us moving toward a recovery, particularly in light of significant headwinds such as the severe credit crunch for housing production loans and inappropriate appraisal practices that are scuttling a quarter of all new-home sales. Unless Congress and the Administration focus their attention on housing right now, this improvement may well be short-lived.”
  
Two out of three of the HMI’s component indexes recorded substantial gains in August, according to the report. The index gauging sales expectations in the next six months rose four points to 30 while, the index gauging traffic of prospective buyers rose three points to 16. The index gauging current sales conditions was unchanged at 16.
 
Regionally, all but the South recorded HMI gains in August, according to the report. The Northeast posted an eight-point gain to 24, the Midwest posted a two-point gain to 16, the West posted a three-point gain to 17 and the South posted a one-point decline to 18.

If you would like to get loan information from recommended banks, or get started and view all homes, new homes, condos, investment properties, pre-foreclosures, bank owned foreclosures (REO's) or thinking of selling your property, please visit our website at: County Properties San Diego or County Properties Riverside