Six Eye Catchers That Add Curb Appeal to Your Home

May 21, 2006

By Guest Author Brandon Cornett

Freddie Mac can help you obtain a home mortgage loan.

But while Freddie Mac might sound like a generous uncle, it’s more closely related to Uncle Sam. So what is Freddie Mac, and how does it help you when buying a home?

Freddie Mac is the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, a private corporation founded by Congress in 1970. Freddie Mac supports the secondary mortgage market by purchasing residential mortgage loans, securitizing them, and selling them to investors (usually through Wall Street).

By purchasing mortgage loans, Freddie Mac increases the availability and affordability of home loans for low- and middle-income Americans.

So while you won’t normally deal with them directly, Freddie Mac has a major impact on the price of mortgage loans — something that does affect you directly.

Here’s how Freddie Mac explains their primary benefit to home buyers. The following passage comes from their website, www.FreddieMac.com:

“Currently, we buy one mortgage every seven seconds to help finance one in six American homes … Because Freddie Mac exists, millions of Americans benefit from lower interest rates, readily available home mortgage credit, a wide choice of mortgage products and reduced loan origination costs.”

Educating Home Buyers
Freddie Mac also plays a major role in educating home buyers. Their website offers a lot of informative (and credible) articles on home ownership, home buying, mortgages and more. To use these resources, visit www.FreddieMac.com.

* Copyright 2006, Brandon Cornett. You may republish this article in its entirety, provided you keep the byline, author’s note and website hyperlink intact.

About the Author

Brandon Cornett is the editor of HomeBuyingInstitute.com, one of the Internet’s largest libraries of home buying information — over 100 expert articles on home buying and home mortgage loans! Learn more at: http://www.homebuyinginstitute.com

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Brandon_Cornett

Bob Roscoe, Mortgage Marketing Associates, Minneapolis, Minnesota

Mortgage Tricks


401k Retirement Plans Explained

May 15, 2006
By Guest Author Stu Pearson

401k retirement plans are special types of accounts, financed through pre-tax payroll deductions. The funds in your account are invested in various ways. Your funds can be invested through any number of stocks, mutual funds, and other ways, and it is not taxed on any capital gains or interest until the money is pulled out or withdrawn. Congress approved this retirement savings plan in 1981, and its name was rooted from the section of the Internal Revenue Code that contains it, which is obviously, section 401k. One great advantage of this retirement plan is that the tax treatment is complimentary. Moreover, capital gains, interest and dividends are not levied until they are pulled out or withdrawn.

In terms of its investment customization and flexibility, 401k retirement plans offer employees and workers an extensive array of options and preferences as to how their property and assets are invested through time. Moreover, many businesses and companies permit employees to obtain company stock for their 401k retirement plan at a cut rate. However, many pecuniary consultants and counselors are not in favor of holding a significant percentage of your 401k plan in the shares of your boss or manager.

So what are 401k plans? If you are like most people, you probably have questions about your 401k retirement plan. You may be wondering how a 401k actually takes place, precisely what a 401k retirement plan is, or how you can be capable of stimulating the diminishing balance in your 401k plan. So how does a 401k plan actually work? If your company offers a 401k retirement plan, you can agree to join. You can also have the selection option of choosing the amount of funds you wish to put in from an inventory of funds presented in the 401k plan. Your payment will routinely be deducted from your pay check before taxes.

Every worker can invest up to a defined proportion of his wage into a 401k plan. Your involvement, along with any coordinated contributions from your employer, are then endowed into your chosen funds. These funds will produce interest before being taxed, and can be withdrawn when you reach 60 years of age. At this point in time, you must pay the income tax on the withdrawn funds. Furthermore, there are methods and means wherein you can pull out your funds before age 60. However, these early withdrawals frequently call for a penalty in conjunction with the payment of taxes.

A 401k retirement plan is an employer-subsidized retirement plan, and it is categorized into two groups: defined benefit and defined contribution. With this defined benefit plan, the employer pledges to give a distinct sum to those who want to retire and those who meet specified eligibility standards and measures.

Article Source: http://www.ArticleJoe.com

Stu Pearson has an interest in Finance, Business and Technology. To access more articles on 401k plans or for additional information and resources visit this 401k plans related website.

Bob Roscoe, Mortgage Marketing Associates, Minneapolis, Minnesota
401k for Down Payment

 

Fixed Rate Mortgage or ARM? Which is Better?

May 11, 2006

By Bob Roscoe

The fixed rate mortgage offers the certainty of a constant monthly payment, but an adjustable may seduce you with its lower payment. Security or affordability? Which do you choose? Just what is a home buyer to do?

Which loan you eventually choose may depend more upon your personality than a careful analysis of each loan’s advantages and disadvantages. People who generally seek security in other areas of their lives, such as occupations and relationships, will often opt for the security of a fixed rate mortgage. Those who are more adventurous will sometimes respond to the lure of an adjustable.

The attractions of a fixed rate mortgage are a principal and interest payment and an interest rate that remain the same for the entire length of the loan. That stable predictability is what entices so many people to choose it, and its safety and reliability will afford the homeowner peace of mind. You get your fixed rate mortgage and you forget about it. What could be easier?

An adjustable rate mortgage or ARM, on the other hand, is generally the opposite. An ARM usually has an interest rate and a monthly payment that are fixed only for a specific period of time, after which both rate and payment will adjust periodically.

The ARM’s initial low rate and monthly payment are its appeal, and it can offer that because its rate is based on the short term bond market while a fixed rate mortgage is pegged to long term bonds. The short term bond market generally features lower rates than the long term market. If you believe that interest rates will decrease by the time your mortgage rate begins adjusting, then the lure of an even lower rate and payment down the road may tempt you even further.

The foreboding most people have with the ARM involves its uncertainty. An element of fear is introduced because your rate and payment might increase once the rate starts to adjust. If interest rates in the bond market are higher once adjustment does begin, then your rate and payment will increase. None of us wants payments higher than they need to be, but some of us shrink from the risk more than others do.
 
But much of that risk aversion is needless hand wringing. Here’s why.

By deciding which ARM you prefer, you are also choosing the initial time period you want the rate and monthly payment to remain fixed. ARMs generally offer the following initial fixed time periods: one month, three months, six months, one year, two years, three years, five years, seven years and ten years. The shortest time periods will offer the lowest initial rates. A one month ARM may provide for a rate and payment guarantee of just one month before adjustment begins. A one year ARM is fixed for one year and then the adjustments start. A three year ARM is fixed for three years, and so on.

By picking a time period that best fits you and your situation in life, you can take advantage of the lower rate and monthly payment that an ARM provides at a substantially diminished risk. If you are a first time home buyer, for example, then a three year ARM might make the most sense because first time home buyers often stay in their home for only three or four years. Why get a 30 year mortgage if you won’t be in the home that long?

If you are middle age and your children are at the point in life where they go off to college or trade school, statistics suggest that they will soon move out and you will become an empty nester. Empty nesters frequently downsize to a smaller home once their kids depart, which means a different home and yet another mortgage.

The point is that our lives change frequently and predictably. We get married, have babies, relocate, get divorced, remarry, get sick, grow old, retire and die. All of these chapters in our lives will often occur in a span of only 30 to 40 years. When these joyous and not so joyous events arise, sometimes without warning, our housing and mortgage needs will oftentimes shift just as suddenly. Yet most homeowners rarely take such life events into account when choosing their mortgage.

The average mortgage lasts only about five years, sometimes because a major life event sprouts up inducing the homeowner either to move or refinance. Other times economic change may cause mortgage rates to drop, which, in turn, may influence people to enact changes themselves. They either refinance or perhaps decide that it’s an affordable time to invest in other housing. Despite all of this, people predictably embrace the 30 year fixed rate mortgage rather than an ARM because of the warm and fuzzy sense of safety that a fixed exudes.

The choice is yours to make. An informed decision will include considering all of the alternatives with the knowledge that your personality traits may be influencing your decision making process. While statistical analysis will often favor choosing the ARM, there is nothing wrong with selecting a fixed rate loan.

Copyright 2006. Bob Roscoe. All rights reserved.

Bob Roscoe, Mortgage Marketing Associates, Minneapolis, Minnesota

Loan Secrets 

Mortgage Delinquencies: Fact and Fiction

May 4, 2006

By Bob Roscoe

Kenneth Harney, a highly respected columnist for the Washington Post, expresses surprise in his column recently because home buyers in high-cost parts of the country like California, Hawaii, Boston and Washington, D.C. are not leading the nation in mortgage delinquencies.

Mr. Harney states in near amazement that the opposite is actually true–that home owners in the high-cost areas of the nation have the lowest mortgage delinquency rate. The Mortgage Bankers Association of America, which recently released its latest survey on delinquency rates, states that Hawaii has the lowest mortgage delinquency rate in the nation at only 0.89%, followed by California at 1.02% and Virginia at 1.32%.

These numbers are contrasted by the states with the highest delinquency rate: Mississippi at 8.5%, Louisiana - 6.7% (pre-hurricane Katrina numbers), Indiana - 6.66%, Tennessee - 6.32%, Texas - 6.31% and Ohio - 6.13%. Notice that most of the high delinquency rates occur in states with a lower than average per capita income. Mississippi and Louisiana have some of the lowest per capita incomes in the nation. Hawaii and California, on the other hand, have some of the highest.

You could read more about the numbers in his column at the Washington Post, but that newspaper requires you to sign-in and become a member just to read its articles. An easier way is to go to The Wichita Eagle (as in Wichita, Kansas) where Harney’s column is reprinted without the signing-in hassle.

While Harney doesn’t explicitly state that he expects the high cost areas to lead the country in mortgage delinquencies, the tone of his column highly suggests that. Harney’s recent columns have made no secret of his belief that home owners in the U.S. are overextending themselves because they are taking out more interest-only mortgages and other non-traditional type of mortgages to finance their home purchases and refinances. His implied expectation is that folks with these types of loans will be the new wave of foreclosures to hit the nation.

Actually, the opposite is true. Anybody with any long term experience in the mortgage or real estate industries will be able to tell you that higher cost does not equal more frequent mortgage delinquencies. Both mortgage delinquencies and foreclosures are usually the result of loss of income. Alcoholism, drug addiction and gambling addiction certainly are factors, but the number one reason people cannot pay their bills is because they are earning less money than they used to.

Every economic downturn produces a new wave of foreclosures, and the next downturn should be no different. This next time around, however, the pundits that predicted the crash of the so-called “real estate bubble” will be telling anyone who will listen that they told us so. They will equate the up tick in foreclosures with the popping of the “real estate bubble.”

They will be wrong.

Foreclosures and mortgage delinquencies follow the economic cycle as sure as sunrise follows sunset. Folks who are laid off their job or are the victims of downsizing are usually the ones who experience difficulty paying the mortgage. I have helped many clients avoid foreclosure, and the constant recurring theme I see with the vast majority of those people is loss of income.

It’s time that the media stopped trying to create the news rather than simply to report it. All of the media hype about an impending bursting of a “real estate bubble” is mere conjecture. Most of those who believe that the bubble will burst believe it because the media has harped on it so much. If you hear almost anything long enough and often enough, you begin to believe it. It’s the underlying principle of today’s advertising. For most of the U.S., the “real estate bubble” will not burst.

It will merely hiss a bit.

Copyright 2005 Bob Roscoe

About the Author

20 years of industry experience has given Bob an eye for detail lending him an expertise which ensures that mortgage transactions will flow smoothly. “Stress free” is Bob’s hallmark. Learn more at Mortgage Marketing Associates & Name That Value.

What Are Reverse Mortgages and How Do They Work?

May 2, 2006

Guest Article by Douglas Hanna

If you have a home that’s paid off – or almost paid off – a reverse mortgage can help you live better by providing a steady stream of dependable income.

This type of mortgage is called a reverse mortgage because instead of you paying the lender a certain amount per month for a certain number of years, the lender pays you. These payments are cash advances against the value of your home.

There are different kinds of reverse mortgages, but all of them are similar in certain ways. You continue to own your home just as you do with a normal mortgage. You pay the property taxes and are responsible for maintenance, homeowners insurance and property repairs.

At the end of the mortgage, you or your heirs must pay all of your cash advances plus interest. If you or your heirs cannot do this, the lender can foreclose on your house.

There are financing fees associated with a reverse mortgage just like with a forward mortgage. The money you get from the reverse mortgage can be used to pay these fees. These costs are added to your loan balance and must be paid back with interest when the loan is over.

How much money can you get with a reverse mortgage?

The monthly amount you get will depend on your age and the value of your home. Here’s an example. One reverse mortgage currently available is the Federally-insured Home Equity Conversion Mortgage or HECM. Assuming you have a home worth $200,000 and owe nothing on it, an HECM could get you $641 a month for the rest of your life. Alternately, you could get a credit line account in the amount of $107,466 that you then could draw from whenever you wished. Or you could choose to get a single lump sum payment for the same $107,466.

Keep in mind that, as a rule, reverse mortgages are first mortgages. In this case, if you still owe any money on your home, you must pay off the old mortgage first. If you don’t have the money to do this, you can usually use money from the reverse mortgage to pay off the old debt.

How much will you or your heirs end up owing?

The debt will equal all the cash advances you have received, plus all interest that is added to your loan balance. If that amount is less than your home is worth, you or your heirs get to keep the difference. The other good news is that you can never end up owing more than your house is worth at the time the loan is repaid.

If you are “house rich” but “cash poor,” a reverse mortgage could help make your golden years more golden, However, make sure you read the loan papers carefully to be certain you understand all the loan’s conditions.

Douglas Hanna is a retired marketing executive and the author of more than 100 articles on HD radio, the Internet and family finances.

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Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Douglas_Hanna

Bob Roscoe, Mortgage Marketing Associates, Minneapolis, Minnesota

Reverse Mortgage Secrets 

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