Monday, August 18, 2014

Simple ways to pay down your mortgage

    Simple ways to pay down your mortgage

Following these tips can help you reduce the length of your mortgage and save you thousands of dollars.

Below is an article that will show you a few ways to shorten or maintain the advantage on your mortgage. Here are a couple ways that I believe they should have included. These two tips may not be for everyone.
A)  Bi-Weekly Payments: Pay your mortgage twice a month not at the beginning . You pay interest on the funds you have borrowed. So if you pay half up front every 2 weeks you will be paying what seems  the same but will be adding a couple payments a year . Plus when you pay half up front you will not be pay interest on that amount for the next 2 weeks. This will Knock Off years from your mortgage. Make sure your financially ready for this
B) Add $100 to each payment . If you add this to every payment on the Bi-Weekly you will Knock Off additional years from the mortgage.

                       

Do you hate having your monthly mortgage payments hanging over your head? Then read on to discover simple ways to pay down your mortgage more quickly.
As silly as it sounds, the acronym "KISS" - for "Keep it simple, stupid" - is a good strategy for homeowners who want to pay off their mortgage faster.
How so? Simple tactics are easier to execute than any strategy that's too complicated. And homeowners hear all kinds of advice when they are looking to save on their mortgages, so it's easy to get confused, says Houtan Hormozian, treasurer of the Los Angeles Metro Chapter of California Association of Mortgage Professionals.
To help take the confusion out of saving on home loans, we've gathered five simple recommendations from industry professionals that could help borrowers "k.i.s.s." their mortgages goodbye. Keep reading to find out which of these solutions could work for you.

Simple Solution #1 - Track Your Home's Fair Market Value

Do you know your home's current fair market value? If you don't, you could miss taking advantage of cost-cutting measures such as refinancing, says Frank Williams, president of the Los Angeles Chapter of the California Association of Mortgage Professionals.
"A lot of people make their payments and forget about it," Williams says. But if your home has dramatically appreciated in market value, you should consider refinancing your mortgage to take advantage of the increased equity in your home. For instance, by refinancing, you could use your equity to pay off credit card debt or fund your children's college education.
And tracking your home's value can be as easy as using a value estimator on a real estate website or on an app for your phone. You can plug in your address to get the fair market value of your home based on comparable homes in your neighborhood and sales records.
For example, Freddie Mac, the government-backed mortgage loan enterprise, has its own estimator called the Home Value Explorer (HVE), which can generate an estimate of property value in all 50 states and more than 3,100 counties with a database of about 81 million property records.
Borrowers interested in keeping up with their home's value also might want to consider a professional appraisal of their home, which might offer a more accurate figure than online home value estimators. According to Federal Reserve Board, appraisal fees range from about $300 to $700.

Simple Solution #2 - Follow the Status of Mortgage Insurance

If you put little down on your home, another simple money-saving measure is to keep up with the status of your mortgage insurance.
Mortgage insurance is "a policy that protects lenders against some or most of the losses that can occur when a borrower defaults on a mortgage loan," according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). Typically, this type of insurance is required for borrowers who make down payments that are less than 20 percent of the home's purchase price.
In order to pay down your mortgage, you'll need to get rid of monthly mortgage insurance premiums (MIP) as quickly as possible, says Williams. This move saves people a lot of money, puts them in a better financial position, and secures them for the future, he explains. So how exactly do you squash this expense?
First, you need to know when your home's loan-to-value ratio (LTV) goes below 80 percent, says Williams. Mortgage insurance is kept on conventional loans until the outstanding amount on the loan drops to less than 80 percent of the value of the house.
So you need to keep an eye on your LTV to make sure your mortgage insurance premium is dropped in a timely manner. Another tip: If you make extra payments toward your mortgage, you'll reach the requisite LTV and be able to drop your mortgage insurance sooner.
For FHA loans, however, mortgage insurance remains for the life of the loan, since these government-backed loans only require 3.5 percent down. But once the LTV reaches 80 percent on this type of loan, you can consider refinancing to a conventional loan and drop your mortgage insurance as a result.
So how much could you save by dropping your mortgage insurance? Williams says mortgage insurance premiums generally cost homeowners about 1.5 percent of their homes value, meaning the MIP for a $200,000 home would be $250 on top of mortgage payments.
"Mortgage insurance is like paying double your property taxes," Williams says. "How long do you want to pay double property taxes? Get it dropped as soon as you can."

Simple Solution #3 - Schedule an Annual Meeting with Your Mortgage Professional

Did you know a calendar can be a simple, but very useful tool for helping you save money on your home loan? But mortgage due dates aren't the only events you should note on your schedule.
As a homeowner, you should meet annually with your mortgage professionals, says Fred Kreger, a branch manager at American Family Funding and a past state president of the California Association of Mortgage Professionals.
"Meeting with them every year is like getting a physical. It's a mortgage wellness plan," he explains.
Scheduling an annual meeting with your mortgage banker,  broker, or lender could alert you to changes that could influence your ability to save on your home loan, Kreger says. Among those changes could be new mortgage laws, rising property values, dropping interest rates, or different loan products that could better suit your financial needs.
For example, meeting with a mortgage broker could help you determine if you should switch from a fixed-rate to an adjustable-rate mortgage.
According to HUD, an adjustable-rate mortgage is a home loan that does not have a fixed interest rate. Instead, the loan is subject to changes in interest rates, which may increase or decrease monthly payments at intervals determined by the lender.
In some cases, sticking with a fix-rate mortgage year after year could be a missed opportunity if you never consider other options that could offer lower interest rates or monthly payments, says Kreger.
"Some people just pay on a mortgage for 30 years and forget about it," Kreger says, referring to the most popular loan term for a fixed-rate mortgage. "But use an anniversary date or tax season to meet with a mortgage professional. The beginning of March is good time."

Simple Solution #4 - Monitor When Lower Interest Rates Can Save You Money

Some homeowners are obsessed with refinancing to get the lowest interest rate possible on their mortgage. But they should also figure out when refinancing to a lower interest rate is a financially sound decision.
It's true - a lower interest rate means less paid to the bank, but homeowners need to assess more than that, Hormozian says. In some cases, refinancing to a lower interest rate could actually cost you more money.
For example, lower interest rates can be negated by the refinance charges required to set up the new loan. The Federal Reserve Board's "A Consumer's Guide to Mortgage Refinancings" spells out a laundry list of potential charges and fees associated with obtaining a new loan, which a borrower might have paid the first time the mortgage was purchased.
Refinance charges such as an application fee, points, appraisal fee, inspection fee, closing fee, and title insurance (to name a few) could cost between 3 and 6 percent of a home's purchase price, according to the Federal Reserve Board.    Ty Laffoon
Unless the new interest rate offers substantial savings over the course of the loan, refinancing might not be what it's cracked up to be, according to Kreger.
So how do you know if a refi is worth the cost?
According to Kreger, you should follow the "1 percent rule." Refinancing typically makes good financial sense when the new interest rate is at least one percent lower than the old one, he says.
Consider the following comparison: A 30-year fixed mortgage of $275,000 with an interest rate of 5.5 percent would translate into $287,110 in interest over the life of the loan. But with an interest rate of 4.5 percent, the total interest would amount to $226,618. Ty Laffoon
As you can see, lowering the interest rate on this mortgage by one point means saving more than $67,000.
If you got a 30-year loan five to 10 years ago, refinancing to another 30-year loan wouldn't make sense, because you have already paid down a substantial amount of your principal. Instead, it would be better to think about shortening the loan term, says Kreger.

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Simple Solution #5 - Let Discipline Be Your Guide

Your best chance at paying down your mortgage is to understand the importance of saving.
"Every nickel helps," Kreger says. "You can pay off your loan quicker and lower your interest rate without refinancing by putting extra money toward the principal on your mortgage whenever you can. I'm talking about creating a habit."
One simple way to do this is to make bi-weekly payments on your mortgage to effectively knock years off a 30-year loan, according to Las Vegas-based loan officer Brian Cook.
On a traditional mortgage payment plan, it's 12 payments a year, Cook says. With a bi-weekly plan, it's 13 payments a year, which basically adds one payment a year that goes directly to the principal.
To see for yourself how much you could save with this tactic, check out this example provided by Cook. On a 30-year fixed mortgage of $250,000 with an interest rate of 4.25 percent, you could knock your loan term down to 25 years and save more than $32,000 by making one extra annual payment.
Cook says the simple act of making payments every two weeks helps instill an attitude of saving money in borrowers who might be prone to living from paycheck to paycheck.
"The wealthy stay wealthy by paying less interest," Cook says. "It takes more discipline, but they are budgeting better and building equity in their home faster."
    

Thursday, August 7, 2014

FICO Drops Paid Collections off report

If you’ve ever had a debt collector call you, Thursday’s announcement from credit scoring company FICO may be good news for you.
FICO just released the newest edition of its general credit scoring model, FICO Score 9. The big changes come in the area of debt collection: The score will not include paid collection accounts, and it differentiates medical collection accounts from non-medical debt.
These are significant changes for a few reasons: First, medical debt is often beyond the consumer’s control, because unlike an unpaid rent check or utility bill, the consumer may have no way of anticipating healthcare needs or medical bills and, as a result, may not accurately reflect a consumer’s typical payment practices.

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In addition, by removing paid collection accounts from the formula, consumers are, in a way, rewarded for meeting their debt obligations. In other scoring formulas, including FICO’s older score versions, collection accounts have a negative impact on a consumer’s score, paid or unpaid.
As is the goal with all credit scoring models, the purpose behind the changes to the FICO score is to better assess the risk consumers present to potential lenders. However, it’s up to lenders which scores they use, and it’s difficult to estimate how quickly the industry will adopt the new model.
The changes in considering collections accounts are similar to a formula currently in use: VantageScore 3.0. That model has grown in popularity, but FICO maintains about a 90% share in the credit scoring market.
“FICO’s announcement today appears to be a competitive response to the traction that VantageScore 3.0 has garnered amongst the largest lenders in the country, and changes to the new FICO model apparently try to remedy many lender and consumer challenges already addressed by VantageScore,” said Barrett Burns, CEO of VantageScore, in a statement to Credit.com.
Whatever the reason, formula changes could be very good for consumers. As score providers aim to design the most predictive models, ideally scores will become increasingly accurate reflections of a consumer’s credit risk, theoretically making it easier for consumers to change their scores through their financial behaviors.
New-score adoption is typically not a rapid process. Lenders tend to test a new model to make sure it serves their purposes better than the model in place, at which point they update their risk-assessment processes to include a new score.
“The advances in FICO Score 9 provide significant incentives for lenders to upgrade from earlier versions of the FICO Score,” said Jim Wehmann, executive vice president for Scores at FICO, in a news release announcing the update. “U.S. lenders can more consistently and precisely assess new applicants and existing accounts with a more robust credit score built on the most current credit data available, while minimizing operational hurdles associated with adoption and compliance. We stand ready to help lenders make that upgrade as smoothly and quickly as possible.
As a consumer, you never really know what credit scoring model a potential creditor will use when reviewing your application, so it makes the most sense to focus on the fundamentals of good credit and increase your chances of receiving a good credit score, regardless of model. An easy way to do this is to review the same credit score over time (checking the same score gives you an apples-to-apples comparison), and as your score changes, you can understand how your behavior impacts your creditworthiness.

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Bank of America will pay just under $17 billion



WASHINGTON — The Justice Department and Bank of America have reached a record settlement in principle in which the bank will pay just under $17 billion to resolve allegations related to fraudulent marketing of mortgage-backed securities that helped cause the nation's economic crisis, an official with knowledge of the negotiations said Wednesday.
The tentative deal, reached last Wednesday night during a telephone conversation between Attorney General Eric Holder and Brian Moynihan, the bank's chief executive, surpasses a similar $13 billion settlement with JPMorgan last November, said the official who is not authorized to comment publicly.

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Last week's telephone call, the official said, came as Justice officials in New Jersey were preparing to file a complaint against Merrill Lynch, a part of Bank of America. The official said the bank then requested the call and later raised its offer to reach a tentative settlement.
Although there is an agreement in principle on the value of the deal, the official said other issues have yet to be resolved, and it could be days before there is any public announcement.
A second government official briefed on the negotiations said the settlement is expected to include "hundreds of millions" of dollars in consumer relief to help struggling homeowners in several states cope with their mortgages. The official was also not authorized to speak publicly because the negotiations are confidential.

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A critic of past settlements between banks and the Justice Department questioned whether this one will go far enough.
"The DOJ can be counted on to brag that the settlement dollar amount with Bank of America sets yet another record and claim, again, that this shows DOJ is tough on Wall Street," said Dennis Kelleher, president and CEO of Better Markets, a financial watchdog group. "But, unlike other recent settlements, will DOJ provide the public with the key information on investor losses, Bank of America profits, the names of involved executives, specific laws broken and the actual systemic illegal schemes and activities? In short, is DOJ willing to actually inform the American people about such important and grave matters?"



Ty Laffoon