Posts Tagged ‘Mortgage’

Under a Minute Facts

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Rates to Stay at Record Levels:

On Wednesday the Federal Reserve announced that the economy is “proceeding” and will keep interest rates at record lows, near zero.

Flood Bill Extended:

Thousands of home owners can breathe a sigh of relief. The House of Representatives passed a bill to extend the authority for the National Flood Insurance Program thru Sept 30th, 2010.

The passage of H.R. 5569 is a first step toward helping home buyers to the closing table,” said NAR President Vicki Cox Golder.

Lenders would not close loans on transactions where flood insurance was required. The coverage would now be retroactive from when the insurance program expired May 31st. Now the senate will have to review the bill.

At the same time a survey was done to CEOs of large U.S. companies. The good news….39% said they expect to increase the number of people on their payrolls in the second half of 2010.

Source: Associated Press, Alan Zibel (06/23/2010)

 

Fannie Mae getting tough with homeowners who just “walk away”:

Fannie Mae announced plans Wednesday to get tough with those who default when they are able to pay. Those borrowers wouldn’t be able to get another Fannie Mae mortgage for 7 years. The current wait is five years. Fannie also threatened to sue home owners who walk away from their mortgages in states where such deficiency judgments are legal.

Some critics say the company should try principal write-downs before it penalizes borrowers for choosing to walk away.

Source: CNNMoney.com, Tami Luhby (06/23/2010)

New Interest Only and ARM Requirements

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FannieMaeOn Friday Fannie Mae announced it will require borrowers using interest-only mortgages to place at least 30% down. This requirement will ensure that buyers can qualify for their mortgage payments should the interest rate rise to the CAP rate, which wasn’t the way the mortgages had been underwritten in the past.

Fannie Mae also said that in order for them to purchase ARM’s that borrowers must qualify using either:

1. The loan’s initial interest rate plus two percentage points.
2. The cap, the maximum the interest rate can rise.

“Our goal is to make sure consumers can sustain their mortgages and remain in their homes over the long-term, while helping our lender partners offer a range of mortgage products for qualified borrowers,” says Marianne Sullivan, senior vice president of Single Family Credit Policy and Risk Management at Fannie Mae, in a prepared release.

In light of defaults from the last 2 years, this makes sense to make sure the borrowers can sustain their mortgages payment should the interest rate rise and just in case the borrowers for some reason are unable to refinance their homes. Perhaps they should think about raising the credit score for those borrowers as well.

 

Under A Minute Facts

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  • Initial Job claims more than expected at $456,000 this week from $450,000. However, it was still better than last week’s figure at $480,000.
  • Exisiting Home Sales rose 6.8 percent nationwide in March to a 5.35 million annual rate, according to the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®.
  • Existing, single-family home sales increased 2.5 percent in March.The statewide median price of an existing single-family home increased 20.8 percent in March to
    $301,790.
  • According to the Mortgage Bankers Association on Wednesday, demand for mortgages rose 13.6 percent as mortgage rates stablized during the week ending April 16.

30 Year Mortgage Rates

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Mortgage rates fell for the third straight week on 30-year fixed home loans, according to Freddie Mac. This week average interest on 30-year mortgages was 4.99 percent, compared to 5.06 percent last week and 5.16 percent a year ago.

Rates on 15-year fixed loans were also lower, averaging 4.40 percent, compared to 4.45 percent last week. Adjustable-rate mortgages also fell this week, the 5/1 ARM being at 4.27% and the 1 year at 4.32. .

“Fixed mortgage rates followed bond yields lower for the third consecutive week, pushing 30-year mortgages below 5 percent once more,” said Frank Nothaft, Freddie Mac vice president and chief economist. “Similarly, ARM rates eased along with shorter-term rates, as the federal funds futures market indicates no increase in the Federal Reserve’s target rate following its upcoming committee meeting on January 26th and 27th.

Source: Freddie Mac

Under A Minute Facts

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· Existing, single-family home sales increased 1 percent in October to a seasonally adjusted rate of 562,400 units on an annualized basis.

· The statewide median price of an existing single-family home increased 0.3 percent in October to $297,500, compared with September 2009.

· C.A.R.’s Unsold Inventory Index fell to 4 months in October, compared with 6.1 months in October 2008.

. The median number of days it took to sell a single-family home was 34.1 days in October 2009, compared with 45.5 days (revised) for the same period a year ago.

. Statewide, the 10 cities with the highest median home prices in California during October 2009 were: Palo Alto, $1,639,550; Los Altos, $1,592,550; Manhattan Beach, $1,037,500; Cupertino, $1,030,000; Newport Beach, $935,000; Los Gatos, $920,000; Rancho Palos Verdes, $900,000; Santa Barbara, $897,500; Lafayette, $867,500; and Santa Monica, $786,000.

October 2009 Regional Sales and Price Activity*
Regional and Condo Sales Data Not Seasonally Adjusted

  Median Price Percent Change in Price from Prior Month Percent Change in Price from Prior Year Percent Change in Sales from Prior Month Percent Change in Sales from Prior Year
   Oct-09 Sep-09   Oct-08   Sep-09 Oct-08
Statewide                
Calif. (sf) $297,500 0.3%   -3.2%   5.9% 1.0%
Calif. (condo) $267,520 -1.0%   -3.6%   5.5% 9.4%
Santa Clara $590,000 6.7%   7.3%   -4.7% 24.6%

 

Median Prices By Region – Current Month vs. Year Ago

  Oct-09 Sep-09   Oct-08  
Statewide          
Calif. (sf) $297,500 $296,610 r $307,210 r
Calif. (condo) $267,520 $270,170   $277,590 r
Santa Clara $590,000 $553,000   $549,940

 Source: CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®

. Thirty-year fixed-mortgage interest rates averaged 4.95 percent during October 2009, compared with 6.20 percent in October 2008, according to Freddie Mac. Adjustable-mortgage interest rates averaged 4.55 percent in October 2009, compared with 5.21 percent in October 2008.

30 Year Mortgage Rates Fall, FHA loans may require more down….

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Mortgage Rates Decline

According to Freddie Mac on Thursday, the 30 year fixed rate dropped from an average of 4.78% to 4.71% from last week. This is the lowest since Freddie Mac compiled data since 1971. Rates have been low all year because of the Fed’s purchase of mortgage-back securities, which in end in the Sping of 2010. This is helping to push mortgage applications which increased 2.1% during the Thanksgiving week stated the Mortgage Bankers Association. But while rates are low, there are still tight credit standards which may hinder buyers qualifying for the lowest rates.  Most buyers will need 20% down, and a high credit scrore in order to qualify. But the push has helped drive more than 4 percent in purchase applications and nearly 2 percent increase in applications to refinance existing loans.

More Cash Required for an FHA loan

The Federal Housing Administration officials are proposing policy changes for FHA-insured mortgage borrowers to help the agency increase its federally mandated funding requirements. Higher credit scores and an increase in the current minimum down payment may be what buyers across America will have to have an order to qualify for and FHA loan. This proposed change is due to increasing financial issues FHA has been facing, which has increased it’s exposure and led to more delinquencies. The Obama Administration may try to propose other ways of increasing closing costs instead of increasing the minimum down payment, such as increasing mortgage insurance premimums or raising minimum credit score requirements so that the change would only effect the lower scoring borrowers. This will make it harder for some but will also reduce the risk of FHA having financial difficulites. FHA’s traditional role was to help American’s reach their dream of homeownership. The details of the change aren’t expected to be final until next month.

Under a Minute Facts

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Calif. median home price - September 09: $296,090 (Source: C.A.R.)
Calif. highest median home price by C.A.R. region September 09: Santa Barbara So. Coast $750,000 (Source: C.A.R.)
Calif. lowest median home price by C.A.R. region September 09: High Desert $117,820 (Source: C.A.R.)
Calif. First-time Buyer Affordability Index – Second Quarter 2009: 67 percent (Source: C.A.R.)
Mortgage rates – week ending 10/29/09 30-yr. fixed: 5.03% Fees/points: 0.7% 15-yr. fixed: 4.46% Fees/points: 0.6% 1-yr. adjustable: 4.57% Fees/points: 0.6% (Source: Freddie Mac)

Mortgage Applications Fall

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According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, the number of Mortgage applications recieved fell last week, falling 12.3 percent compared to last week.

Most of the decline was in refinances, which fell 16.2 percent and the purchase index declined 4.8 percent. Except for 15-year rates, mortgage rates were down slightly:

  • 30-year fixed-rate mortgages decreased to 5.04 percent from 5.07 percent.
  • 15-year fixed-rate mortgages increased to 4.53 percent from 4.51 percent.
  • 1-year ARMs decreased to 6.79 percent from 6.86 percent.

Under A Minute Facts

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Calif. median home price – August 09: $292,960 (Source: C.A.R.)
Calif. highest median home price by C.A.R. region August 09: Santa Barbara So. Coast $828,750 (Source: C.A.R.)
Calif. lowest median home price by C.A.R. region August 09: High Desert $111,770 (Source: C.A.R.)
Calif. First-time Buyer Affordability Index – Second Quarter 2009: 67 percent (Source: C.A.R.)
Mortgage rates – week ending 10/15/09 30-yr. fixed: 4.92% Fees/points: 0.7% 15-yr. fixed: 4.37% Fees/points: 0.7% 1-yr. adjustable: 4.60% Fees/points: 0.5% (Source: Freddie Mac)

Local Median Home Prices….

  County/City/Area                August 2009               August 2008             % Change

Santa Clara County

 $    450,000.00

 $   570,000.00

-21.1%

Campbell

 $    615,000.00

 $   652,000.00

-5.7%

Cupertino

 $    870,000.00

 $1,153,000.00

-24.5%

Gilroy

 $    375,000.00

 $   415,000.00

-9.6%

Los Gatos

 $    900,000.00

 $1,250,000.00

-28.0%

Milpitas

 $    410,000.00

 $   565,000.00

-27.4%

Morgan Hill

 $    517,500.00

 $   641,000.00

-19.3%

Mountain View

 $    732,500.00

 $   810,000.00

-9.6%

San Jose

 $    382,500.00

 $   500,000.00

-23.5%

Santa Clara

 $    525,000.00

 $   592,500.00

-11.4%

Sara toga

 $ 1,337,000.00

 $1,325,000.00

0.9%

Sunnyvale

 $    527,000.00

 $   650,000.00

-18.9%

Source:CAR

Permanent FHA Loan Limits

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Making the current FHA loan limits permanent would ensure liquidity in the housing market and make mortgages more affordable for qualified buyers at a time when the market is showing signs of a fragile recovery, the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® testified to the House Subcommittee on Housing and Community Opportunity today.

Current FHA loan limits are as high as $729,750 in high cost areas, and are set to expire at the end of the year and revert to lower amounts, greatly hindering the housing recovery process.

“NAR strongly supports making FHA loan limits permanent,” said Boyd Campbell, an NAR spokesperson and managing partner-associate broker of Century 21 in Lanham, Md. He urged the subcommittee to quickly consider legislation that would do that—H.R. 2483, introduced by committee members U.S. Reps. Brad Sherman (D-Calif.) and Gary Miller (R-Calif.).

“FHA is more important than ever to homebuyers in the present market. In the wake of the collapsing private mortgage market, FHA has played a critical role in removing inventory from the market and stabilizing home prices,” he said. Present FHA housing market share is approaching 25 percent, significantly up from 3 percent two years ago.

NAR said that FHA has performed remarkably well through the housing crisis, compared to Fannie and Freddie, because FHA has never strayed from the sound underwriting and appropriate appraisals that have traditionally backed up their loans.

FHA is taking timely steps to protect taxpayers: implementing credit policy changes to enhance risk management; hiring a chief risk officer for the first time in the agency’s history; and shifting responsibility for mortgage brokers away from taxpayers to the lenders who use mortgage brokers.

Such changes would help give consumers more affordable choices when purchasing a home, would help strengthen our communities, and would reduce inventory and stabilize home prices, Campbell said.

In addition to the above enhancements, NAR recommended that FHA make these specific changes to condominium purchases:

  • Eliminate the owner-occupancy requirement, or at least amend rules so all bank-owned properties are not counted in the occupancy ratio;
  • Increase or temporarily suspend the 30 percent limit on total units in a condominium project that may have an FHA mortgage;
  • Reduce or eliminate the requirement that at least 50 percent of the units in the condominium be sold prior to FHA’s endorsement; and
  • Reconsider the elimination of the Spot Loan Approval Process, which allows certain borrowers to use FHA to purchase a condominium in a project that is not FHA approved.

Source: NAR