Archive for January, 2008

I have a mortgage on my name but house is not on my name anymore, person responsible for paying the mortgage?

Thursday, January 31st, 2008
west asked:

person responsible for paying the mortgage is not paying on time, he dosnt want to put the mortgage on his name nor he wants to sell the house. ,what are my options, should I tell mortgage bank that they should call him and take off my name from mortgage, what are my legalities and rights since deed his on his name and he doesnt return my calls. he is a mortgage officer and he knows everyone in real estate proffession from attorney to agent, I am getting very scarred as I m getting calls every month from mortgage company that my mortgage is due, as he is already one month behind.
Month of april alreday shows on my credit report as a late payment. please someone help me with a professional advice.

well, he is an investor not living there (mortgage officer), he is the one approved my loan for this house, his friend find me this house (real estate agent), the house is in NY, and both are in NY . I have nothing to do any thing with NY, I am from NJ, this Mortgage officer is my cousin !!! , initially he told me that you have nothing to do but sign the papers and i will get you good chunk of money in 3-4 months, i dont know what comes to me and i signed the papers.
I dont know how can I go about and what to do, initially he forge the papers to approve for loan (he put his address as I am living there in NY, my income level is also showed as 10 times which i make, thats a long story), I didnt take any money from him matter of fact I have paid 3 mortgage payments from my pocket, he promised me orally that he will give me back my money once He sold the house, we didnt have any written contract. It is a 2 family house and both floors are rented. rent is not covering the mortgage.
he puts his name on deed, but the mortgage is on my name, i dont know if deed and title are the same papers.

Question posted courtesy of: Darren

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Can my 2nd and 3rd mortgage holders foreclose on my house (1st mortgage is not delinquent)?

Thursday, January 31st, 2008
shirishnayna asked:

I have a home worth about $325,000. On this home, I have a $150k first mortgage with WaMu, a 2nd mortgage (home equity line with Chase) with a $200k balance and a 3rd mortgage (another home equity line with Harris Bank) with a $150k balance. The first mortgage (and taxes/ins) are up to date but I cannot afford the payments on the 2nd and 3rd mortgages due to being placed on disability. If I keep my first mortgage payments up to date, can either Chase or Harris Bank seek to foreclose on the house? The reason I am wondering about this is there is no equity in the house for the 3rd mortgage holder (Harris Bank) and the 2nd mortgage holder (Chase) would have to pay out the 1st mortgage holder before they would recover any money for their outstanding balance. Given the current state of the real estate market, i am not even sure I could sell my house for $325k. My hope is that over a lifetime, i can pay the 2nd and 3rd mortgages after I pay off the first mortgage in 10 years.

Question posted courtesy of: Sandra
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The Government-Created Subprime Mortgage Meltdown?

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008
MISES.ORG asked:

The Government-Created Subprime Mortgage Meltdown
by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
by Thomas J. DiLorenzo

DIGG THIS

The thousands of mortgage defaults and foreclosures in the “subprime” housing market (i.e., mortgage holders with poor credit ratings) is the direct result of thirty years of government policy that has forced banks to make bad loans to un-creditworthy borrowers. The policy in question is the 1977 Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), which compels banks to make loans to low-income borrowers and in what the supporters of the Act call “communities of color” that they might not otherwise make based on purely economic criteria.

The original lobbyists for the CRA were the hardcore leftists who supported the Carter administration and were often rewarded for their support with government grants and programs like the CRA that they benefited from. These included various “neighborhood organizations,” as they like to call themselves, such as “ACORN” (Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now). These organizations claim that over $1 trillion in CRA loans have been made, although no one seems to know the magnitude with much certainty. A U.S. Senate Banking Committee staffer told me about ten years ago that at least $100 billion in such loans had been made in the first twenty years of the Act.

So-called “community groups” like ACORN benefit themselves from the CRA through a process that sounds like legalized extortion. The CRA is enforced by four federal government bureaucracies: the Fed, the Comptroller of the Currency, the Office of Thrift Supervision, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. The law is set up so that any bank merger, branch expansion, or new branch creation can be postponed or prohibited by any of these four bureaucracies if a CRA “protest” is issued by a “community group.” This can cost banks great sums of money, and the “community groups” understand this perfectly well. It is their leverage. They use this leverage to get the banks to give them millions of dollars as well as promising to make a certain amount of bad loans in their communities.

A man named Bruce Marks became quite notorious during the last decade for pressuring banks to earmark literally billions of dollars to his organization, the “Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America.” He once boasted to the New York Times that he had “won” loan commitments totaling $3.8 billion from Bank of America, First Union Corporation, and the Fleet Financial Group. And that is just one “community group” operating in one city – Boston.

Banks have been placed in a Catch 22 situation by the CRA: If they comply, they know they will have to suffer from more loan defaults. If they don’t comply, they face financial penalties and, worse yet, their business plans for mergers, branch expansions, etc. can be blocked by CRA protesters, which can cost a large corporation like Bank of America billions of dollars. Like most businesses, they have largely buckled under and have surrendered to their bureaucratic masters.

Consequently, banks in every community in America have been forced to hold a portfolio of bad loans, euphemistically referred to as “subprime” loans. In order to compensate themselves for the added risk of extending these loans, many lenders have increased the lending fees associated with mortgage loans. This is simply an indirect way of doing what banks always do – and what they must do to remain solvent: charging effectively higher rates of interest on riskier loans.

But this is discriminatory!, complained the “community organizations.” Thus, if one browses the ACORN web site, one can read of their boasts of having “predatory lending laws” passed in numerous states which outlaw such fees, prohibiting banks from protecting themselves from the added risk involved in making forced loans to “subprime” borrowers.

These are price control laws, and price controls always cause shortages. Normally, banks would respond to such laws by extending fewer riskier loans. But in this case the banks are forced to continue making the marginal loans by their bureaucratic masters at the Fed and the other three federal bureaucracies mentioned above. So-called predatory lending laws therefore force the banks to “eat” the losses. This is undoubtedly a contributing factor to the bankruptcy of dozens of mortgage lenders over the past year.

Then of course there is the issue of the Fed’s monetary policy having created the housing bubble, characterized by a spectacular escalation of real estate values in every American city over the past decade or so. This created a further problem for the financial institutions that are victimized by the CRA. They are forced to make a certain amount of bad loans, but because of the Fed-created explosion in housing prices, many thousands of subprime borrowers no longer qualified, by a long stretch, for conventional mortgages based on their incomes.

The only way these borrowers could qualify for their mortgage loans (even ignoring their bad credit ratings) was to take out adjustable rate mortgages, some of which had astonishingly low first-year rates in the 3 percent range, and sometimes lower. This is what has largely fueled the subprime mortgage meltdown – the inability of thousands of subprime borrowers to afford their mortgages now that their rates have adjusted upward. Thus, the combination of the Fed’s enforcement of the CRA (with the help of political pressure groups like ACORN) and its post 9/11 monetary policy in general are the reasons for the bursting real estate bubble and the “subprime” mortgage meltdown.

Don’t expect to read about this in the “mainstream media,” however, which generally views groups like ACORN as heroic champions of the poor, laws like the CRA as anti-discrimination laws, and places all of the blame for the subprime mortgage meltdown on greedy capitalists, especially mortgage brokers. Encouraged by such reporting, the odious Senator Charles Schumer of New York has promised federal legislation that will reign in these miscreants, while the Bush administration is proposing an indirect bank bailout by having the Federal Housing Administration cover many of the bad “subprime” loans. This will create what economists call a “moral hazard” by encouraging even more bad loans to be extended in the future. Every banker in America will be glad to extend loans (at high rates of interest) to the most uncreditworthy borrowers if he thinks there is no possibility of default with the FHA effectively guaranteeing the loan.

September 6, 2007

Thomas J. DiLorenzo [send him mail] professor of economics at Loyola College in Maryland and the author of The Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an Unnecessary War, (Three Rivers Press/Random House). His latest book is Lincoln Unmasked: What You’re Not Supposed To Know about Dishonest Abe (Crown Forum/Random House).

Question posted courtesy of: Norman

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mortgage?????

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008
gerbera asked:

Plz explain the meaning of mortgage in this context:
“The man sends his paycheck to the bank for the mortgage payment on his house.”

Thanks.

Question posted courtesy of: Jamie

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mortgage after bankruptcy?

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008
practicalwizard asked:

i’ve been researching this as we are getting ready to file. we currently own a home that is mortgaged to the hilt and we are trying to decide if we are going to include the mortgage in the bankruptcy (as the burden is really greater than the asset), give up our house and rent for a few years. we would like to plan on trying to buy another house 5 years after or so. what difference would discharging our current mortgage make later on when applying for another mortgage? or, do lenders simply look at the fact that you have a bankruptcy at all and the fact that you discharged your previous mortgage specifically doesn’t make a difference?

Question posted courtesy of: Jason
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(UK) one account mortgage.what are the catches?

Thursday, January 17th, 2008
gijaneridesagain asked:

My husband wants us to take out a one account mortgage. He reckons that you put your savings and income in there, your mortgage shrinks, say, to 3 years - then your house is completely paid off and you still have all your funds 100%intact. I have pointed out to him that this is to good to be true, and therefore probably isn’t. I have read through the info pack and there are a couple of contradications - the on-line calculator said we could shrink our mortgage to 3 years, and yet the info booklet says the one account mortgage term is for a minimum of 5 years, also, one paragraph says that you can withdraw your savings at any time, and then another paragraph says your savings / lumps sum payment have to remain in the account for the duration of the mortgage term…confused? we are - are then any financial gurus out there who can help to simplify things in a nutshell for us please?? - specifically the pros and cons of taking out such a mortgage and any pitfalls to watch out for.
Sorry - Steve B - was there supposed to be more to your answer??

Question posted courtesy of: Barry
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Mortgage ?

Wednesday, January 16th, 2008
Becca asked:

Can I cosign on a mortgage when I have no credit? As in no bad credit, no good credit?
I would be cosigner. Hubby is the major bread winner.

I have never had a credit card, but have paid my car insurance on time always, etc.
I would be cosigner. Hubby is the major bread winner.

I have never had a credit card, but have paid my car insurance on time always, etc.

Question posted courtesy of: John

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Mortgage question?

Sunday, January 13th, 2008
eternal_dancing_butterfly asked:

You take out a mortgage today of $350,000 with a 25-year amortization period, a
5-year term, and a 6.25% (annual) posted mortgage interest rate. Suppose four
years from today, you decide to refinance your mortgage at a 5.50% (annual)
mortgage interest rate. Also, you would like to increase your payment frequency
from monthly to weekly. (Assume your mortgage payments are made at the end
of each month or week).
(a) What is your original monthly payment on the mortgage? (5 marks)
(b) What is the remaining balance on the mortgage after 4 years?
(c) What will be your weekly payment on the refinanced mortgage? (There
are 52 weeks in a year.
(d) Are you paying more or less on a monthly basis once you refinance your
mortgage if your discount rate is 8%, compounded annually? (Assume
that there 4.3333 weeks per month)

Question posted courtesy of: Pedro
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Mortgage question??

Thursday, January 10th, 2008
bula asked:

Where can I find low mortgage rates in missouri?Did anyone worked with at-home-mortgage.com ?
Where can I find low mortgage rates in missouri?Did anyone worked with at-home-mortgage.com ?
Where can I find low mortgage rates in missouri?Did anyone worked with at-home-mortgage.com ?

Question posted courtesy of: Ella
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