Special offer

How Much Should You "Put Down"?

Reblogger Roland Woodworth
Real Estate Agent with Blue Cord Realty TN 00273649 * KY 200690

Original content by Brian Brady NMLS 2415712

Down payment requirements, for mortgage loan programs,  have increased over the past 12-18 months.  Here are some examples:

The larger down payment requirements were implemented to “limit loss exposure” to the lenders and guaranteeing agencies/insurers.  That’s good right? Well, not necessarily good for you, the borrower.  Low down payment loans, while more expensive, help to limit buyer losses in a down market.  Low down payment loans transfer market risk from the borrower to the lending institution; it makes the borrower “too big too fail”.

That’s EXACTLY what these big banks and brokerage firms did; they borrowed so much that they became “too big to fail”.  Former Labor Secretary, Robert Reich, outlines the conundrum we face by consolidating the companies who were “too big to fail” into  larger institutions that are…REALLY “too big to fail”.

What’s that mean to you, the would-be home buyer?

You never want to borrow money you can’t afford to pay back…BUT…a low down payment loan just might give you some insurance against a declining real estate market.  It gives you LEVERAGE with the lender when things get…a bit dicey.

Why do banks rush defaulted loans, against homes with lots of equity, to foreclosure while they are more apt to “negotiate” a loan modification with a delinquent borrower who is “underwater?  Banks have to deposit a “loan-loss reserve”, with the FDIC, when mortgages become delinquent.  If the prospect of recovery is slim, some banks simply “write-off the loan” (to avoid that deposit with the FDIC) with hopes that they’ll recover SOMETHING later.

If higher downpayments “protect the lender” against market risk, it is only logical that the market risk is transferred to…the borrower.

That’s you.

Posted by

**************************************************************************************

Think Clarksville * Think Fort Campbell * Think Real Estate 

Think Blue Cord Realty * Think Roland

Roland Woodworth

Licensed in both Tennessee & Kentucky. Please don't keep me a secret, if you know anyone looking to BUY or SELL, Please send me their contact informtion and give them my name and number.

View my website at Clarksville Home Information or Fort Campbell Housing

 Roland Woodworth is a member of NAR's Short Sales & Foreclosure Resource

 

Roland Woodworth, REALTOR ® Blue Cord Realty

Call: 931-320-9411

E-Fax: 866-596-2172

  

Clarksville TN Homes For Sale, Clarksville TN - Roland Woodworth, REALTOR

I specialize in helping families relocate to and from the Clarksville, TN and Oak Grove, KY - Fort Campbell, KY and the surrounding areas. I have the tools to market your Home For Sale including New Construction, Short Sales, Foreclosures, Distressed Properties. I'm a US Army Veteran still serving the Clarksville, TN and Ft Campbell, KY area. Looking to sell your home ,give me a call at 931-320-9411

TN Lic # 273649  -  KY Lic # 57120

Blue Cord Realty

1191 Fort Campbell Blvd. Suite C.  Clarksville, TN 37042

 

Each Office is Independently Owned & Operated

**************************************************************************************

Ryan Shaughnessy
PREA Signature Realty - www.preasignaturerealty.com - Saint Louis, MO
Broker/Attorney - Your Lafayette Square Real Estate Partner

I liked the overview of the downpayment requirements.  However, I don't necessarily disagree with the fact that the borrower should as the owner of the asset bear the market risk.

Feb 14, 2009 04:30 PM
Roland Woodworth
Blue Cord Realty - Clarksville, TN
Blue Cord Realty

Ryan... thanks.. this was great post.

 

Feb 20, 2009 03:28 PM