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  • Casual Articles - Lending Guidelines Change - The Future of 100% Financing, Sub-prime, and First-Time Homebuyers

    5 Sure - Fire Ways To Increase Your Credit Card Limit
    Many credit card holders want a higher credit card limit for various reasons. Credit card holders need to remember that to get a higher credit card limit, they must follow the terms and conditions of the credit card company or bank that issued the credit card.Here are 5 ways for you to get a higher credit card limit:1. The most important thing to do to get a higher credit card limit is to prove your credit worthiness. This is the first thing that banks look for when increasing your credit limit. Always give importance to the prompt payment of your credit card bill.2. Attract positive attention from the credit card company or bank by paying a finance charge once a year. Obviously, this is not advisable on a repeated basis. However, this will increase your chances of getting a higher credit limit by giving you a positive credit history of meeting your financial obligations. The bank will see you as a better credit risk.3. Use your credit cards regularly to help increase your credit limit. Banks regularly increase the spending limits for customers with a good record of paying on time and those who use the service frequently. Don't reserve your cards for emergency use only. Most banks and credit card companies will be reluctant to give you a higher credit card limit if you do not use them on a regular basis.4. Always spend within your credit card limit because this means that you are capable of controlling your expenses.5. Try to always pay the full amount due on your credit card bill if possible and do not make any late payments. This helps your chances of getting a credit limit increase, and you will avoid late fees and finance charges which can become expensive.Call your credit card company once a year and request a credit limit increase. Don't assume that they will automatically increase your credit limit. Many ti
    a 5%-10% down payment if your credit score is not at least 660.

    If you have to state your income, plan on a bank seriously considering your payment shock before approving you. Many new banking guidelines are limiting this to no more than two times your current payment. For example, if you pay $2000 today for your home or rental, it will be difficult, but not impossible, to find you a bank who will allow your new payment to be any higher than $4000.

    If you are a first-time homebuyer, and you don’t rent from a professional management company, you should make sure you have cancelled checks to prove your last 12 month rental history and your credit score should be decent. If not, you are likely going to face a greater challenge and possibly a higher interest rate.

    If your credit score is not at least 660, and you cannot fully disclose your income, you will find it very hard or very expensive to secure a 100% loan on a new home purchase or refinance.

    When I say expensive, I mean if you are doing an 80/20 loan, and your credit score is not at least 660, and you have to state your income, plan on that last 20% costing you between 3-8% on that loan as a loan discount fee, if you can even find it.

    If you buy a $300,000 house, and you are doing an 80/20, this means your first mortgage is $240,000 and your second mortgage is $60,000.

    Based on these numbers, that second mortgage will cost you a discount fee between $1800 and $4800 just to get that second loan in additional closing costs.

    Now t

    Career Change
    Coping with change is now an everyday occurrence. What’s more the pace of change is accelerating and the need for us all to adjust is greater than ever. Yet, this is a time of opportunity.Career change – Ignore it at your peril or seize the opportunityAll around us we constantly see the changes which are affecting us. Economically power is shifting and the consequences are massive. China and India are emerging nations using modern technology to massive effect as their economies grow at rates previously unheard of. It is predicted that China will be the 4th largest world economy by 2006 overtaking the UK and by 2020 it will be challenging the world’s largest economy, the US.Although these changes will be seen by most as threatening they are really opportunity in disguise. Traditional and new processes are being executed with increasing effect world wide but the net result is that as this happens new situations arise which we as individuals can tap into.The shifts in the world economy are affecting the large corporations and people employed by the corporates. This does not mean that within any community the need for goods and services diminishes. In fact as more people benefit financially from the changes demand grows and that demand has to be satisfied.The key to succeeding in the new world order is to be prepared to change. Jobs for life no longer exist, particularly in the corporate world and the people who suffer are those that cannot adjust. What’s more world wide pensions are under pressure so that means we all have to look out for ourselves in later life. This is not a threat it is a challenge if you are prepared.Facing the challenges can mean there is a need for career change. Each time I changed direction when employed in the corporate world I faced new challenges. Perhaps I should have been more wary but I got to enjoy the c
    You have likely seen the television news reports or have read the newspaper and know something about the demise of the sub-prime mortgage business.

    By now, you, or someone you know, thought they were getting a mortgage, and then suddenly, without warning, were turned down for that loan, because the bank no longer offered that program.

    You may have even seen "The Mortgage Lender Implode-O-Meter" that many of my colleagues have sent me on the website mortgageimplode.com.

    You also know that this is being caused primarily by a record number of foreclosures as well as the highest percentage of people who are late on their mortgage in nearly four years.

    As a result, nearly every mortgage lender in the country has dramatically changed its lending guidelines in the last 30 days, especially the sub-prime banks that decided to stay in business.

    Many banks have made the decision to close. According to the Implode-O-Meter, this number is now at 39 as of today.

    New Century, the third largest sub-prime lender in the U.S, is no longer accepting loan applications. They are on the verge of bankruptcy or closure, depending on the reports you read. Their stock, which had been at 51 in the past year, hit a low below 4. It dropped nearly 70% in one day.

    You have probably dealt with Fremont and Aurora as well. Fremont is the second-largest independent U.S. mortgage lender. They recently closed their sub-prime division.

    Aurora recently eliminated a very popular sub-prime program they had.

    You may have even had a deal fall out of escrow because of it. The buyer, who was a slam dunk loan a month ago, today can’t qualify.

    Why are these guidelines changing like this and so rapidly?

    The mortgage business works like a river with a downhill stream. All of the water ends up in the same pool at the end of the river.

    Nearly all mortgage loans originated everywhere end up being purchased by a handful of companies. This handful of companies purchase nearly all of the mortgage notes made in the U.S. These are large, institutional, Wall Street investment companies.

    These investment companies buy mortgage notes because they have been highly profitable in the past few years. They were profitable because the market was vibrant. People made their payments on time and when they didn’t, they simply sold their property at a profit before they lost the home to foreclosure. Mortgage notes were lucrative and came with little risk.

    The rewards were tremendous and nearly every large Wall Street institution from Morgan Stanley to Lehman Brothers to Goldman Sachs to Credit Suisse got in the game. Even General Motors owns two mortgage companies.

    However, with foreclosure rates higher than ever and late payments also very high, these mortgages are no longer profitable for these Wall Street investors. In fact, they have become an albatross threatening to bring them down.

    Sure, it’s great to own a $60,000 Note on a second mortgage where a guy pays you 11.000%. However, when he goes into default and you take back his home and he is upside down by $100,000 and you lose your entire $60,000 because you are in second position to the first mortgage note holder, it’s a first-class beating.

    Some experts say these investors now potentially could lose billions of dollars. General Motors announced this week they are writing a $1 billion check to cover losses in their mortgage division. That’s billion with a "B."

    The biggest loser for these Wall Street investors has been sub-prime mortgage notes and second mortgage notes. Their research shows that these losses are mostly and directly related to first-time homebuyers and 100% financing.

    So, these Wall Street investors have decided to fight back. They have collectively determined that second mortgage notes are the absolute riskiest and they are going to limit purchasing them. They have decided to only purchase the best notes. The ones with the least risk. The ones made to people who have some of their own money in the deal and/or only those with better credit.

    They have determined that sub-prime notes are also not worth owning unless the borrower has a lot more of his own money in the property, so they are limiting buying those as well unless the borrower has a substantial down payment or a lot of equity on a refinance.

    They have determined that notes for borrowers who state their income are far more likely to end up in foreclosure, so they are limiting those to only the better credit score borrowers.

    They have determined that first-time homebuyers, without a down payment or a verifiable rental history or a very good credit score, are excessively risky, so they are limiting investing in those Notes as well.

    So the mortgage companies that sell the Wall Street investors these Notes, including Countrywide, Option One, New Century, Fremont, Aurora, and nearly every other mortgage lender you or your broker deal with got put on notice from these Wall Street investors.

    They were told, “Do business any way you deem necessary but just know that we no longer purchase risky notes, like those listed above.”

    Without a place to sell these notes, these banks had to change their guidelines to only allow for notes they can sell and that’s where we are today.

    OK, so what does this mean to you and me?

    In the last few weeks, nearly all of the mortgage banks have eliminated stated income loan programs for credit scores under 660 that allow for 100% financing.

    They want the buyers to have their own money in the deal as they believe that will make them less likely to be willing to lose their home.

    If you do an 80/20 loan to cover 100% financing, the 20% second mortgage may be very difficult to obtain. It will be nearly impossible if your credit score is below 660 and you state your income.

    If your credit score is less than 620, that makes you sub-prime to most lenders, so you will very likely need a minimum of a 5% down payment and probably more like 10-20%.

    If you have to state your income, you should plan on at least a 5%-10% down payment if your credit score is not at least 660.

    If you have to state your income, plan on a bank seriously considering your payment shock before approving you. Many new banking guidelines are limiting this to no more than two times your current payment. For example, if you pay $2000 today for your home or rental, it will be difficult, but not impossible, to find you a bank who will allow your new payment to be any higher than $4000.

    If you are a first-time homebuyer, and you don’t rent from a professional management company, you should make sure you have cancelled checks to prove your last 12 month rental history and your credit score should be decent. If not, you are likely going to face a greater challenge and possibly a higher interest rate.

    If your credit score is not at least 660, and you cannot fully disclose your income, you will find it very hard or very expensive to secure a 100% loan on a new home purchase or refinance.

    When I say expensive, I mean if you are doing an 80/20 loan, and your credit score is not at least 660, and you have to state your income, plan on that last 20% costing you between 3-8% on that loan as a loan discount fee, if you can even find it.

    If you buy a $300,000 house, and you are doing an 80/20, this means your first mortgage is $240,000 and your second mortgage is $60,000.

    Based on these numbers, that second mortgage will cost you a discount fee between $1800 and $4800 just to get that second loan in additional closing costs.

    Now th

    Call Capture Finds Its Place In The Mortgage Industry
    Relationships in business can mean the difference between success and failure. In business, many times it is Who you know and not What you know. Take for example the relationships between mortgage brokers and real estate agents. If a mortgage broker builds a strong relationship with an agent, someone who will refer business their way, they can double their leads over their competitor simply by knowing that agent. However, how does a mortgage broker suggest that relationship with an agent and once they have it, ensure loyalty? Up until now, that could be complicated. But, with a new twist on some tried and true technology, it is now becoming easier.For years now, real estate agents have been reaping the benefits of toll free number call capture systems. Savvy agents have been using these toll free number call capture systems to generate more leads, get more listings and make more sales. The agents use their toll free numbers on sign riders for 24/7 information about their properties as well as offer 24/7 recorded expert information on buying and selling homes. Each call that comes in is a captured, qualified lead. These original systems were designed for just one real estate agent. However, now some call capture system providers have released new technology that allows for an unlimited number of real estate agents to use 1 system. Here is where mortgage brokers are seeing a great opportunity to forge relationships with the real estate agents in their area, and at the same time take advantage of the call capture technology for their own leads.Here is how it works. A mortgage broker purchases a multiple-user call capture system and starts using it themselves. First they place ads offering free, 24/7 recorded information that people looking to finance a home will be interested in. An example of such an ad might read, “Don't make one of these mistak
    p>You may have even had a deal fall out of escrow because of it. The buyer, who was a slam dunk loan a month ago, today can’t qualify.

    Why are these guidelines changing like this and so rapidly?

    The mortgage business works like a river with a downhill stream. All of the water ends up in the same pool at the end of the river.

    Nearly all mortgage loans originated everywhere end up being purchased by a handful of companies. This handful of companies purchase nearly all of the mortgage notes made in the U.S. These are large, institutional, Wall Street investment companies.

    These investment companies buy mortgage notes because they have been highly profitable in the past few years. They were profitable because the market was vibrant. People made their payments on time and when they didn’t, they simply sold their property at a profit before they lost the home to foreclosure. Mortgage notes were lucrative and came with little risk.

    The rewards were tremendous and nearly every large Wall Street institution from Morgan Stanley to Lehman Brothers to Goldman Sachs to Credit Suisse got in the game. Even General Motors owns two mortgage companies.

    However, with foreclosure rates higher than ever and late payments also very high, these mortgages are no longer profitable for these Wall Street investors. In fact, they have become an albatross threatening to bring them down.

    Sure, it’s great to own a $60,000 Note on a second mortgage where a guy pays you 11.000%. However, when he goes into default and you take back his home and he is upside down by $100,000 and you lose your entire $60,000 because you are in second position to the first mortgage note holder, it’s a first-class beating.

    Some experts say these investors now potentially could lose billions of dollars. General Motors announced this week they are writing a $1 billion check to cover losses in their mortgage division. That’s billion with a "B."

    The biggest loser for these Wall Street investors has been sub-prime mortgage notes and second mortgage notes. Their research shows that these losses are mostly and directly related to first-time homebuyers and 100% financing.

    So, these Wall Street investors have decided to fight back. They have collectively determined that second mortgage notes are the absolute riskiest and they are going to limit purchasing them. They have decided to only purchase the best notes. The ones with the least risk. The ones made to people who have some of their own money in the deal and/or only those with better credit.

    They have determined that sub-prime notes are also not worth owning unless the borrower has a lot more of his own money in the property, so they are limiting buying those as well unless the borrower has a substantial down payment or a lot of equity on a refinance.

    They have determined that notes for borrowers who state their income are far more likely to end up in foreclosure, so they are limiting those to only the better credit score borrowers.

    They have determined that first-time homebuyers, without a down payment or a verifiable rental history or a very good credit score, are excessively risky, so they are limiting investing in those Notes as well.

    So the mortgage companies that sell the Wall Street investors these Notes, including Countrywide, Option One, New Century, Fremont, Aurora, and nearly every other mortgage lender you or your broker deal with got put on notice from these Wall Street investors.

    They were told, “Do business any way you deem necessary but just know that we no longer purchase risky notes, like those listed above.”

    Without a place to sell these notes, these banks had to change their guidelines to only allow for notes they can sell and that’s where we are today.

    OK, so what does this mean to you and me?

    In the last few weeks, nearly all of the mortgage banks have eliminated stated income loan programs for credit scores under 660 that allow for 100% financing.

    They want the buyers to have their own money in the deal as they believe that will make them less likely to be willing to lose their home.

    If you do an 80/20 loan to cover 100% financing, the 20% second mortgage may be very difficult to obtain. It will be nearly impossible if your credit score is below 660 and you state your income.

    If your credit score is less than 620, that makes you sub-prime to most lenders, so you will very likely need a minimum of a 5% down payment and probably more like 10-20%.

    If you have to state your income, you should plan on at least a 5%-10% down payment if your credit score is not at least 660.

    If you have to state your income, plan on a bank seriously considering your payment shock before approving you. Many new banking guidelines are limiting this to no more than two times your current payment. For example, if you pay $2000 today for your home or rental, it will be difficult, but not impossible, to find you a bank who will allow your new payment to be any higher than $4000.

    If you are a first-time homebuyer, and you don’t rent from a professional management company, you should make sure you have cancelled checks to prove your last 12 month rental history and your credit score should be decent. If not, you are likely going to face a greater challenge and possibly a higher interest rate.

    If your credit score is not at least 660, and you cannot fully disclose your income, you will find it very hard or very expensive to secure a 100% loan on a new home purchase or refinance.

    When I say expensive, I mean if you are doing an 80/20 loan, and your credit score is not at least 660, and you have to state your income, plan on that last 20% costing you between 3-8% on that loan as a loan discount fee, if you can even find it.

    If you buy a $300,000 house, and you are doing an 80/20, this means your first mortgage is $240,000 and your second mortgage is $60,000.

    Based on these numbers, that second mortgage will cost you a discount fee between $1800 and $4800 just to get that second loan in additional closing costs.

    Now t

    Are Your Employees Aligned With Your Brand?
    Do your employees behave toward your customers the way you would expect them to? Is the culture of your senior executive team consistent with the culture of your lowest level line workers in the field? Do you really know what your company’s culture is? Why is employee culture important?Your company’s culture can include: • the behaviors of your employees as they interact with each other and with customers, • the decisions they make as they conduct their work, • the way they collaborate and solve problems, • the way they rise to new challenges and obstacles to achieve your goals, • the way they express their purpose and loyalty to a common purpose or mission, • and the value and meaning they derive from the work they do.If the basic behaviors and tendencies of your employee population are aligned with your mission, or brand promise, then they will produce consistent results and customer experiences. Empowered people must believe in their leaders, in their team members, in their purpose and mission, and in their ability to deliver results to delight the customer. If they cannot feel any cultural affinity with their leaders or their team members, they will narrowly act in ways that conform to the business goals you have laid out for them. They will make decisions that fit those goals within the strict confines of their own specific work domains and personal spheres of influence. They will not risk a confrontation (i.e., collaboration) with other people who may choose a different approach to addressing the same decision. If you have an environment where your workers are managing demanding processes and working heads-down for hours on end, you may be successful in spite of the lack of cultural affinity across your population. However, even then a predominant culture of fear is likely to emerge as employees focus on meeting t
    default and you take back his home and he is upside down by $100,000 and you lose your entire $60,000 because you are in second position to the first mortgage note holder, it’s a first-class beating.

    Some experts say these investors now potentially could lose billions of dollars. General Motors announced this week they are writing a $1 billion check to cover losses in their mortgage division. That’s billion with a "B."

    The biggest loser for these Wall Street investors has been sub-prime mortgage notes and second mortgage notes. Their research shows that these losses are mostly and directly related to first-time homebuyers and 100% financing.

    So, these Wall Street investors have decided to fight back. They have collectively determined that second mortgage notes are the absolute riskiest and they are going to limit purchasing them. They have decided to only purchase the best notes. The ones with the least risk. The ones made to people who have some of their own money in the deal and/or only those with better credit.

    They have determined that sub-prime notes are also not worth owning unless the borrower has a lot more of his own money in the property, so they are limiting buying those as well unless the borrower has a substantial down payment or a lot of equity on a refinance.

    They have determined that notes for borrowers who state their income are far more likely to end up in foreclosure, so they are limiting those to only the better credit score borrowers.

    They have determined that first-time homebuyers, without a down payment or a verifiable rental history or a very good credit score, are excessively risky, so they are limiting investing in those Notes as well.

    So the mortgage companies that sell the Wall Street investors these Notes, including Countrywide, Option One, New Century, Fremont, Aurora, and nearly every other mortgage lender you or your broker deal with got put on notice from these Wall Street investors.

    They were told, “Do business any way you deem necessary but just know that we no longer purchase risky notes, like those listed above.”

    Without a place to sell these notes, these banks had to change their guidelines to only allow for notes they can sell and that’s where we are today.

    OK, so what does this mean to you and me?

    In the last few weeks, nearly all of the mortgage banks have eliminated stated income loan programs for credit scores under 660 that allow for 100% financing.

    They want the buyers to have their own money in the deal as they believe that will make them less likely to be willing to lose their home.

    If you do an 80/20 loan to cover 100% financing, the 20% second mortgage may be very difficult to obtain. It will be nearly impossible if your credit score is below 660 and you state your income.

    If your credit score is less than 620, that makes you sub-prime to most lenders, so you will very likely need a minimum of a 5% down payment and probably more like 10-20%.

    If you have to state your income, you should plan on at least a 5%-10% down payment if your credit score is not at least 660.

    If you have to state your income, plan on a bank seriously considering your payment shock before approving you. Many new banking guidelines are limiting this to no more than two times your current payment. For example, if you pay $2000 today for your home or rental, it will be difficult, but not impossible, to find you a bank who will allow your new payment to be any higher than $4000.

    If you are a first-time homebuyer, and you don’t rent from a professional management company, you should make sure you have cancelled checks to prove your last 12 month rental history and your credit score should be decent. If not, you are likely going to face a greater challenge and possibly a higher interest rate.

    If your credit score is not at least 660, and you cannot fully disclose your income, you will find it very hard or very expensive to secure a 100% loan on a new home purchase or refinance.

    When I say expensive, I mean if you are doing an 80/20 loan, and your credit score is not at least 660, and you have to state your income, plan on that last 20% costing you between 3-8% on that loan as a loan discount fee, if you can even find it.

    If you buy a $300,000 house, and you are doing an 80/20, this means your first mortgage is $240,000 and your second mortgage is $60,000.

    Based on these numbers, that second mortgage will cost you a discount fee between $1800 and $4800 just to get that second loan in additional closing costs.

    Now t

    Improve Your Google Ranking - Full SEM Techniques
    It is often said, by many search engine optimisation experts, that content is king. Others proclaim that a text linking strategy is king. The simple fact is, if you are to be successful in your site promotion efforts, all aspects of Search Engine Marketing (SEM) are essential to the mix.SEM consists of all the elements that are required to successfully promote a website; with the objective being to improve a website's ranking on Google, Yahoo and MSN and other major search engines. These elements may be classified as:1) On-page optimisation (all the techniques involved in manipulating page content). 2) Off-page optimisation (all the techniques involved in website promotion).A good way to think of it is: on-page optimisation is used to promote your product, service or information. Whereas off-page optimisation is used to promote your website.On Page Optimisation. Site Readiness - W3C Compliance:Search engine robots do not like broken HTML code. Your rankings will suffer if your pages do not conform to World Wide Web (W3C) standards. A free online HTML validation service is available at: http://validator.w3.org/. Search engines like Google now check CSS code, this must be validated also. A tool for this is available at: http://jigsaw.w3.org/css-validator/.Site Readiness - Broken Links: It should be obvious, but is often overlooked, that broken links are a problem in terms of search engine optimisation. Clearly, if the search engine robot cannot finish spidering your site, due to broken links, then some pages will not be indexed. A tool for checking broken links can be found at: http://validator.w3.org/checklink.Site Readiness - Keyword Research:Analyzing your niche market, or business sector, allows you to create an appropriate set of
    first-time homebuyers, without a down payment or a verifiable rental history or a very good credit score, are excessively risky, so they are limiting investing in those Notes as well.

    So the mortgage companies that sell the Wall Street investors these Notes, including Countrywide, Option One, New Century, Fremont, Aurora, and nearly every other mortgage lender you or your broker deal with got put on notice from these Wall Street investors.

    They were told, “Do business any way you deem necessary but just know that we no longer purchase risky notes, like those listed above.”

    Without a place to sell these notes, these banks had to change their guidelines to only allow for notes they can sell and that’s where we are today.

    OK, so what does this mean to you and me?

    In the last few weeks, nearly all of the mortgage banks have eliminated stated income loan programs for credit scores under 660 that allow for 100% financing.

    They want the buyers to have their own money in the deal as they believe that will make them less likely to be willing to lose their home.

    If you do an 80/20 loan to cover 100% financing, the 20% second mortgage may be very difficult to obtain. It will be nearly impossible if your credit score is below 660 and you state your income.

    If your credit score is less than 620, that makes you sub-prime to most lenders, so you will very likely need a minimum of a 5% down payment and probably more like 10-20%.

    If you have to state your income, you should plan on at least a 5%-10% down payment if your credit score is not at least 660.

    If you have to state your income, plan on a bank seriously considering your payment shock before approving you. Many new banking guidelines are limiting this to no more than two times your current payment. For example, if you pay $2000 today for your home or rental, it will be difficult, but not impossible, to find you a bank who will allow your new payment to be any higher than $4000.

    If you are a first-time homebuyer, and you don’t rent from a professional management company, you should make sure you have cancelled checks to prove your last 12 month rental history and your credit score should be decent. If not, you are likely going to face a greater challenge and possibly a higher interest rate.

    If your credit score is not at least 660, and you cannot fully disclose your income, you will find it very hard or very expensive to secure a 100% loan on a new home purchase or refinance.

    When I say expensive, I mean if you are doing an 80/20 loan, and your credit score is not at least 660, and you have to state your income, plan on that last 20% costing you between 3-8% on that loan as a loan discount fee, if you can even find it.

    If you buy a $300,000 house, and you are doing an 80/20, this means your first mortgage is $240,000 and your second mortgage is $60,000.

    Based on these numbers, that second mortgage will cost you a discount fee between $1800 and $4800 just to get that second loan in additional closing costs.

    Now t

    Understanding The 0% Intro Rates Credit Cards
    Just like there are a lot of flavors to ice cream or a great deal of genres in music and books, there are also a lot of types to choose from when it comes to credit cards. And because credit cards deal with money and finances, just the slightest variation can spell a whole lot of difference in terms of life’s comforts.Basically, however, there are just two primary classifications of credit cards: the reward type of credit card and the non-reward type of credit card. But what do you think is best for you? Well, the definition of each type should give you a clue then if you’re still unsure on which type of credit card you prefer to own.The reward type of credit allows you to earn reward points every time you use your credit card. The more money you spend using your reward type credit card, the more points you earn. You can redeem all sorts of prizes with the reward points you earn. The downside however to reward types of credit cards is the high interest rates they charge you.On the other hand, there is what you’d call the non reward type of credit cards. Non reward type of credit cards does not, obviously, offer you the chance to earn bonus or reward points. But they do however charge the credit card owner very low interest rates. One particular type of non-reward credit card should be the focus of our article today and that’s the credit card that offers 0% intro rates.Now, now, now, don’t get blinded with the fact that there are the words “zero percent” (0%) attached to the term credit card because all is not what it seems! I’m not saying that a 0% intro rate credit card is a curse – or a blessing – in disguise but only that you should know what you’re getting into first before making any decision that could affect your life.A 0% intro rate credit card basically allows you to enjoy a zero percent interest rate for a certain period of time.
    a 5%-10% down payment if your credit score is not at least 660.

    If you have to state your income, plan on a bank seriously considering your payment shock before approving you. Many new banking guidelines are limiting this to no more than two times your current payment. For example, if you pay $2000 today for your home or rental, it will be difficult, but not impossible, to find you a bank who will allow your new payment to be any higher than $4000.

    If you are a first-time homebuyer, and you don’t rent from a professional management company, you should make sure you have cancelled checks to prove your last 12 month rental history and your credit score should be decent. If not, you are likely going to face a greater challenge and possibly a higher interest rate.

    If your credit score is not at least 660, and you cannot fully disclose your income, you will find it very hard or very expensive to secure a 100% loan on a new home purchase or refinance.

    When I say expensive, I mean if you are doing an 80/20 loan, and your credit score is not at least 660, and you have to state your income, plan on that last 20% costing you between 3-8% on that loan as a loan discount fee, if you can even find it.

    If you buy a $300,000 house, and you are doing an 80/20, this means your first mortgage is $240,000 and your second mortgage is $60,000.

    Based on these numbers, that second mortgage will cost you a discount fee between $1800 and $4800 just to get that second loan in additional closing costs.

    Now this is still certainly less expensive than putting 5% down or $15,000 on this same home, but it does make it much more difficult for the first-time homebuyer and those with little to no money to put down.

    Most banks limit seller contributions on 100% programs to 3% of the loan amount so those additional costs on the second mortgage will certainly mean you will need some cash out of pocket.

    The sub-prime market, primarily for borrowers under 620 credit scores, is nearly dead today for higher loan to values. If you have between 5%-20% to put down, you should still be OK for now.

    Here are some of the other things you can expect to see:

    · The lighter your documentation (stated income, stated assets, etc), the higher your down payment and higher your rate.

    · The lower your credit score, the higher your down payment, the higher your rate.

    · More intense scrutiny from underwriters. They are being told to take their time and be extra careful about every loan they make. Many of them have been fired as a scapegoat for today’s high rate of delinquency. As they land at new companies, you can expect their lesson to be learned.

    · The acceptable documentation needed for your loan will likely be more substantial and will need stronger third-party verification like income, employment, previous rental history, reserves, down payment, credit history and depth of credit including more and longer trade-lines.

    · All investment loans will likely require 6-12 months in reserves.

    · Plan on all loans requiring more reserves and tougher asset seasoning guidelines.

    · Option ARM’s will likely only be available with more equity or much more down payment.

    · Plan on loans costing your borrowers more on the front end. Banks are dramatically cutting back the Yield Spread Premiums and Rebates paid to brokers and bankers and they will likely pass some of this onto the borrower.

    If you have been reading this newsletter for some time, you know that I am an OPTIMIST!!!!

    So, what’s the good news here?

    The GREAT news is that we still live in one of the most vibrant, incredible real estate markets in the HISTORY OF THE WORLD!!!

    People are still moving here in droves and they are going to for many years to come.

    In 1989, at the age of 23, I bought my first house. It was in South Shore, on West Lake Mead, at the base of a giant desert that was rumored to soon be a development called Summerlin. I was a first-time homebuyer. I made about $6/hr. working for a television station after graduating from college.

    My soon-to-be wife and I found a house we loved for $136,000. That seemed like it was all the money in the world. It was at the time.

    I got an 80% loan because that was all I could qualify for and I got a generous gift from my parents to help with the down payment. My interest rate was 12.000% and it was not interest-only.

    How I made that payment each month was once featured on a segment of television show called “Unsolved Mysteries.”

    The point is we found a way. Las Vegas exploded during those years, as it does today, with people “finding a way.”

    There weren’t any interest-only’s or hybrid ARM’s or Option ARM’s or 100% financing for borrowers “one day out of BK.” You had a down payment or you didn’t get a house. You had decent credit or you rented until you could improve. Many lenders did FHA loans and nothing else.

    Yet our city exploded. More so than any city in American history.

    In my opinion, creative financing did not create the real estate explosion. The real estate explosion created creative financing. Wall Street wanted in and they did so by creating “something for everyone.”

    I can remember the days, not that long ago, when I would do tons of FHA loans, that required 3% down payment, and loans that required mortgage insurance, and loans that didn’t go to Wall Street but went straight to “the agencies” like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and guess what? Those days are back.

    Sure, it will take some time getting used to it and we will have to say “no” a few more times than we did in the past few years. We will talk to a lot more people, try and pre-qualify them, and then we will have to make that call all lenders hate to make. We will deliver the bad news that their dream of homeownership is not today. However, with some good guidance and solid consultation that dream should remain alive as someday it will happen.

    And, yes, the timing is horrible when factored against what is already going on in the market with inflated inventory and fewer buyers, so sales and values will likely drop even further from previous years as a result.

    However, and this is the important thing to remember, there will still be thousands of home sales each month and more sales here than in most other cities.

    I was talking about this subject to one of my reps at one of the biggest mortgage investors in the U.S. He told me his company went through the archives and the lending guidelines are now very similar today to how they were in 2000.

    In 2000, a 30-year fixed rate mortgage averaged 7.75%, yet it was the third-best performing year for home sales in the previous 37, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, and Clark County saw its population grow over 300% from 1990. Even with higher interest rates than today and similar lending guidelines, people were buying houses and getting loans.

    One more item of optimism for you. 100% financing still exists and likely will exist for borrowers with credit scores over 620 if they can prove their income and 660 for those who state their income.

    Please look at the chart below. This is the “National Distribution of FICO Scores” table as found on myfico.com. This breaks down Americans by their credit scores.

    800+.............. 13%

    750-799.......... 27%

    700-749.......... 18%

    650-699.......... 15%

    600-649.......... 12%

    550-599.......... 8%

    500-549.......... 5%

    under 499........ 2%

    As you can see, n

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