TexOle wrote:People need to know their limits financially.
DING!
primelax wrote:An ARM can be better for the consumer in certain situations. The real root of the problem is questionable lending practices by finance companies.
TexOle wrote:I do live in an apartment. Many of these problems are on the homeowner. If you would not buy something else that you cannot afford then why do you make the purchase of a home that you cannot afford. I cannot afford a house, and I do not plan on buying until I can afford that purchase. My point was there are a lot of shady lenders that are out to make a quick buck by giving bad advice.
People need to know their limits financially.
Should city bail homebuyers out?
Alarcon wants Los Angeles to help those facing foreclosure
BY KERRY CAVANAUGH and GREGORY J. WILCOX, Staff Writers
Article Last Updated: 08/21/2007 10:48:36 PM PDT
Housing experts painted a grim picture of Los Angeles' real-estate market Tuesday as City Councilman Richard Alarcon called for city, state and federal funds to help bail out city homeowners who can't pay their mortgages.
Warning that the region is embroiled in a foreclosure upheaval, Alarcon said he's also considering asking lawmakers to declare a state of emergency to direct state and federal money to counseling and loans for people about to lose their homes.
Alarcon has proposed using city money for an emergency-loan program to help homeowners on the verge of foreclosure.
But he and housing advocates acknowledged that the problem is growing so quickly that $5 million or so in city money would only help a fraction of the homeowners in default.
"We're seeing people who borrowed $600,000 and can only afford $300,000," said Lori Gay, president and CEO of Los Angeles Neighborhood Housing Services.
The mortgage crisis right now is not the consumer's fault.
I've received a few panicked calls recently from borrowers - most are mortgaged to the hilt, have crazy ideas of their current home's value, massive credit card debt, 2-3 car payments, lines of credit, and less than 2 months worth of expenses saved for emergencies.
The sense that tighter credit and falling housing prices create some kind of "crisis" -- George W. Bush and Hillary Clinton have both said that of mortgage economics in recent weeks -- is an example of the modern urge to declare everything an emergency.
Last week's New York Times estimated the real estate cooldown will reduce the appraised value of the U.S. housing stock 10 to 20 percent. Even the high end of that estimate would leave U.S. housing worth substantially more, in inflation-adjusted terms, than a decade ago, meaning the typical homeowner who plans to sell is still better off.
What about people who jumped into the hot market from 2002 to 2005 using gimmick loans and might face default? There's no doubt many were snowed by mumbo jumbo from mortgage brokers, and no doubt many never read what they signed. But reading before you sign is, after all, your responsibility -- not a responsibility that should be passed along to fellow taxpayers who did read before they signed.
The facts hardly indicate a credit crisis. As of mid-2007, data show that prices of existing homes are not collapsing. Despite large declines in new home production and existing home sales, home prices are only slightly falling overall but are still rising in many markets. Default rates are rising on subprime mortgages, but these mortgages -- which offer loans to borrowers with poor credit at higher interest rates -- form a relatively small part of all mortgage originations. About 87 percent of residential mortgages are not subprime loans. Subprime delinquency rates will most likely rise more in 2008 as mortgages are reset to higher levels as interest-only periods end or adjustable rates are driven upward. Unless the U.S. economy dips dramatically, however, the vast majority of subprime mortgages will be paid. And, because there is no basic shortage of money, investors still have a tremendous amount of financial capital they must put to work somewhere. On the immediate problem of mortgage defaults, some aid to the subprime borrowers might be justified, but bailing out the lenders even more than we have up to now would create a moral hazard by merely encouraging them to do it again.
As of mid-2007, data show that prices of existing homes are not collapsing. Despite large declines in new home production and existing home sales, home prices are only slightly falling overall but are still rising in many markets. Default rates are rising on subprime mortgages, but these mortgages—which offer loans to borrowers with poor credit at higher interest rates—form a relatively small part of all mortgage originations. About 87 percent of residential mortgages are not subprime loans, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s delinquency studies.
As of September 2007, National Association of Realtor data show that the median price of existing homes sold was down only 4.2 percent nationally vs. one year earlier, though down 8.8 percent in the west. These data show that prices of existing homes are not collapsing, despite large decreases in both new home production and sales of existing homes.
The subprime mortgage market has recently generated the most concern that credit markets may completely seize up and paralyze the economy. In fact, subprime mortgages form a relatively small part of all mortgage originations.
...among all U.S. residential mortgage originations, subprime loans altogether comprised a cumulative total of under 13 percent from 1994 through 2005, though they rose to 19 percent in the year 2004 and 21 percent in 2005, according to the Mortgage Bankers’ Association (MBA). This means at least 87 percent of residential mortgages as of mid-2007 were not subprime loans, according to the MBA’s delinquency studies.
Nothing in this world lasts forever, and the recent unprecedented prosperity in housing and real estate markets is no exception. Activity in U.S. residential markets has already slowed down, and that slow-down will probably continue for the next year or so, though it may recover after that. But in commercial real property markets, though interest rates are appropriately rising somewhat, there is still considerable capital looking for someplace to go.
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