User55371_2_t Patricia Cornish NJ, New Homes, Pre Owned Homes
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From 1996 to 1997, the origination fee charged on a loan went from 2.1 to 0.6 points. Folks were looking for cheap refinancing and financing for houses escaping the last housing crisis. That crisis only hit values in some states and began in the early nineties. Houses and condominiums were suddenly worth something again in those areas.

Paul Stillwaggon   Paul Stillwaggon Pat Cornish
New Jersey Estates/ Weichert Realtors

55 Stirling Road
Watchung NJ 07069
email: njestates@gmail.com
New Jersey Estates/ Weichert Realtors
Phone:: 908-561-5492
Mobile:: 908-310-1358
  New Jersey Estates/ Weichert Realtors

REAL ESTATE & MORTGAGE NEWSLETTER

July 2008

 

What's Inside?

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Rate Predictions

Home Sales Figures

Home Appreciation

Inventory Levels

July Movies

 

 

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Home Sales Pace
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Home Appreciation
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Interest Rate Outlook & History

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Foreclosures and the Housing Crisis

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The housing crisis is causing a mess, because of lower home values and massive foreclosures, often blamed on the sub-prime mortgage industry.

What started it?

From 1996 to 1997, the origination fee charged on a loan went from 2.1 to 0.6 points. Folks were looking for cheap refinancing and financing for houses escaping the last housing crisis. That crisis only hit values in some states and began in the early nineties.

Houses and condominiums were suddenly worth something again in those areas.

So were the loans.

Unfortunately, the timing coincided with people falling in love with the internet. Instead of the "old fashioned" way of finding a lender, some early adopters let their fingers do the walking and used their keyboard and their mouse.

Borrowers ended up with people who said they were loan officers but only pushed paper around. Not surprisingly, loan officers did not know what they were doing. They did not know Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, FHA, VA, and Jumbo guidelines.

When the rest of the market quickly followed with low origination fees and low cost loans, the loan officers who knew what they were doing could not get a loan if their life depended on it. The companies also had to hire loan officers who did not know anything so that they could make more profit for themselves and less for loan officers.

In the past, loan officers were commissioned employees. In other words, sales people on one hundred percent commission.

With smaller profits per loan, the only place left for them to go was sub-prime, alt-A, and borrowers who could not qualify the regular way. Alternatively, they could make less money.

These professional salespeople found they made more money. They told their friends in the mortgage industry and as the sub-prime market began to grow, and were rewarded with rich profits. Companies in this market hired new employees that did not know anything but to be commissioned salespeople, in both the retail (direct-to-consumer) market and the wholesale (mortgage banker to sub-prime loan officer) market.

In 2000-2002, the bottom fell out of the stock market and some folks who got their money out quickly decided to make more money the old-fashioned way - in real estate.

Boom!

Values sharply increased and lenders were right there to snap up the financing. These money people wanted to put as little money down as possible and they wanted things to be as easy as possible. They wanted no qualifying.

Some folks saw their values increasing and took cash out to invest in real estate, too. Or, more real estate.

The little guy got taken along for the ride, and the loan officers who had not been through the early eighties believed what they were saying, "real estate values will always go up."

And, they have (until now).

There are statistics and graphs to prove it. Until recently, the median price (nationwide) has always increased on a year-to-year basis - until now!

How do you fight it? In those states that require licensing, ask what percentage of their loan officers are actually licensed, and make sure you see the license when/if you meet them.

Otherwise, get three lenders and have them all to work off copies of the same appraisal.


 

Paul Stillwaggon & Pat Cornish
New Jersey Estates/ Weichert Realtors
55 Stirling Road
Watchung NJ 07069

Equal Housing Opportunity

Phone: 908-561-5492

Mobile: 908-310-1358
E-Mail: njestates@gmail.com

New Jersey Estates/ Weichert Realtors


 
Posted by Patricia Cornish NJ, New Homes, Pre Owned Homes on 07/02/2008 10:16 PM   Comments (2)   new jersey estates newsletter  
This post has been included in New Jersey Information
Post is included in group: Realtors®
Post is included in group: New Jersey & Pennsylvania -- Realtors/Loan Officers/Title Clerks/Real Estate Lawyers
Post is included in group: Weichert Realtors
Post is included in group: Weichert Family of Companies
Post is included in group: Weichert Realtors

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Real Estate Agent: Patricia Cornish NJ, New Homes, Pre Owned Homes (Weichert Realtors/ New Jersey Estates)
Patricia Cornish NJ, New Homes, Pre Owned Homes
Berkeley Heights, NJ
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Weichert Realtors/ New Jersey Estates

Office Phone: (908) 561-6499
Cell Phone: (908) 578-0890
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Linking the latest technology to old fashion service. Pat is always conscious of how important it is to purchase or sell a home. The price point of the home doesn’t matter.


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