The buyer for our home just backed out and we have to close next Friday on the house we had made an offer on. We don’t have enough cash on hand without our equity in this house to make the down payment. Is there anyway we can get a loan to make the down payment so we can move ahead with the purchase. I would rather not get a bridge or finance 100%.
Posts Tagged ‘recession’
When to refinance?
Tuesday, August 18th, 2009I’ve got one of those nasty balloon payment loans (or whatever they are called) on my home. I called the bank and the balloon (or the balance of the loan) is due December 2008. So obviously I need to refianance before next December. The good news is I have plenty of equity in my home and my credit is very good so I won’t have a problem refinancing for a good rate on a 15 yr fixed loan. But at what point should I refinance? Should I just get off my duff and do it now or wait to see if the Fed will cut rates again? Thanks.
Help! Swindled out of house and home?
Friday, August 14th, 2009I recently was served with notice of a foreclosure on my property, which I share as co-tenant with my father, a realtor. A while back, he had taken out a loan for 10,000 to invest in his realtor business. Of course I also had to sign the loan agreement, which he later refinanced in his name only. It was one of those "home equity lines of credit." Long story short, he eventually took out 5,000 without my knowledge – instead of the agreed upon ,000 – and hasn’t made any payments in over a year! He wasn’t even on the property originally to begin with, I added him so he could take out the loan. This is incredible! I feel completely betrayed. Do I have any recourse? Is he liable for this? He doesn’t live with me, so he could care less if the house is foreclosed. I am at a loss for words…
Economists, do you think this is an accurate view of the crisis?
Monday, August 10th, 2009Contrary to popular sentiment, we have not been in a recession until now. Since 2007, what people thought was a recession, has actually been a long, slow, government subsidized protracted crash. Instead of letting the markets crash themselves a year ago and begin to level off, government meddling has exhausted resources propping up the collapse. The results were recession-like attributes; loss of jobs, less money, contracting GDP. Up until now however, the GDP has still been slightly positive, and unemployment has been under 7%.
That is at an end. The recession is here now with a vengeance. However, due to all of the government intervention, the problem is actually now much worse. If we had the crash a year ago, as the markets wanted, those suddenly out of work would have had more money and resources to pull through a recession and even reinvest when the market bottomed. Since the government has been dragging out the crash, we’ve been investing resources over a year into a decline. Now that the recession has actually begun, due to the long strain on all of us, we don’t have the resources, energy, or trust in the system to begin coming out of it for some long time. Some economists are estimating 10-30 years using our own history as a guideline. Also, since we’re going into a recession already constrained, that greatly opens the possibility of a depression.
Look at history, look at economics. Recessions and depressions come AFTER the crash. This has been nothing more than a protracted crash complete with Friday’s "dead cat bounce" (Google it), and the worst is yet to come. If this were a recession it would be good news, because we’d at least know we were on a slow road to the very bottom where the only way to go was back up. But we’ve only just seen the collapse of the mortgage bubble. Next is the collapse of the credit card bubble which will probably take down most consumer goods with it.
Most consumer outlets that offer their own credit cards (which are most consumer outlets these days) will collapse when the loans are defaulted due to the strain on each of us from a government subsidized crash and a new recession. Look at GM. They fell so badly last week not because of their manufacturing arm, but because of GMAC, their financing institution. Sears makes more of their money from their finance department than from selling merchandise, same for Macy’s, Home Depot, many large supermarkets, and just about everything else. The credit card bubble will be much worse, because when people are unemployed, foreclosed, and evicted, they will need emergency funds. Most people use their maxed out credit cards for living expenses as well as their emergency fund.
Stores providing credit may be shuttered. Banks only slightly touched by the mortgage crisis will suddenly collapse under the credit card crisis. The effects will be compounded by the fact that we’ll be kicked when we’re down. After that we may even see the collapse of the student loan bubble, the collapse of lending in general, and the collapse of the dollar bubble, which would bring us back to 1970’s economic levels (if we’re lucky, the 30’s if we’re unlucky), before Nixon decoupled our dollar from the gold standard, the Dow was at less than a thousand, and before easy credit was aggressively marketed.
I say the 1970’s because if you look at the DOW chart over time, the majority of growth before the 1980’s was on a moderate incline. As the nation switched from a creditor nation to a debtor nation throughout the 1980’s, coupled with aggressive marketing of consumer debt by banks now freed from interest rate regulations usury laws after 1978, the Dow begins growing at a much steeper rate. When the HELOC, subprime mortgage, and derivatives market opened in the 90’s and gained steam in this decade, the line gets even steeper until it just couldn’t hold anymore last year and began a long bear market run that wiped out billions until the Panic this October.
By the end of Friday’s session, we were back at 1998 levels. Do you think it can go as far down as I’ve suggested here? What can a nation 10 trillion dollars in debt do to stem the collapse? When they say they will inject capital into the banks, aren’t they just printing money in an attempt to inflate the debt away? How long can this broken system of leveraging a future and living beyond your means possibly hold up?
For another of my questions on this topic, please link here:
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=ArwYK6mBrtGb2KVMvXUElyXsy6IX;_ylv=3?qid=20081011092417AA3hraD
have a first $257k at 5.35% HELOC $70k at 8.75 (and rising)?
Friday, July 31st, 2009would like to leave the first alone as it is fixed for 30yrs
Current value is ~0k
? Can I just refi the HELOC at a lower rate and raise the amount of credit? FICO 763. trying to stay away from PMI which starts at 7k
Should I consolidate credit card debt into my HELOC?
Thursday, July 30th, 2009I currently have about 00 a credit card with a 15K limit and 00 on a HELOC with a 15K limit. The interest rate on the HELOC is 2 points lower than the credit card (8.99%). I am considering consolidating the debt onto the HELOC (going unsecured to secured) to benefit from the lower interest rate and also use the interest from the HELOC as a deduction for 2009. I can afford to pay 00 a month on the HELOC with no prblems and my credit score is in the high 700s. Should I consolidate the credit card debt into the HELOC for the benefit of a lower interest rate and tax deduction or leave it as is? I am thinking my debt ratio on the credit card should balance out and I have access to 55K in credit total (which I will never use).
Why isn’t Wall Street paying for its own bailout?
Sunday, July 19th, 2009This is what I wrote to my Senator
Dear Senator
I’m screaming!!! Can you hear me??? Do not jump on board with Bush… it is imperative that you put the burden on the rich. Use the idea of a surtax on stock transactions and the taxing of capitol gains dividends. Tax them!!! Let those that dabble in Wall Street pay for Wall Street. Couple that with regulation and over site and dont ever take your eye off the ball again. Likewise, if failure to fulfill their fiduciary responsibilities does occur then CEOs need to go to prison and have their accounts confiscated. This is nuts that you would dump on us again… stop this madness. People need health care in this country and this is Norquists plan to tie us up in knots with no moneys for the poor and middle class while they walk away with the check book. I retired from United Airlines and WE watched them walk away with my money while they claimed bankruptcy on my retirement. For 12 years I was an employee owner and they were the highest in UAL’s History and yet they failed to fund the retirement. The government over site or the PBGC took its eye off the ball and didnt require the Corporation to fully fund the retirement don’t do it again. Stop this crap!
There is no rush, Dodd and Pelosi don’t have to do this… Sorry, but I’d rather go into a recession and work our way out rather than give the rich one more dime. Take the same money and put people to work and they will pay their mortgages… and our infrastructure will be rebuilt OR take the bad loans and renegotiate them in two, a 1st and a 2nd mortgage, leaving the owner with a payment and interest rate that fits their income and the rest to be put on a FEMA type loan at 3 percent simple interest with no payments for 30 years or until the property is sold Lets get creative to keep people in place and the economy moving.
I work for a company that writes rehab loans using city money @ 30 years no payments, 3 percent simple interest. Our max is ,000 but that can be upped if need be. As long as the home owner is able and there is some equity there, however small Lets keep the ball rolling till they die or sell. Then all their un-assumable loans are paid off. Everybody wins while we tighten up regulation on Wall Street.
Can your mortgage lender require PMI when your home value decreases?
Friday, July 10th, 2009Bought my home in 2007 with 20 % down. Never wanted to have to pay PMI. With current home values I may only have 10% equity now. Can the lender require PMI under these circumstances?
Why do home equity rates varry so much?
Tuesday, June 30th, 2009I am looking into taking out a equity loan. I have 100% equity in a 140k home and I would like 85k out of it. I have been looking at rates and have notices that some banks are at 6-7% interest and others are around 10%. Why would there be the difference. Why would anyone take out a loan at a bank for 10% when they can walk down the street and get the same loan for 6%. Can someone please explain this
Related ‘recession’ sites :
| Recession - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia In economics, a recession is a business cycle contraction, a general ... A recession has many attributes that can occur simultaneously and includes declines in ... en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ | |
| RECESSION.ORG | United States Economy & Global Economic Recession What is recession? What causes economic recession? History of United States Recessions, Global Recession News & Forum Discussion. recession.org | |
| recession: Definition, Synonyms from Answers.com recession n. The act of withdrawing or going back. An extended decline in general business activity, typically two consecutive quarters of falling www.answers.com/topic/ | |
| recession Definition A recession is generally considered less severe than a depression, and if a recession continues long enough it is often then classified as a depression. ... www.investorwords.com/4086/ | |
| Recession | Define Recession at Dictionary.com Recession definition at Dictionary.com, a free online dictionary with pronunciation, synonyms and translation. Look it up now! dictionary.reference.com/ | |
| Recession Recession - Definition of Recession on Investopedia - A significant decline in activity across the economy, lasting longer than a few months. ... www.investopedia.com/terms/r/ | |
| Recession - News - Times Topics - The New York Times News about recession and depression. Commentary and archival information about recession and depression from The New York Times. topics.nytimes.com/... | |
| recession - definition of recession by the Free Online ... Translations of recession. recession synonyms, recession antonyms. Information about recession in the free online English dictionary and ... www.thefreedictionary.com/ | |
| HowStuffWorks "How Recessions Work" Find out exactly what a recession is, how it happens and what can turn it around. ... We'll also look at the effects of recession as well as explore some of the ways a country ... www.howstuffworks.com/ | |
| Recession - Definition and More from the Free Merriam-Webster ... Definition of recession from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary with audio pronunciations, thesaurus, Word of the Day, and word games. www.merriam-webster.com/ | |