I own a mortgage company so some of you might think this is self serving, but all I'm trying to do is offer some free advise and maybe trigger you to think in a new way. I won't even tell you what state I'm located in or the name of my mortgage company or give you any identifiers so you won't think I'm a Canoe.
Based upon a map I saw on Housingwire.com recently and upon recent foreclosure maps it appears that about 97% of the country isn't in dire straits as far as the housing market goes. For those of you in the areas where housing values are still falling rapidly YMMV.
Mortgage Interest rates are at an all time low. With that said here's a quote from the Wall Street Journal :
"Around 60% of all borrowers with a 30-year fixed-rate loan could lower their rate by one percentage point given current rates ... but only 38% could actually qualify for a refinanced loan because of the stricter loan standards." Mahesh Swaminathan, Senior Mortgage Strategist, Credit Suisse, quoted in The Wall Street Journal, 08.13.10
That same statement could be said about purchase loans as well. Basically 62% of the people with decent downpayments, stable jobs and good credit no longer can qualify for a mortgage loan. Forget the Alt A and B loan people, they aren't part of this equation.
When you change things just to make a change then the baby gets thrown out with the bath water sometimes, but I'm not here to gripe about the current administrations misteaks (of which there are more than a few). If you are one of the 38% who can get a loan I want you to begin to think in a different way.
I own a mortgage company and in the past month or so I've been closing loans at rates that vary between 3.5% to 4.375%. If you are ever going to buy or refinance THIS IS THE TIME!
I've only done one loan with a 30 year term, all the rest have been for 25 years or less.
When my wife and I first got into Real Estate rates were this low and people got as short a term of a loan as they could get and still afford the payments. Then rates started top climb and people had to get 30 year loans just to qualify. Fast forward over 40 years and once again rates are this low, but most people have never even thought about a loan for less than 30 years because that's all they've ever known. You've got to change your thought patterns.
Loan come in 5 year increments. They are basically only quoted as 15 or 30 year loans but you can get 5-10-15-20-25 year loans.
20 year loans are a good blend of payment vs. quick pay out. On a 20 year loan at 4.5% for each $100,000 of loan you will accrue an EXTRA $8,400+ equity in the first 5 years vs. a 30 year loan.
For the first and only time in most people's lives you have the opportunity to get a home and actually have a chance to pay it off. Refinance your current home for the lowest term you can afford and even if you don't stay in it long enough to totally pay it off you will build so much more equity that when you buy your next home you'll have such a large downpayment you may not need to finance it for more than 5-10 years
We are headed for Carter era interest rates. The multi-trillion dollar Healthcare bill alone guarantees it. And that doesn't even factor in all the other huge spending bills that have been passed since the election. There's no question of IF we'll have these rates, the only question is WHEN. By buying or refinancing now at the lowest term you can afford you have the chance of not getting hamstrung when the rates rise to those atmospheric levels. RENTERS will suffer the worst because you will be paying the owner's high interest rates, their cost of the house along with a profit.
If you're like most people you function so much better economically without a car payment, just think of the options you'd have without a house payment.
Another tidbit, pay no or little attention to the low interest rates quoted in the media. They tell less than half the story on rates. Since the CHANGE they've changed how interest rates are calculated. There is now a base rate (what you see quoted in the news) and then you have multiple add-ons for things like loan-to-value, credit score, loan size, buyer strengths, loan term, loan type, etc. Only the top 1-2% of the people get the lowest rate.