California Mortgage News
1/3 of all ARMs in California will end in forclosure
One of the things I love is little tidbits that sometimes get buried in articles about the implosion of the sub prime market. This article is about how lawmakers are blaming mortgage bond investor should be held liable for deceptive loans. Well there is plenty of blame to go around for the sub prime market (starting with Alan Greenspan's decision to keep the prime artificially low). But four paragraphs in we get this little tidbit
Economist Christopher Cagan projected about a third of all adjustable-rate loans originating from 2004 to 2006 will default because of reset, when the initial "teaser rate" expires and borrowers must start making regular payments that include principal, he said in a study by First American CoreLogic released last month.
While many consumer and civil rights groups want government intervention, not everyone is pleased about any legislation costing taxpayer dollars.
"People have bought houses they can't afford, period," said Christopher Thornberg, economist and principal of Beacon Economics. "So unless the government is going to give them $100,000 to $200,000 each, what option do they really have?"
Given that sub prime East Bay borrowers who are sixty days late have risen from 4.29 to 12.23 percent, that rate adjustment is going to come as a complete shock.
The problem is of course is that there isn't a clean happy solution to the sub prime borrowing situation. It's going to end in foreclosures, tighter lending standards and an overall tightening of credit.
Labels: CAMortgageNews, EastBay, EastBaySubprime, forclosure, novastar, refinance, Subprime, subprimeforeclosure, subprimemortgagelending
The Subprime Directive
For all the talk of the minimal effect the sub prime defaults are going to have, it's pretty apparent that the "minimal effects" are going to be larger than anyone has expected. Let's just look at the current closings and layoffs
- Loancity closed on 3/22/07
- Countrywide's subprime mortage defaults for 2006 may exceed the company's highest on record.
- New Century lays off 54% of their workers (this company is headed for the dustbin)and files for Chapter 11
- Aegis Lending plans to shutter its Sacramento office
- People's Choice (another sub prime lender) files for chapter 11
The shake out in California continues. You can bet that you will hear about it hear first (or nearly first). New Century was one of the ones that we reported on very early on (when I got a few emails about the situation there).
Labels: aegislending, CAMortgageNews, countrywide, countrywidesubprime, NewCenturyFinancialCorp, Subprime, subprimemortgagecalifornia
Accelerating Mortgage Payments
Accelerating your mortgage payment is the quickest way to pay off your home faster. Most people have had the opposite approach to their homes, using them like an ATM. Flooding the market with cheap credit has driven up the price of homes which then has encouraged the same wealth effect that people saw with their stock portfolios with their homes. Needless to say the tables have turned and people begun to look to pay off their debt faster.
Accelerating your mortgage payment is easy. First pay off any seconds or home equity lines of credit first. The interest there is far higher. Then simply include additional payments toward principal. Simply including one additional payment a year will shave 5 years off a 30 year mortage.
Labels: CAMortgageNews, mortgagepayment, mortgageprepayment., payingyourmortgageoffearly
Initial launch
Given the way the California Real Estate market has heated up over the last 5 years, I thought I would start a site to extensively cover changes in the market. So here it is.
Labels: CA, California, CAMortgageNews, Mortgage
Covering the mortgage and real estate market in California. Find information on real estate, mortgage vendors and mortgage brokers.