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Most Recent from Mortgages

Will VA Borrowers Lose Rights Under The Robo-Signing Settlement?

Under the just-announced $25 billion national mortgage settlement, members of the military are supposed to have additional protections to guard against wrongful foreclosures. It would seem that the new settlement would bolster the benefits already in place under the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) but that’s not entirely clear.

The issue is this: When must lenders halt foreclosures involving a member of the military who serves in a combat zone? Are copies of orders or a letter from your commanding officer to the loan servicer enough to demonstrate SCRA coverage?
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talkingaboutfinances

Talking Credit with Your New Spouse

Veterans United Network’s Christy Lewis covers how to approach credit when applying for a VA loan with your new spouse.

Historically low interest rates

Whatever Happened To Interest?

Cash is a wonderful thing. It may be true that it can’t buy love or happiness, but it sure is useful when it comes to groceries, gasoline and mortgage payments.

Real median household income, says the Census Bureau, reached $49,777 in 2009. That’s 5 percent less than households earned a decade earlier, in 1999, when they typically took in $52,388.
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Tax Credits for Homeowners

Tax Credits for Home Owners

From handling all of the maintenance to homeowners insurance, there are as many new responsibilities that come with owning a new home as there are benefits.

Although property taxes increase drastically with a home purchase there are a number of tax benefits offered to homeowners that you’ll want to take advantage of.
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VA Mortgage Settlement

Government Gets $45 Million In New VA Mortgage Settlement

The federal government will receive $45 million from the JPMorgan Chase Bank to settle allegations in a lawsuit that it overcharged military borrowers.
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Foreclosure settlement

Why VA Foreclosure Rates Beat FHA Loans

The leading real estate story of the past few years has concerned foreclosures and delinquencies, but an untold story concerns the VA mortgage program and the fact that it has the lowest level of troubled loans.

VA loans have had the lowest rate of foreclosure for the past 14 months and the lowest rate of serious delinquency for the past 11 months, according to the Mortgage Banker Association. Serious delinquency refers to the percentage of loans 90 days or more past due. The rates exceed even those of prime loans.

These VA foreclosure results allow us to make several observations.

First, down payments are not the key to mortgage success. VA mortgages are almost always made with zero down versus 3.5 percent for FHA financing and 5 percent for conventional loans with private mortgage insurance.

Second, high interest rates for subprime loans are justified by steep foreclosure rates. Alternatively, some would argue that as a business decision lenders should not be making subprime loans given the woeful results such financing produces. The catch is that if lenders do not make subprime loans there will be fewer buyers in the marketplace, less demand, and less pressure to force up home prices — not a good strategy in today’s world.

Third, another argument in the finance field goes like this: The VA gets good results, the best results, because it uses leverage to hold lenders accountable for the loans they make.

Leverage

How is that done?

Here’s an example: Imagine that a lender makes an FHA loan. The principal amount is 100 percent insured. If the loan goes bad the FHA insurance fund takes the hit.

Now imagine that a lender makes a VA mortgage. Nope, no 100 percent lender guarantee here. Instead, the VA promises to pay back only a portion of the debt. As the VA explains, lenders get “a 25% guaranty from VA, assuming the veteran has full entitlement.”

A 25 percent guarantee is substantial — before the foreclosure crisis it was hard to imagine a situation where a lender could make a VA loan and lose a quarter of the loan amount. In effect, VA mortgages represented almost no risk to lenders.

Foreclosures

Today, however, a 25-percent loss is entirely possible. As an example, the Federal Housing Finance Agency reports that home values at the end of the second quarter were down 18.8 percent when compared with the peak in April 2007. You can bet that in the major foreclosure centers the typical price drop has been far greater.

To get the benefits of a VA mortgage you can expect lenders to check and verify every aspect of a loan application with a particular vigor. That’s fair, because with the VA program lenders really have skin in the game — their own.

The benefit to VA borrowers is that with fewer foreclosures there’s less justification to raise the up-front funding fee, and that’s fair, too.

Photo courtesy of respres

VA Loans are a Better Bet than FHA

Should You Save Your VA Eligibility and Go FHA?

The past few years FHA loans have been enormously popular. This is largely a byproduct of the fact that FHA financing is a known quantity; these loans have been used by more than 37 million borrowers since the 1930s.

No less important, FHA financing is safe. Like VA loans, an FHA mortgage doesn’t have any “gotcha” clauses that create unfair costs or surprise foreclosures.

The popularity and safety of FHA financing raises a question: Instead of getting a VA mortgage would it make more sense to get an FHA loan now and save your VA entitlement for later?

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Government Mortgage

Why You’re Safer With A Government Mortgage

The government has new mortgage information and guess what? It turns out that the use of VA mortgages has more than doubled since the financial crisis began — and that those who use VA loans have fewer foreclosures than any other group of borrowers.

This is a very big deal because the foreclosure crisis would be far worse had it not been for the use of FHA and VA mortgages. Now, for the first time, we can begin to see how government-insured home loans have prevented the fall of the housing market from being much worse.

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Adjustable or Fixed — Which Loan Is Best For You?

In recent months mortgage rates have plummeted and plunged to depths rarely seen.

“Fixed-Rate Mortgages Lowest on Record,” said a recent Freddie Mac news release.

If you’re a borrower the news on the mortgage front has only been good. There can’t possibly be a mortgage shortage when rates are in the dumper — low rates have to mean the supply of cash is outstripping loan demand.
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Will VA Borrowers Soon Need 20 Percent Down?

There’s a big mortgage debate in Washington and vets are very much in the middle. The question is whether home loans should require at least 20 percent down.

Under new Wall Street Reform rules enacted last year in Washington borrowers in some cases will need 20 percent down.
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Featured Author

Peter G. Miller

Peter is a nationally syndicated real estate columnist and mortgage expert. He is the author of seven books and has appeared in broadcast and print interviews with leading media including Oprah, CNN, the Today Show, National Public Radio and The New York Times. Peter was the creator and original host of the AOL Real Estate Center and a past editor of RealtyTimes.com. Today he hosts OurBroker.com, a leading source of real estate news and opinion.


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