Iconocast Logo

Welcome To Iconocast

How to add a URL link from your web site to the Iconocast web sites


Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: loans + home + end  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/7/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 10 of about 15,933 for loans home end. (0.25 seconds) 
Recent
Archives
  • All dates
  • 2000-08
  • 1990s
  • 1980s

 Sorted by relevance   Sort by date   Sort by date with duplicates included 

The Associated Press
Mortgage 'fix' not helpful to troubled homeowners
San Diego Union Tribune, CA -
Which means it would not be available to any of the people who are currently underwater on their loans. The rate would only be available if you're buying a ...
Self-employed people finding it harder to get mortgages Fort Worth Star Telegram
Crisis Makes High-Risk Mortgages Obsolete Washington Post
Rate plan puts homeowners, buyers on hold San Jose Mercury News
RisMedia.com (press release) - TIME
all 1,041 news articles »
More than 1 in 10 Texas mortgage holders face home loss 11:54 AM CT
Dallas Morning News, TX - Dec 5, 2008
The highest foreclsoure rate is in Florida wehre about 7.32 percent of total loans were in foreclosure at the end of the third quarter. ...
Record 10% of US homeowners in arrears or foreclosure Los Angeles Times
Mortgage Delinquencies, Foreclosures Rise to Record (Update3) Bloomberg
MBA Report Shows Crisis Deepens as Efforts to Stop Foreclosures Fail MarketWatch
CNBC - Contra Costa Times
all 633 news articles »
Home-Equity Loans Are Stumbling Block In Mtge Modifications
CNNMoney.com - Dec 5, 2008
Still, these efforts so far have fallen far short of enabling widespread mortgage modifications, with terms on home loans still being worked out on a ...
Sub-6% mortgages fail to spur refinancings
Buffalo News,  United States -
Rates on 30-year loans dropped to as low as 5.375 percent in recent days, following the Federal Reserve?s announcement last week that it will buy up $600 ...
It?s bad news when politicians replace markets Times Online
all 3 news articles »

ABC News
Levin: Deal close on auto aid bill, but unsure it can pass Congress
DetNews.com, MI -
Automakers have sought $34 billion in emergency loans and lines of credit. General Motors Corp. says it needs $4 billion by the end of the month to survive ...
AssociatedPress
FACES OF THE DETROIT THREE'S OPPOSITION Southern lawmakers against ... Detroit Free Press
Rounding Up Votes for Auto Bailout Could be Daunting CQPolitics.com
Washington Post - Indianapolis Star
all 2,197 news articles »  GM
Anonymous Banker: Why Creditworthy Businesses Can?t Get Loans
New York Times, United States - Dec 5, 2008
This past week I spoke with a business owner who had a $150000 home equity line that he used for business purposes at the end of each year. ...

The Associated Press
Home loan troubles break records again
The Associated Press - Dec 5, 2008
The foreclosure crisis continued to be concentrated in states like Florida, where a stunning 7.3 percent of all loans were in foreclosure at the end of ...
Home foreclosures are rare in Routt County
Steamboat Pilot, CO -
The number of filings provides a view of how many borrowers have become seriously delinquent on their loans, the report says. Foreclosure sale numbers ...

Boston Globe
Banks not in a hurry to cut rates
Economic Times, India - 35 minutes ago
Most banks are expected to bring down interest rates by end-December. Rates on home, auto and consumer loans may come down less than the one percentage ...
Margareta Pagano: Why Gordon Brown will eat his wife's hat Independent
all 513 news articles »
The credit crunch
San Diego Union Tribune, CA - Dec 6, 2008
You heard about the home loans going bad. You've heard the commercial real estate may be dropping. Credit cards haven't been addressed yet. ...
Source: Google News

 
 

Easy loans could end up hurting home values

DENVER — If advertisements in the Rocky Mountain News are any indication, this is the place to buy a house. Like the old Dire Straits song, it's "money for nothing" in this city.

Three tabloid pages have 12 advertisements for home mortgages at rates of 1 to 2 percent.

Several offer no payments for six months. Others offer nothing down, no closing costs and interest-only programs. About the only offer missing is a single-payment loan, made posthumously from the borrower's estate — but that doesn't mean some lender isn't working on it.

 

Then again, Denver isn't unique. You can get this kind of financing anywhere in America. Millions do.

And that's the problem.

The same home-finance industry that has extended homeownership to millions of Americans is now threatening future home values with its generosity.

Skeptics should consider recent comments by Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan.

Speaking in tranquilizing tones Oct. 19 to the America's Community Bankers annual convention in Washington, D.C., he reassured lenders we weren't in a debt-financed housing bubble.

His most interesting comment, however, was: "In addition, improvements in lending practices driven by information technology have enabled lenders to reach out to households with previously unrecognized borrowing capacities."

Don't you just love it! Join hands with me, reader, and we will explore our "previously unrecognized borrowing capacities"!

What that means, in translation, is that mortgage lenders will finance anyone with a pulse.

People with no down payments, poor work records, uncertain incomes and significant other debt can now go to a mortgage broker to be embraced, not rejected.

So while some worry about housing bubbles in the obvious places — Boston, Florida's West Coast, most of California, Las Vegas, etc. — all of us, wherever we live, should worry about the long-term effect of irresponsible lending.

My thesis is simple: Much of the future appreciation today's homebuyers are counting on has been discounted into today's mortgage-financing practices.

If you own a home with a low-rate mortgage, you're getting tomorrow's appreciation today — in lower mortgage payments.

A rise in mortgage rates would bring two major dangers:

• Inventory overhang.

• Fewer qualified buyers.

You can understand by examining two possible events.

First, consider supply and demand.

With nearly 108 million households in the United States and 68 percent of them homeowners, we have more than 70 million homeowners.

According to the National Association of Realtors, we're currently selling/buying existing houses at the rate of 7 million a year.

That's nearly 10 percent of all homes.

Reduce the buying pool from the largest in 40 years, and homes will go unsold.

A sales slowdown would mean rising inventory and flat-to-sinking prices.

Second, consider the impact of rising interest rates. Since a rising interest rate will turn some homeowners with variable-rate mortgages into sellers while turning some potential buyers into long-term renters, we could see a very rapid shift in the balance between buyers and sellers.

It won't be a crash like the stock market, but millions of homeowners will get hurt.

What can you do?

First, pray that high oil prices and a falling dollar don't translate into higher short- and long-term interest rates.

Second, if you own your home, pay down your debt as fast as you can.

If you have a variable rate, convert to a fixed rate.

Third, if you don't own a home but want to, don't let easy money talk you into buying more house than you could buy with a traditional fixed-rate mortgage.

Fourth, if you're thinking about buying, think about how much house you really need, not how much you want.

 
 
 
Google
Web www.iconocast.com
 
 
 

Continue News With:
News8 ; News9 ; News9A


ADVERTISEMENT

Iconocast is about learning and teaching without borders; we offer eMarketing, Internet Advertising, Internet Marketing, Search Engine Optimization, Search Engine Marketing, Online Branding, and eMarketing News Services. Home

 © 2002-2006

Keywords::

Contact Iconocast

Home Page