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Obama cuts refinance costs for some mortgages

| March 7th, 2012 | No Comments »


Obama cuts refinance costs for some mortgages

By Les Christie @CNNMoney March 6, 2012: 11:19 AM ET

 

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) — Borrowers with some federally insured mortgages will be able to refinance into lower interest rate loans more easily and cheaply under a plan being unveiled Tuesday by the Obama administration.
At a news conference scheduled later in the day, President Obama was set to announce that the Federal Housing Administration will cut upfront fees for refinancing loans it already insures.

The new fees are for borrowers whose FHA loans were issued before June 1, 2009. An estimated 2 to 3 million borrowers could take advantage of the savings, which could reduce mortgage payments for the typical FHA borrower by about a thousand dollars a year, according to the administration.
Borrowers who refinance their existing FHA loans will pay an upfront insurance premium equal to 0.1% of the mortgage amount — $100 for a $100,000 loan — plus an annual fee of 0.55%.
The fees being announced for refinancing contrast sharply with the cost of obtaining a new FHA loan, according to Jaret Seiberg, an analyst with the Washington Research Group. A borrower making a 3.5% down payment on a home purchase as of April 1 will pay a 1.75% upfront fee and a 1.25% annual fee. Those purchase fees were raised barely a week ago to improve the FHA’s capital reserve.

Has Obama’s housing policy failed?

Still, lowering refinancing fees “should be broadly positive for housing and the economy by reducing foreclosures and freeing up income for consumers to spend on other goods and services,” Seiberg said.
The new policy will also make it easier for the banks to refinance loans because it directs the FHA to not count these refinanced loans toward the lender’s “compare ratio.” That calculates the performances of loans issued by the lenders and compares it to other lenders’s performances.
Some lenders have not wanted to refinance FHA loans because they tended to have been made during years of high default rates, according to Seiberg.The administration proposal eliminates the downside to banks making these refinance loans.

 

This FHA refinance fee reduction is the latest in a long line of administration initiatives intended to jump start the housing market and, by extension, the economy.
It can be thought of as an addition to the Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP). The program enables borrowers with mortgages backed by Fannie Mae (FNMA, Fortune 500) or Freddie Mac (FRE) to refinance even when they are deep underwater on their loans, owing far more than their homes are worth.
By reducing mortgage payments, both HARP and the new FHA fees free up money that could now be spent on other things like consumer goods.

Also being provided with potential relief are servicemen wrongfully foreclosed on. Lenders and servicers will be required to review the cases of every service member foreclosed upon since 2006.
Under the plan, any service member wrongly foreclosed upon will receive compensation. There will also be a refund of any overcharges for those who were denied the opportunity to refinance, and relief for those who had to sell their homes at a loss because of a change in station.

 

Housing sales and prices edge up in metro Denver

| March 6th, 2012 | No Comments »
Article by Steve Raabe:  Denver Post

Housing sales and prices edge up in metro Denver

The metro Denver housing market took another step toward recovery in February with sales up and inventory levels down.

Unsold homes on the market dropped sharply, with the current inventory at 10,086, a drop of 41.9 percent from February 2011.

Properties under contract for sale totaled 4,150 in February, an increase of 12.4 percent from the same month in 2011, according to data compiled by independent real estate consultant Gary Bauer.

“The momentum that started at the beginning of the year is continuing,” Bauer said. “We’ve got a market that’s really moving.”

Driving the market is a surge in the number of first-time buyers and move-up buyers targeting lower-priced homes, Bauer said,

Among single-family home sales in February, 43 percent were properties that sold for less than $200,000.

For condo sales, 62 percent were priced at less than $150,000.

Sellers of the lower-priced properties are moving up to moderately-priced homes, creating a bottom-up chain reaction that should eventually stimulate the sale of more-expensive homes, Bauer said.

The median price of detached single-family homes that closed in February was $220,000, up 0.5 percent from January and unchanged from February of last year.

Condos and townhomes sold in February at a median price of $120,000, up 6.2 percent from January, but a decrease of 3.8 percent from February 2011.

Economist Patty Silverstein of Littleton-based Development Research Partners said that a 13.2 percent increase in home sales during the first two months of the year “demonstrates that the housing recovery remains on track in metro Denver.”

She noted that although inventory levels are down, they remain high enough that metro Denver “is still not achieving solid price appreciation.”

Housing and mortgage analyst Lou Barnes of Premier Mortgage Group in Boulder noted that two recent national reports showed ongoing weakness in the real estate market.

Case/Shiller’s home price index dropped 3.8 percent in the last 90 days of 2011. CoreLogic reported that 27.8 percent of households are under water with their homes valued lower than their mortgage balances.

Steve Raabe: 303-954-1948 or sraabe@denverpost.com

Denver Post: www.denverpost.com 

FHA changes to impact borrower costs – effective April 1st

| March 1st, 2012 | No Comments »

EFFECTIVE APRIL 1:

MAJOR FHA CHANGES TO INCREASE BORROWER’S COST

(plus a little good news)

 

This week several major changes were announced at HUD that will have a direct impact on FHA borrowing costs.

If you have clients that are on the fence share this information with them. These changes go into effect on all new FHA case numbers generated on or after 4/1/12. You can read the formal press relesase from HUD here.

 

 

CHANGE #1

Annual mortgage insurance premium (MIP) is increasing by 0.10%.
For loans over $625,500, effective June 1st the increase is 0.35%.

CHANGE #2

Upfront premium (UFMIP) is increasing by 0.75%.
HUD will continue to allow this to be financed.

Here is a scenario to show you the effect the April 1st changes will have on borrower costs. I assumed a purchase price of $250,000 with 3.5% down.

 

Current FHA Fee New FHA Fee
on 4/1/12
Increase
Upfront MI $2,412.50 $4221.88 $1809.38
Monthly MI $231.20 $251.30 $20.10

 

BUT THERE IS GOOD NEWS TOO!


In addition to this, HUD also just announced it would be reducing premiums for FHA loans endorsed on or before May 31, 2009. This decrease in MI will make streamline refinances more easily available. Details are due in the next couple weeks.

Questions? Contact me anytime!

Happiest Cities in America… BOULDER IS AT THE TOP!

| March 1st, 2012 | No Comments »

 

 Photo of Dave Query of Big Red F Restaurant Group

2. Boulder, Colo.

Happiness score: 99.36

Gallup-Healthways Index rank: 5
Unemployment rate: 5.8
$100,000+ families: 43.8
Average sunny days: 360+

According to the most recent survey of American happiness and well-being, the country’s residents are just a little less well off than they were in 2010 in terms of their habits, environment, and emotional and physical health. The nation’s “Well-Being Index” score, computed by Gallup-Healthways as part of an annual survey, was 66.2 out of 100 in 2011—the lowest since Gallup-Healthways first conducted the survey in 2008.

But not every pocket of America is sagging. To find out which metro areas have the sunniest dispositions, The Daily Beast first analyzed Gallup-Healthways’ data for more than 100 metro areas, accounting for 40 percent of a city’s final score.

Because happiness has been linked to employment, earnings, and even the weather, we also considered each of the following: unemployment rates, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics; percentage of families earning more than $100,000, or approximately the top-earning quartile nationwide, according to census figures; and, where available, the number of clear days per year, according to the National Climatic Data Center.

Story from http://www.thedailybeast.com

 

“Buy Houses” Says Warren Buffett

| February 27th, 2012 | No Comments »

Warren Buffett’s investment advice is to buy houses

From MSM Money
Billionaire and Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett gave out some free investment advice on TV Monday. Buffett said on CNBC that Americans should buy distressed houses, which are really cheap right now, and rent them out (after fixing them up a bit, of course). Buffett said he’d snatch up “millions” of single family homes if it were practical, but said he isn’t very handy.

America’s investment grandpa also was optimistic about the economy: He said it’s bouncing back in almost all sectors, except home construction, but he predicts it will bounce back there, too.

related links
Buffett says he was ‘dead wrong’ on housing market
Warren Buffett’s biggest stock investments
How to tap your inner Buffett

Gratitude: the quality or feeling of being grateful or thankful.

| January 19th, 2012 | No Comments »

Typically when I write in this blog I am talking about finance and how it relates to “us”.

Today I am going to focus more on an overwhelming feeling that I have in my life.

Gratitude:  What does gratitude mean to you?

I am grateful for a few very important items, family, friends, and my overall health.

“Everybody can be great…because anybody can serve. You don’t have to have a college degree to serve. You don’t have to make your subject and verb agree to serve. You only need a heart full of grace. A soul generated by love.”

-Martin Luther King, Jr.

I am grateful for my clients that take the time to share their experience while working with me.  Thank you.

I’ve worked with Ian on a number of occasions in capacities ranging from refinancing a primary mortgage to options around income properties to new home purchase. In each and every situation, Ian was not only knowledgeable about available financing options, but was professional, responsive and couteous. He is able to work effectively with first time home buyers to multiple dwelling and property owners.

-Matthew and Jennifer, Denver, CO

What are you grateful / thankful for?

Cheers,

Ian Bennett

 

Easton’s Winter in house tournament raffle drawing: winner of a New Gi

| January 13th, 2012 | No Comments »

Easton’s Winter in house tournament raffle drawing: winner of a New Gi goes to Easton Brazilian Jiu Jitsu student Sean Madden! Congratulations Sean Madden for entering into the drawing this past December. All Easton Bjj students, and affiliated schools, who “like” this page, Ian Bennett at Premier Mortgage Group,  will be enter into the next drawing. Stay tuned.