Wednesday, November 23, 2011

What happened to the people who had loans/mortgages from those fallen companies?

Do they still need to pay back that money? where do they send it to?What happened to the people who had loans/mortgages from those fallen companies?
of course they need to pay it back.Its because of bad loans that these companies have fallen.People took out loans they could never repay because they didn't make enough money (called living beyond your means)and the companies sold mortgages to people for little or no down payment and it caught up with them.To many bad loansWhat happened to the people who had loans/mortgages from those fallen companies?
Those companies will be taken over by other organization and you will continue to pay your mortgage on time in full amount ! It is your obligation and you signed at the dotted lines when you bought the house.
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  • Information on mortgages for a potential first time home buyer?

    I would like to purchase my first starter home by mid 2008, but my credit is somewhat shaky. I have two credit cards (totalling 700) and one will be paid off by the end of the summer. I have 6 late payments on this card in the past 5 years of its existence, but the most recent was in 2005. The other card is 1.5 years old with perfect payment history. I have 4 collection accounts (2 with cell phone companies from 2003 and 2 for medical bills in 2006). On a good note, I obtained a car and paid the balance (before the end of the loan) of $6,200 in 10 months with never a late payment for 2005. Federal government student loans totalling $5,250 have also been on time for the past 14 months.


    With this said, how hard would it be to obtain a mortgage? I'm sure the interest rate would be high, but I am so desperate to buy a house! I have lived in an apartment for 5 years and am tired of ';throwing money out of the window.';Information on mortgages for a potential first time home buyer?
    With that credit history, let's just say it will be a ';challenge.';





    Currently, renting is not really throwing money out of the window. When you buy, there are quite a few fees and taxes you have to pay that will not go towards your equity. For example, property tax, and association dues on a condo. Buying makes more sense financially if house prices are going up, and currently they are not.Information on mortgages for a potential first time home buyer?
    I would assume you could get a loan relatively easily, if you are putting money down, and have the income.There are alot of programs that do not use credit score as a criteria for the loan. I would suggest paying the cell phone collections, and keeping your credit card balances to less than 25% of thier maximum balance. You will have to have proof of a steady income over the last two years. Putting 20% down will easily get you the loan, and 10% should be enough. Try putting the amount you expect to pay away for the next few months to see if you can do it. If you want to find out your score or have some other questions send me a message.
    Even with all the information you have given, you need to have your credit score checked and I believe you can do that for free annually and I'm sure any Realtor can run a credit check and let you know where you stand. Any mortgage company could help you as well. You can go to these people for services and not necessarily use them for a loan.
    Most banks look at the last 12 months history. You're off to a good start if your last late payment was in 2005.


    Regarding the collection accounts, you should try to clean them up as soon as possible as the bank may require you to pay them off before closing anyway.


    Depending on how low your credit scores are, it is possible for anyone to obtain a mortgage.


    To give you an exact answer, one would need to know more detailed information such as your income situation, potential down payment, and exact credit scores.
    Well, I'm glad you're getting concerned now rather than in the spring of 2008. So you have some time to get things cleaned up prior to qualifying for a mortg.





    You should start talking to a lender tomorrow. Call a Direct Mortg. lender or a larger bank, someone who will ultimately fund your loan ';in house';,, you Will get the lowest rate %26amp; costs by going this route, rather than going through The middleman (the mortg. ';broker';).





    You need to have your credit pulled right away %26amp; keep a copy for yourself. Work with the lender %26amp; they will tell you what items need to disappear or be paid down or fixed prior to your finally qualifying in mid 2008.





    this way you know NOW what needs to be done.





    Tip: Do NOT make any more late payments, be frugal w/ your money for this next year. You want to be GOLDEN when the time comes for you to get loan approval!





    feel free to email me if you have any more questions, I can help you further , thx to the email option that Y!A's provides its' users.
    The mortgage market (for the lenders) isn't that great right now. If you notice most of the country is headed into a buyers market. Therefore the lenders are more than a little anxious to make loans. I don't think getting the loan will be difficult, specially if you can come up with 20% down payment (none of it as a gift, i.e. your parents/relatives don't ';give'; you any money). If someone is going to help you, have them give it to you now, put it in a CD (so you can't spend it) and it will appear to the mortgage company as your money. The other advantage to putting down a 20% down payment is that you don't have to pay PMI.





    Regarding credit - the main thing they are looking for is that you make regular payments. Missing payments and/or late payments is a bad thing.
    This is a rough time to be applying for a mortgage unless you have an exceptionally good credit rating. If your credit score is shaky, you'll only be accepted by one of the ';sub-prime lenders'; and you WILL have a very high interest rate. Unless you have someone with A-1 credit that can be the co-buyer, and their name WILL be on the deed. Warning - stay away from lenders like Dietech, Lending Tree and all the others that advertise heavily, they'll rob you blind. Stick with an actual bank or credit union. Their rates will be much lower, but again a lot depends on your credit score. Good Luck
    it's gonna be V E R Y hard for you to get any kind of housing loan...try for a condo...maybe a co-signer would help...your credit sucks too much for a conventional mortage. (the collection accts and student loans are the worst.)
    http://www.capitalone.com/ then click home loans, they are fast and good people to work with

    Two separate mortgages for one house from same bank?

    Could two people apply for individual mortgages and buy one house. For example, I apply for a $90,000 mortgage at 6.5% and the other applies for a $90,000 mortgage at 9.5% from the same lender/bank and both use their mortgages to purchase one property. Since both are using the same lender, just at different rates, would the purchase of a single property be viable?Two separate mortgages for one house from same bank?
    I don't think this situation is possible bec Financial Institutions loan money for a mortgage based on risk and in doing so, they check with local government tax office on the recording of the deed to make sure property title is good and their order/precedence (1st Lien) to the owning the property if you were to default or miss payments resulting in foreclosure. That said part of the settlement costs you buy gives the Financial Institution ';title insurance'; for mistakes (by the way, normally if you the Buyer want optional title insurance, then they want extra $$. This is why I believe it is not possible to have 2 half-half mortgages on same property, or two separate and unknown parties buying the same property bec Financial Institution and maybe local government would require a single deed with 2 names that could be tied to same property, and mortgage loan would also be one. Problem or rather extra expenses might come down the road when 2 parties for some reason split %26amp; go separate ways or if one buys out the other, it takes a legal contract to change and record new ownership deed. There are cases where owners can be replace via ASSUMPTION OF MORTGAGES but I would advise doing everything they correct way bec say one owner buys out the other owner and then tries to sell eventually down the road and the TITLE DEED is a mess bec legal documents are missing or say they can't find other owner and written contract wasn't notarized or prepared by attorney/lawyer where it's one party's word vs another. Such a situation go literally STOP one from selling DEAD IN ITS TRACKS trying to take a short cut and maybe costs more in the long run to untangle compared to both parties in the beginning applying for a mortgage as joint owners.





    I'm not an attorney and only participated in several (5-10) real estate transactions...and hope I understood your question correctly and that my explanation was sufficient...Two separate mortgages for one house from same bank?
    Uh, no, the lender isn't going to allow that, and why would you choose the MOST EXPENSIVE route to a home purchase?





    You'll pay out the nose, even if you could finance it like that, which you can't.





    It sounds like you are trying to get around something...and remember that bank fraud is a felony and there are sweeping new laws getting ready to come down from Congress that will put people in the pokey for pulling crap like that.
    Yes if the two borrowers had formed a legal partnership of some sort (like an LLC or corporation). You could have different names on the different promissory note but both be named in the mortgages and share interest on title assigning it to the partnership name.
    that happens...and it's fraud with the seller.





    but whichever buyer goes to the county to record first...is the new owner.





    most banks have a system that reviews for the same property, but it's not connected with other lenders
    No.

    Are mortgages solely based on credit scores or the actual info in the report?

    A judgement would lower my score (I know). What I am asking is if the mortgage broker looks at all the information in the report? If they see ';judgement'; would that automatically result in my application being deniedAre mortgages solely based on credit scores or the actual info in the report?
    They will look at everything, score public records, trade lines, payment history etc.





    As long as your judgment is paid you will have no problems, if it's not is is going to be a problem since whoever has the judgment can place a lien on any property you may own.





    Good luck.Are mortgages solely based on credit scores or the actual info in the report?
    No, it would be taken into consideration. Hopefully you paid it.
    no not automatically

    How could so many people let their mortgages default?

    Seriously - I would take drastic measures, take some pretty undignified jobs if I had to etc. etc. before I'd let that crazy $hit happen to my house. What the hell? Didn't people realize that somebody was going to have to pay? Now we see the repercussions were huge. What kind of person would let this happen and how do they sleep at night knowing what a loser they've been?!How could so many people let their mortgages default?
    As an appraiser I must state that during the height of the market many people outright overpaid for their property. That is a huge reason and also the adjustable rate mortgages and option arm loans. If your payment went up a few percentage points and you couldn't pay or sell then you are stuck.How could so many people let their mortgages default?
    You should not be so quick to judge. Many people were basically tricked into arm loans and all kinds of inventive loans other than conventional to make a sale. These loans rates change, go up of course and families can no longer afford. I think it was the lenders fault for giving risky creditors loans that were too high for peoples income to afford. Haven't you been reading the papers? These people may have been foolish in thinking they could afford it later but the lenders are going bankrupt for the foolish way they gave everyone loans left and right too.
    A lot of people got themselves into adjustable loans and took a gamble that rates would not increase as fast and that property values would continue to go up.


    now that it is time to refi, there isn't any equity and the home is upside down and there mortgage payment is going up fast.





    The bank takes a huge risk too. this is not the first or the last time. Everybody was too busy enjoying the party to beleive it would happen again.
    So many people want a house and want more than they can afford. Salespeople are great about talking people into more than they can afford too. Then the bad things happen, children get sick, cars need repairs, the house needs major repairs, taxes and insurance go up drastically and on and on. Money gets shorter and shorter, the arguments over money start and there is nothing left to have any type of good time. At some point, they give up and lose. It doesn't make people losers, it just means they made mistakes and that's ok as long as you learn from the experience. There is a lot to know when you purchase property--loans, repairs, insurance. . .it's the biggest purchase that most people make in their lives and yet they step into it totally uninformed. It can be a very expensive lesson.
    in all fairness..the lenders are just as much to blame by letting many first home buyers qualify when they really shouldn't have. Many of them went and got interest only mortgages which are only good for so many years before you have to start making regular payments and when that time came there payments were much higher then anticipated.





    A home buyer should always get a traditional mortgage.
    Some people purchase a home then years later lose their job to no fault of their own, or something terrible happens to one of their spouse, children, etc. you have to think of all the things that can go wrong in a family you dont call someone who has made their payments every month a loser just because something happens in their life they have no control over.
    Predatory lending is confusing, and is taking advantage of too many hard working people. Do drastic measures = illegal activity? Many folks, work around the clock to barely make ends meet. There should be more regulations in place.
    it happened to my niece --- she's a good person but it wasn't her fault -- her boyfriend walked out on her and left her with 3 kids and a mortgage --- she ended up defaulting and losing the house ---

    How often do people get fixed rate mortgages that end?

    for example back in 2003 etc.. many people nailed down their current ARM in exchange for a low fixed rate.





    how many of those deals expire after a certain length of time??





    what percentage??





    why so??





    thanks for your answers!How often do people get fixed rate mortgages that end?
    Are you asking if someone converts their ARM to a fixed rate, how long does the fixed rate last? Until the loan is paid off. The interest rate doesn't change.

    How do you prove there are no mortgages on a property?

    What documents prove there is no mortgage on a house?How do you prove there are no mortgages on a property?
    Mortgages must be recorded with the county. You can ask them. You can have a title company to a title search. It should tell you what liens are against the home.How do you prove there are no mortgages on a property?
    You must pay a title company to search for an abstract on the property. The full name for the search is an ';Abstract of Title';.


    You can often find out about thease and other questions by asking a realtor or even a city governed central appraisal district.
    If you know the owner's of the property, then you can ask them to provide you with a letter from their mortgager. If you don't know the owner of the property, then you can go to your clerk of records and inquire there. If you know the attorney who drew up the legal papers, you can start there as well
    The mortgage company should send you (or the owner) and the county where the property is located a ';Letter of Satisfaction'; showing that there are no monies owed and if it's a ';Lien Theory State'; like FL, it will remove the lien from the property.





    You should be able to look this info up on line through a county website or a title company can do some research for you for a fee. Mortgages, Deeds, Liens and Sat. of a Lien are all public records.
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