home lenders refinance mortgage

March 28, 2011

What should I do about this loan? Mortgage vs student loans?

indiechick asked:


My math skills aren’t amazing and I’m not sure how I would figure this out anyway, so maybe someone can help me. This is a real life question. We have about 60 or so thousand dollars in private student loans and then maybe 10 in federal loans. If you’re not familiar with private student loans, skip to the bottom and I’ll explain them. The rate for the student loans is currently about 9%.

We are selling our house and if we sell the house for the amount that we paid (we’ll probably get a little more), we will net about 35,000 after commissions. We’re planning on buying a small fixer upper for 75-100,000 and getting a 10 year mortgage. Mortgage rates look like they’re about 4 or so percent. I was planning on getting the 10 yr mortgage, paying it off in about 4 years and then taking out a home equity loan and paying them off. My dad said that I should either put down less and pay down the student loans even though it doesn’t pay them off or take out equity as I go and pay them down.

My hesitation to do this is that my payment on the student loans won’t go down just because I owe less, but with a HEL, I will be paying more for the time being (mtg + HEL+ student loans at the same time). It’s still doable, but I’d rather not be paying more than I have to.

So my question is this:

if I pay down as I go, will my student loans skip ahead so that I’m paying a higher percentage of my payment to the principle than interest? Or is the percentage of principle vs. interest determined by time rather than how much you owe?

What do you think the best strategy for paying off these loans quickly and for the least amount of money?

*************************************
Private student loans: they were offered for a short time while lenders were lending money like crazy and they’re not federal loans, so they don’t have the low interest rates. The interest rates on private student loans are variable, currently at about 9%, but it’s been as high as 11.5%. No one is offering them anymore so you can’t refinance them, lock in a rate, file for bankruptcy, or in any way alter the loan terms. No matter what, the loans will be at that rate and you can’t get rid of them. If our credit scores go down or we don’t pay on time or whatever, the rates can go up to whatever they want. So as you can imagine we are dying to pay these off and get them out of our lives.
“The value of the “fixer upper” is based on the market. Planning to take a heloc to pay off the student loans is not necessarily a workable idea.”

thanks. The market here is extremely stable, so I wouldn’t expect for the house to gain equity through fixes (although it probably would). The equity would come through buying a cheap house and paying it off cheaper. The logic is that fixers are cheaper and thus easier to pay off. If I sell it later, It will be worth the same or a little more than I paid for it. I’m not expecting to make a profit on the house, just pay it down and then use what I’ve paid off as equity. The market won’t go up, but it also won’t go down either. (most likely)
“Have you talked to a banker to determine if there is a different type of loan that you could use”

I haven’t. I should do that although I’m doubtful. That’s a lot of money and I can’t imagine having that much borrowing power. Hmm…maybe, I’ll look into it. I don’t have many assets outside of the home equity.

“This provides you cash to pay off student loan faster and allows for interest deduction for longer period of time”

So take out a second mortgage to pay off the student loans? I’m actually not sure that the interest will be high enough to be tax deductible. The houses we would buy are less than 100K, so the payments would be very low.

Jeff

March 15, 2011

What are my chances for getting a mortgage after a divorce?

M A asked:


I’ve got divorced little over a year ago. My ex wanted the house, so I just walked away. It was documented in the court paper that she is taking over the house and everything that comes with it. She was planning to refinance to get my name of the mortgage, but she couldn’t since the home’s value dropped since we financed it 5 years ago. ( she is getting an inheritance money in two years and that when she plans to refinance)
I’m renting, now. And want to buy a house considering the housing market. I want to pay 75k down and refinance the rest (about 140 k) I have good credit score.
I know she is reliable, and she has been making payments on time. Also, I understand the difference between Quick Claim Deed and the mortgage responsibility to the lender??
What are my chances at getting the best mortgage deal available??? If any?? would lenders not qualify my at all?
What should I do? Please help!

Mark

February 14, 2011

10 points Please, please help me!

Suck it asked:


7. Which term refers to the decrease in value of an asset over time?
       Financing
       Equity
       Depreciation
       Inflation

8. How much of your FICO® credit score is determined by your payment history?
       25%
       35%
       45%
       55%

9. How do interest rates on a secured loan usually compare to credit card rates?
       Higher
       Lower
       About the same
       There’s no consistent relationship

10. Which of the following should you definitely NOT do when you pay off a credit card?
       Celebrate
       Use the card again
       Close the account
       Remove the card from your wallet

11. What do lenders get in exchange for money when providing a secured loan?
       Collateral
       Credit report
       Interest payments
       Principal

12. Which of the following is the worst type of debt?
       A home mortgage
       A car loan
       A car lease
       Credit card debt

13. Which of the following is NOT a credit reporting agency?
       Equifax
       TransUnion
       American Express
       Experian

14. Which type of debt is the least attractive for a consumer?
       Unsecured debt
       Secured debt
       Mortgage debt
       Lease debt

15. Why do lenders often charge higher interest rates on a car loan than on a home mortgage?
       The car could be stolen.
       The car could be destroyed in an accident.
       You could move the car and they couldn’t find it.
       All of the above

16. Debit cards are most similar to which of the following?
       Credit cards
       Charge cards
       Checks
       Car loans

17. If the bank decides you’ve defaulted on a car loan, what will they do?
       Refinance the car
       Repossess the car
       Depreciate the car
       Inflate the car

18. How much of your FICO® credit score is determined by your credit mix (number and types of loans/debts)?
       10%
       20%
       30%
       40%

19. When you pay for something with a debit card, what interest do you pay?
       0%
       Under 3%
       About 10%
       From 18% to 22%

20. How much of your FICO® credit score is determined by your debt-to-income ratio?
       30%
       35%
       40%
       45%

Ramon

February 9, 2011

I need a hard money lender who will go higher than 80% LTV with low FICO. Know anyone?

cjburl2@yahoo.com asked:


We have a beautiful home on 5+ acres (4800 sq. feet) and need some financial assistance. We need to either refinance or get a hard money lender to do a second before we end up in foreclosure. We have had several deaths in our immediate family this past year and have fallen behind in payments due to so much time missed from work. We need someone that will go higher than 80% LTV and because we have fallen behind our FICO’s are low. Can anyone help us without filing for bankruptcy advice?

Edith

January 29, 2011

my son thought he was living the american dream. I think he is living in a nightmare?

Kim N asked:


So, 6 years ago my son got married. Both have descent full time jobs + 1 part time job. 4 years ago they decided to buy a house and worked with his “good buddy” a broker to obtain a loan. They had $10,000 for a down payment. I want to say the house they bought was about $180,000
after all was said and done we went out to celebrate their new home and my husband asked about their rate (or something) they proudly explained that they got 2 loans. the first was for $30,000 at 7% for the down payment (added to their $10,000) and then another place financed the rest at 6% . my husband and I just sort of looked at each other already feeling like OH-OH?????
We thought their were programs out there for first time home buyers. It sounded like the good buddy steered them away from those as well as fha. Now I could be wrong but am I????
Here is the thing. these 2 loans are killing them, recently wells fargo (not their lenders) called them and got them all excited about refinance. In the end they were told with the 2 loans and now that their home is worth less then what they owe. they are pretty much screwed. They still are able to pay all their bills but i worry for how long. they are struggling. they have also maxed out 2 credit cards to cover an emergency medical expense that came up. So I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions? with all this help out there I would think there would be a way to combine the 2 mortgages at a lower rate. Or is wells fargo right and they are screwed

Sheila

January 24, 2011

Who can I report a predatory lender to?

Jason asked:


My wife and I both have excellent credit, and started a refinance on our home with Countrywide… They wanted to do most of it by fax, so the broker never came out to our house.

She sent an “opening package” that was like 8 pages for us to sign that estimated $3400 in closing costs for an interest rate of 6.3 – an exhorbitant sum in closing costs and only an average interest rate. We were going to do it anyway though and she sent a “mobile closer” to our house who was supposed to get everything signed in 15 minutes and be out the door.

They tried to pull a classic bait and switch, and the the notary showed up with paperwork that had $8950 in closing costs! The closing was only supposed to take 15 minutes because they were hoping I would not read everything.

I asked them to leave and did not sign the paperwork. Where can I report these folks for pulling a scam like that?

Rita

January 8, 2011

Refinancing Mortage during Bankruptcy?

Don asked:


I’ll make this quick. Do to some circumstances my wife and I fell behind on our mortgage. Our lender is countrywide. We have a 100% financed sub-prime loan with an 80/20 ARM and prepayment penalty. (A piece of trash loan I know, we know better now) Also there is another Lender…Franklin Credit which makes up the 20…We filed for bankruptcy in 2006 and have been making payments for two years now…due to the economy and a few unfortunate illnesses we were not able to stay current on our chapter 13 payments…so there was a motion filed by our trustee to close the bankruptcy unless we could become current by a certain time…..

When we contacted our lawyer he told us that we had three options…
1.bring the payments current(9,000.00) of course we don’t have that…
2.Let the bankruptcy go and hang on until foreclosure on our house starts then try to start another chapter 13….
3.Modify our current bankruptcy and pay them a fee to file this motion…go get chastised by a judge…and make our payments higher.
Oh I guess there were four options…4.convert to chapter 7….

At the time the bankruptcy was initiated there were no problems in making the payments….but then the bottom fell out…I am in transportation….my overtime was cut to 0….my wife has had a significant reduction in hours and I had a surgery that kept me out of work for two months…all of this has led to the fall behind…..

Ok so I have two questions relating to this situation…..

1. Can/Should I try to refinance the loans during the bankruptcy…The mortgage payments are made through the trustee….but we still get statements from countrywide….our current statement is 3000.00 a month UNBELIEVABLE…..If we can’t refinance there is no way we can afford this ridiculous arm after the bankruptcy…

2.Will president Obamas new plan help us during bankruptcy…we don’t know what to do…stay here pumping money into bk13 that was primarily done to save our home that we may not be able to keep after the bk….or convert to chapter 7…let it all go…uproot our family and start over…or possibly get some help from Obamas new plan.

We need guidance…we are good people with good jobs…good family…and good morals…we were admittantly irresponsible in money management…we own our part and we have drastically changed our lifestyle….but we were also taken advantage of as first time homebuyers so we want them to own thier part as well….

Please anyone who can give advice on my situtaion would be greatly appreciated…please don’t soilicit us…we are in trouble…our family is in trouble as many others…we need good soild,honest advice to get back on track…..Thank You.

Todd

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