west palm beach real estate boca raton real estate delray beach real estate
boca raton homes del ray beach homes
Palm Beach Info 
 
Communities
    Delray Beach
    Boca Raton
    West Palm Beach
    Palm Beach Gardens
    Palm Beach Shores
    Wellington
    Boynton Beach
    Lake Worth
    Manalapan
    Hypoluxo
    Highland Beach
    Singer Island
    Intercostal Properties
    Ocean Properties
 
Realty Investors
    Free Investor Seminars
    Investment Basics
    What is a 1031 Exchange?
    Elements of An Exchange
    Exchange vs. Sell
    Types of Exchanges
    Alternative to 1031 Exchg.
    Resources & Links
 
Commercial Properties

Realty Investors
Latest Articles
1031 Exchanges Capital gains Real Estate tax deferment
A New And Revolutionary Business Model To Real Estate Investing
Are you responsible for the Financial Crisis and the consequential Government bail out, or the state of the current national and Florida Real Estate market? Are you responsible for Foreclosures and Short Sales.
As real estate market softens, players need to adapt
Bank of America settles lawsuit over bad mortgages
Buying A Short Sale For Maximum Profit With The Help Of A Realtor
Capital Gains & Losses Invesment Basics
Commercial Real Estate Index maintains uptrend in second quarter
Despicable Real Estate advice from the Miami Herald
Federal Reserve Rate-hike winners and losers
Five different types of IRS § 1031 Exchanges For Real Estate
Florida Has Four of the Top Ten Hottest Markets for Job Creation
Florida homeowners walking away from underwater mortgages
Florida Real Estate Investment Seminar Information
Florida Real Estate Market Supported By Destination Survey
Home sales to hold fairly steady for balance of year
Hopeful glimmers in the housing slump and real estate market
How You Should Use Free Mortgage Calculators
Investor Survey: Commercial investors remain confident
Is it the right time to buy real estate in Florida
Is there a Real Estate Bubble?
New program allows subprime mortgages to become a fixed-rate FHA
Overview of A IRS § 1031 Exchange.
Private Annuity Trusts As Alternative To A IRS § 1031 Exchange
Rates on 30-year mortgages drop to lowest level in 6 months
Real Estate Bubble or Market Correction in South Florida
Real Estate IRA Investing
SELLING HOMES AAND REAL ESTATE IN A COOLING MARKET
Slow Economy
Slow Economy? Real Estate Auctions are Making Millionaires!
Slow Economy? Real Estate Auctions are Making Millionaires!
Spike in housing is no bubble, Fed says
Tenant-In-Common Properties
The New Game In Pre-Construction Real Estate
The Real Story About Today’s Real Estate Market
The State of the Florida Real Estate Market February 2007
They Buy Ugly Houses Real Estate sales in South Florida
Title: 10 Tips You Must Know About Buying Properties In Pasco County, Florida
Troubled home loans didn’t require insurance


Search



Realty Investors

 


Troubled home loans didn’t require insurance
By 2008 The Dallas Morning News, Jim Landers. Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune News Service.


Email this article
 Printer friendly page
WASHINGTON – Oct. 2, 2008 – If the problem threatening to take down the economy is bad mortgages, then why isn’t mortgage insurance taking care of it?

In the 1980s and 1990s, most homebuyers could not get a mortgage with a downpayment less than 20 percent unless they bought private mortgage insurance, or PMI. This insurance covers the lender in case the borrower can’t pay. It wasn’t cheap (about $150 a month for a $235,000 mortgage). And unlike mortgage interest, you couldn’t deduct it on your federal income taxes.

Between 2000 and 2007, lenders offered homebuyers unable to afford a large downpayment several ways to get a house without mortgage insurance.

One of the most common was a “piggyback,” where the borrower took out two mortgages at once. The first mortgage covered 80 percent of the price. The second mortgage, usually with an adjustable rate, covered another 10, 15 or 20 percent of the price. Down payments ranged from 10 percent to nothing.

With house prices rising, it all looked good. Interest paid on both mortgages was tax-deductible. If the second loan was going to set at a high rate, the borrower could refinance with the rising value of the house.

But when the housing bubble popped, so did piggybacks.

“The loans that are in the most trouble are the loans that circumvented mortgage insurance,” said Jeff Lubar, spokesman for the Mortgage Insurance Cos. of America.

Karen Watson, who runs a Dallas mortgage company in Preston Center, said buyers of mortgage securities set the guidelines allowing borrowers to get home loans with no money down and no mortgage insurance. The underwriting and approval process was automated.

Mortgage securities buyers “came in and took on the risk that insurance companies were designed for,” she said.

Mortgage insurers got back in the game after persuading Congress to allow homebuyers to deduct their mortgage insurance payments. That law took effect on Jan. 1, 2007, but expires in 2010.

Watson said she was still offering piggyback mortgages until this spring, when the lenders “changed the guidelines almost ex post facto - ‘We’re not offering these as of yesterday.’”

Despite the mayhem this month on Wall Street, she said mortgages are still being sold.

“People are getting used to the new guidelines, which are the old guidelines,” she said. “We’re doing what we used to do.”

© 2008 The Dallas Morning News, Jim Landers. Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune News Service.
  Related Topics: Mortgages
Questions, comments or suggestions on this article? Have a news tip? Send a letter to the editor to: Newseditor@floridarealtors.org.


Web Site Design
© Copyright 2006 IMC, Articles by PalmBeachRealEstateSource.com

Top of Page