Treasury to Promote Homeownership? Not so fast Huffington Post, NY - Dec 4, 2008 ... recklessly exploited to fuel the American economy. Attempts to resurrect the so-called "ownership society" from the dead, will only come back to haunt us.
'My whole world is gradually going under ' Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - Dec 4, 2008 At the time I paid little heed, but now his words come back to haunt me: ''Gradually, and then suddenly.?? A year ago, I suppose I was what I seem to have ...
Emerging market banks: In the line of fire Euromoney Magazine, UK - Dec 3, 2008 As in the west, lax lending practices could come back to haunt the banks. In many emerging markets, for example, borrowers take out auto loans against ...
MacBank smoke and mirrors The Age, Australia - Nov 17, 2008 This should buoy confidence for a time. The sort of accounting and disclosure issues canvassed above, however, will come back to haunt the Millionaires Factory.
Cramer: Am I Too Negative? CNBC, Englewood Cliffs - Nov 17, 2008 You can only refinance mortgages from the ground up, not the top down, and Paulson & Co. don't want to do it, although the FDIC does, but it lacks the teeth ...
Send a copy to me Conde Nast Portfolio, NY - Nov 10, 2008 Michael Lewis, who chronicled its excess in Liar?s Poker, returns to his old haunt to figure out what went wrong. To this day, the willingness of a Wall ...
It?sa long term game Telecoms.com, UK - Nov 21, 2008 A straight-talking type of chap, Gabriel beamed at the audience as he said: ?We?ve just refinanced, we?ve got $4.5bn in cash and we are SHOPPING! ...
Bricks & slaughter The Sun, UK - Nov 12, 2008 Both businesses are now worth substantially less than that ? and both need to refinance their debts. Sir Tom?s firm, West Coast Capital, was recently ...
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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: refinance + 7,370 + web Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/4/2008)
City running short of time to refinance debt Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, PA - Unusually high insurance quotes are threatening to derail a plan to refinance $77.17 million of the city's debt to generate $3 million in savings this year, ...
Are some loans too small to re-fi? Boston Globe, United States - I'd like to re-fi since I plan on staying in the house but was told that this was a rather small amount to refinance. I'd like to go to a 15 year mortgage. ...
Sigma creditors look to join forces Financial Times, UK - The move by some of Sigma?s creditors comes as the fund ? which held the title of largest fund of its kind ? needs to refinance billions of dollars of debt ...
Disney offers to refinance Hong Kong Disneyland loan Reuters - Jul 30, 2008 N: Quote, Profile, Research) has offered to refinance more than $300 million in commercial loans due on Sept. 30 for its Hong Kong Disneyland joint venture, ...DIS
Agents share views on credit crisis impacts Inman.com (subscription), CA - ... percent financing was common, and buyers were told by many lenders that they could always refinance out of their ARM or their exotic loan terms later. ...
Family's money woes center on the house MLive.com, MI - Aug 2, 2008 In the meantime, the family contacted Huron Valley Financial to discuss ways to do a third home refinance to get them out of the adjustable rate mortgage. ...
THE MOST COMMON PROBLEMS UNDERWRITING A LOAN APPLICATION American Chronicle, CA - Aug 3, 2008 (Recently did an illegal assumption) Borrower not on title and loan is for a refinance. When adding borrowers to assist in qualifying for a loan, ...
School Bond Debt In Sights Wheeling Intelligencer, WV - Aug 3, 2008 By BETHANY ROMANEK Ohio County taxpayers could see a reduction in their personal property tax now that county school officials are hoping to refinance...
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[CITATION] ANSWER GUIDE SL ShawanoLeader
[PDF]Lost Opportunities: Energy and Politics in Russia - P Rutland - NBR Analysis, 1997 - nbr.org ... 4518 University Way NE, Suite 300 Seattle, WA 98105 Tel: (206) 632-7370 Fax: (206 ...
shifted over to the oil and gas industry through a complex web of political ... -
[PDF]NewsNotes - P STANDARD, USP PAID, CA SAN DIEGO - calcatholic.com ... TELEPHONE: (619) 699-8494 FACSIMILE: (619) 881-2401 E-MAIL: emgrimm@cox.net WEB:
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[PDF]NewsNotes - P Parenthood, AS Rape, SB Calls, S February - calcatholic.com ... FACSIMILE: (619) 881-2401 E-MAIL: emgrimm@cox.net WEB: www.sdnewsnotes.com Contents ?
2006 by Jim Holman. All rights reserved. See ?Letters,? page 22 ... -
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[CITATION] The Cologne-Rodenkirchen Bridge A Boak - Civil Engineering and Public Works Review, 1973 - Lomax, Erskine & Co
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Bad refinance decisions come back to haunt borrowers
By Jack Guttentag
June 06, 2005
Of every 10 letters I receive asking my opinion of a proposed refinance, I advise seven or eight that the refinance would make them poorer. My letters are not from a cross-section of prospective borrowers, so perhaps the comparable figure over the market generally is three or four. That still qualifies as a mass seduction. Although borrowers participate willingly, many will regret their decisions in the morning.
In most markets, bad decisions can safely be ignored because the costs of mistakes are small and people learn from them; the second and third times around, they make better decisions. In the mortgage market, however, transactions are large and infrequent, so mistakes are much more costly.
What Is a Bad Refinance Decision?
It is a decision that results in the borrower being poorer in the future than he/she would have been had he/she not refinanced. It also can mean raising money at a cost well above that of readily available alternatives. Here is an example of the first:
Smith has a fixed-rate mortgage with a balance of $164,000 at 5.375 percent, and with 18 years to go. She refinances into a 5-year adjustable-rate mortgage at 5.875 percent that is interest only (IO) for 5 years. This reduces her monthly payment from $1,186 to $803, or by $383.
Over five years, the new IO mortgage will save $23,012 in payments, but the balance will be $164,000, the same as now. Had Smith retained her original mortgage, the balance would be paid down to $132,975, a reduction of $31,025. After five years, Smith would be $8,013 poorer.
Hucksters argue that Smith could invest the payment savings, but few consumers have either the discipline or investment skills needed to pull this off successfully. Smith would have to earn 11.6 percent just to break even. For most consumers, amortizing a mortgage remains the best way to save.
Why do people make so many bad refinance decisions? The three major reasons are borrower shortsightedness, meretricious mortgages, and the dysfunctional incentive systems of loan providers.
Borrower Shortsightedness:
The great majority of those who make bad refinance decisions are either payment-myopic or cash-dazzled. Smith in my example was payment-myopic – she focused on the amount she had to pay every month and ignored how much she owed.
Cash-dazzled borrowers are equally shortsighted, but their focus is on the cash they raise with a "cash-out" refinance. Often they have no idea what that cash is costing them. Here is an illustration:
Jones has a fixed-rate mortgage with a balance of $190,000 at 5.75 percent, and with 28 years to go. Jones needs $16,000 in cash and refinances into a 6.5 percent mortgage for $206,000. Jones believes he is paying 6.5 percent on his $16,000, which is why he chose it rather than a second mortgage available at 7.5 percent.
But Jones fails to take account of the increase in the rate on $190,000. When that is added in, the cost of the $16,000 raised with a cash-out refinance increases to almost 12 percent, or well above the cost of a second mortgage.
Meretricious Mortgages:
Meretricious, meaning "falsely attractive," was originally applied to London streetwalkers, who appeared attractive in the shadows but not so good in the light. Some mortgages are like that.
Adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) with an interest-only option, and especially the flexible-payment or option ARM, have exploded in popularity recently. While these ARMs have legitimate applications, the surge in popularity is due to their appeal to payment-myopic borrowers. These mortgages reduce payments now, and extract their pound of flesh later.
Dysfunctional Incentive Systems:
Most borrowers will shy away from loan providers who charge for information – such as information on whether the borrower will really benefit from a refinance. As a result, with very few exceptions, loan officers and mortgage brokers get paid only if a loan closes.
I know mortgage brokers who will not refinance a borrower who cannot benefit from it. The broker's reward can be a future referral from a grateful borrower, but in most cases the reward is received in heaven.
Such people are treasures but they comprise a small part of the market. The rest are hell-bent to close loans. They reinforce borrower shortsightedness and leave the meretricious mortgages in the shadows.
How do you avoid being seduced? Check my tutorials on interest-only and option ARMs. They can show what it may cost you tomorrow to lower your payment today. Tutorial-phobic borrowers should take advantage of the 3-day right of rescission to reconsider their deal, preferably with the help of a knowledgeable third party. And don't respond to solicitations!