All the financing info you could need

Here is a list of links to anything and everything financial!

Bankruptcy Courts http://www.pacer.psc.uscourts.gov/
Excluded Parties List Search https://www.sam.gov/
Fannie Mae – Selling Guide and Announcements www.efanniemae.com
Fannie Mae – Link to Determine if Fannie Mae Services Loan http://www.fanniemae.com/loanlookup/

 

FHA Condo Lookup https://entp.hud.gov/idapp/html/condlook.cfm
FHA Connection https://entp.hud.gov/clas/index.cfm
FHA Handbooks http://www.hud.gov/offices/adm/hudclips/handbooks/hsgh/
FHA Loan Limits https://entp.hud.gov/idapp/html/hicostlook.cfm
FHA Mortgagee Letters http://www.hud.gov/offices/adm/hudclips/letters/mortgagee/index.cfm
FHA FAQ http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/FHAFAQ
Freddie Mac – Selling Guide and Announcements http://freddiemac.com/sell/guide/
Freddie Mac – Link to Determine if Freddie Mac Services Loan https://ww3.freddiemac.com/corporate/
HUDCLIPS http://www.hud.gov/offices/adm/hudclips/
VA Circulars http://www.homeloans.va.gov/new.htm
VA Handbook http://www.benefits.va.gov/warms/pam26_7.asp
VA County Limits http://www.benefits.va.gov/homeloans/loan_limits.asp
VA Condo Lookup https://vip.vba.va.gov/portal/VBAH/VBAHome/condopudsearch
USDA Property and Income Eligibility http://eligibility.sc.egov.usda.gov/eligibility/welcomeAction.do?NavKey=home@1
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau http://www.consumerfinance.gov/
Federal Housing Finance Agency http://www.fhfa.gov/

Thank you Bill Hylind, Mortgage Master Inc. , 443-570-9233

FHA Fee Increases and Decreases

In the current economic climate, every dollar saved helps. Though new homeowners will pay more for their upfront insurance premiums, existing homeowners can save thousands by refinancing.

The Federal Housing Administration (FHA) is increasing their upfront insurance premium from 1 percent to 1.75 percent. FHA’s annual mortgage insurance premium will increase by 0.10 percent for loans under $625,500 and by 0.35 percent for jumbo loans over $625,500. Anyone who rolls the upfront… Read More

Waiting Periods to Buy a Home After Foreclosure, Deed-in-Lieu, Short Sale and Bankruptcy

Here is a great chart to have!

 

Federal Housing Administration (FHA) Insured Loan

  • Foreclosure – 3 years
  • Deed-in Lieu – 3 years
  • Short Sale – 3 years
  • Bankruptcy (Chapter 7) – 2 years from bankruptcy discharge
  • Bankruptcy (Chapter 13) – 2 years from bankruptcy discharge for automatic approval

 

Veterans Administration (VA) Guaranteed Loan

  • Foreclosure – 2 years.
  • Deed-in Lieu – 2 years.
  • Short Sale – 2 years.
  • Bankruptcy (Chapter 7 or 11) – 2 years from bankruptcy discharge
  • Bankruptcy (Chapter 13) – 2 years from bankruptcy discharge for automatic approval

 

Conventional Conforming Mortgage Loan (meets Fannie Mae (FNMA) and Freddie Mac (FHLMC) Loan Purchasing Guidelines)

  • Foreclosure – 7 years for full eligibility with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
  • Deed-in Lieu – 7 years for full eligibility with Fannie Mae and 4 years for Freddie Mac. Partial eligibility with Fannie Mae is available after 4 years for up to 90% LTV and 2 years for up to 80% LTV.
  • Short Sale – 7 years for full eligibility with Fannie Mae and 4 years for Freddie Mac. Partial eligibility with Fannie Mae is available after 4 years for up to 90% LTV and 2 years for up to 80% LTV
  • Bankruptcy (Chapter 7 or 11) – 4 years from bankruptcy discharge or dismissal with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
  • Bankruptcy (Chapter 13) – 2 years from bankruptcy discharge (4 years from bankruptcy dismissal) for automatic approval with Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.

 

Conventional Non-Conforming (JUMBO loans which exceed the maximum loan amount which will be purchased by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac)

  • Foreclosure – 7 years.
  • Deed-in-Lieu – 7 years.
  • Short Sale – 7 years.
  • Bankruptcy – 7 years.

 

!    Please note, if extenuating circumstances apply, waiting periods may be reduced.  Generally with a manual underwrite.  You can review extenuating circumstance guides through All Regs as they differ depending on FNMA, FHLMC, And Govt. Loans.

Four Simple Ways to Raise Your Credit Score

Raising your credit score can improve your life in many ways. You’ll have access to cheaper mortgage rates, you’ll pay less for insurance, and you may even have a better shot at your dream job. Here’s how to proceed:

1. Know what’s going on.
Annual credit report.com allows you a free report from all three credit bureaus once a year. (Avoid other “free credit report” sites, which are really attempts to sell you something.) You’re also entitled to a free report if you’re turned down for credit. Dispute any misinformation that negatively impacts your score. Creditors have 30 days to verify their report or they must remove… Read More

Sellers Concessions May Be Reduced!

From the Desk of Carol Galante,  the acting assistant secretary for housing/federal housing commissioner  FHA is issuing revised proposal on seller concessions.  This could drastically affect the real estate market Again, in a negative fashion.  With the real possibility of this becoming a reality, it is essential for first-time buyers to start finding homes now!  Buy before another incentive is taken away from you!!

Click here to read FHA memo

The Latest Mortgage News

The average rate for a conventional 30-year fixed rate mortgage (FRM) reached a record low, according to Freddie Mac’s Primary Mortgage Market Survey. For the first time in history, the 30-year FRM dropped below four percent, averaging 3.94 percent for the week ending October 6, 2011. That’s a 0.33 percent difference from last year’s average of 4.27 for the same week in October. The 15-year fixed-rate mortgage—one of the most popular options for refinancing—fell to 3.26 percent, the lowest level on record.

Higher Interest Rates for Jumbo Loans
Homeowners looking to buy or refinance in the country’s most expensive real estate markets will need… Read More

What is a 203K loan?

With all the foreclosures we are facing, many buyers want to purchase a foreclosure, but cannot afford to do the required work on the house in order to make it pass inspection. Hence, the need for the 203K loan. This video gives you a small idea of the workings of the loan. I would be happy to answer any questions or help you get this done. I am currently helping my nephew purchase a home using this loan – You can really get some GREAT deals by rolling the work into the loan. Call me with questions! I am here to help! My cell is best way to contact me at 443-386-1306

Loan Limits Decrease!

The temporary loan limits will end September 30, 2011.  If you are looking to purchase a house with a loan over $500,000, you may need to do so by the end of this month to ensure financing by the end of September!  Don’t know what the loan limits are? Click Here to see the new limits after September 30th – listed by County!  Need help, call or email me, I will be happy to explain your options to you.

 

Suze Orman vs. Warren Buffett: Whose Real Estate Advice Should You Follow?

You know Suze Orman – she delivers hardcore financial gut checks to everyday Americans on a regular basis. In her latest book, The Money Class, she also recently delivered a pretty striking declaration: that the American Dream – which, for many, includes home ownership and upward economic mobility – is as dead as a doornail. To back this up, she points to huge numbers of jobless and what she sees as the near impossibility of getting credit these days.

But you might also have heard of Warren Buffett. He just so happens to be the third richest human being on the planet.  In Buffett’s most recent letter to his company’s shareholders, he, too, made a striking declaration of his feelings about owning a home: “[h]ome ownership makes sense for most Americans, particularly at today’s lower prices and bargain interest rates.”  And the Oracle of Omaha didn’t stop there – he literally raved about home ownership, saying that “the third best investment I ever made was the purchase of my home.” Now, that’s a big statement from a guy whose investment decisions have earned him a net worth over $50 billion!

Suze says the American financial dream is dead. But Buffett says buy, and buy now.  Who’s right?  (And who’s wrong?!)

Orman is right that one extreme version of the American Dream is dead.  But not the traditional American Dream of owning an affordable home that appreciates over time. That basic premise of the value of homeownership is valid. But it may be valid for a smaller segment than ever before. Orman believes that renters should save, save, save up every penny and they may never be a candidate to own a home.

Buffett believes now is the time to purchase as affordability has never been better. Buffet wins here; he’s right that a home is a very strong investment, with abundant yields, both financial and emotional. And according to our latest survey, the American Dream of homeownership lives on in the hearts of the 72 percent of Americans who say owning the place they live is a part of their personal American Dream.

How can you make sure your exercise in owning a home is set up to be like Buffett’s 3rd best investment (#s 1 and 2 were wedding rings, btw), rather than Orman’s image of the American nightmare? Here are 3 basic steps Buffett urges every American who owns a home – or wants to – to include in their approach to home ownership.

1.  Ditch your “dream home” for a practical pad. When it comes to homes and mortgages, bigger is not always better.  What is better is to buy a home that makes sense for your family’s future and its finances. In Buffett’s own words, “a house can be a nightmare if the buyer’s eyes are bigger than his wallet and if a lender . . . facilitates his fantasy.”  Instead of buying dream homes, Buffett went on, the goal should be to buy a home you can afford.

2.  When you buy, plan to hold. Warren Buffett is worth $50 billion, and he still lives in the home he bought 52 years ago – for $31,500. Many Americans got caught in the housing crash when they took on mortgages they could only sustain for a short period of time, then weren’t able to refinance as expected. Buffett’s stock investing advice has long been to avoid making investments you can’t hold for at least 10 years. Likewise, buying a home should be done with a long-term plan to avoid catastrophe when home values fluctuate in the short term.

3.  Mortgages should have fixed, affordable payments. In his shareholder letter, Buffett points out that a housing company he holds has done vastly better than other real estate and mortgage industry players and attributes their success to the fact that “our approach was simply to get a meaningful down-payment and gear fixed monthly payments to a sensible percentage of income.”  Buffett believes these two mortgage musts are the key to avoiding foreclosure, opining that “[i]f home buyers throughout the country had behaved like our buyers, America would not have had the crisis that it did. . ..  This policy kept [the company] solvent and also kept buyers in their homes.”

Unless you are one of those rare buyers who know their income will increase by a predictable amount at a predictable point in time, like a lawyer prepping for partnership, a good rule of thumb is to stick with a fixed mortgage payment (including taxes and insurance) that’s under 30 percent of your take home income.

found at:

http://www.trulia.com/blog/taranelson/2011/03/suze_owning_is_over_orman_vs_warren_buy_now_buffett_whose_real_estate_advice_should_you_follow

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Debbi Rivero, Realtor & Expert Seller Consultant | (443) 386-1306