December 24, 2007

Christmas

Christmas

 

As we pause to spend a few days with our families during this Christmas Holiday season, we wish you and your family a safe and happy holiday filled with joy and thanksgiving. 

 

We'll be back on Thursday with more real estate news and tips. 

 

Thanks for sharing some of your precious time with us at this website this year.

 

 

 

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December 23, 2007

Home Equity Diminishing

Home Equity Diminishing

 

Homeowners began to lose hold of their homes long before spiking foreclosures and the housing slump slammed the economy.

 

Piece by piece, some gave away their homes by tapping equity to take cash out to pay for cars, weddings and vacations.  Others never owned one brick.  During the country's most recent housing boom, the term "homeowner" became a misnomer as lenders offered 100 percent or more home financing to some buyers.

 

Now, slipping home prices threaten to further erode the value of many Americans' single largest asset, curbing consumer spending and jeopardizing retirement assets.

 

Thanks in large part to mortgage-related tax deductions and a drumbeat of advice that everyone should own their home, the U.S. homeownership rate rose steadily in recent decades.  It peaked at 69.2 percent in 2004 before backing down to 68.2 percent at the end of the third quarter, according to the Census Bureau, which has collected the data since 1965.

 

But that small decline masks a much larger plunge in the amount of equity homeowners hold.  This figure, equal to the percentage of a home's market value minus mortgage-related debt, fell to an average of 50.4 percent in the third quarter of this year, down from 62 percent at the end of 1990, according to the Federal Reserve, even as the average home value surged 139 percent during that period.

 

But the recent drop in average value is particularly bad news for homeowners who treated their homes as piggy banks instead of as savings accounts.  Nationwide, they drained $468.7 billion out of their homes in 2004 through home equity loans or cash-out refinancings, according to a report from former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan and Fed senior economist James Kennedy.  Fifty-eight percent of that cash went to home improvements and personal spending, while 27 percent paid off credit card debt.

 

 

 

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December 22, 2007

Eliminating PMI

Eliminating PMI

 

You have to insure your home. But do you really have to insure that mortgage too? It's called private mortgage insurance, and according to money expert Stacy Johnson, for many people, it's expensive and unnecessary.  Watch the short video (1:24) and tell us what you think.

 

 

Leave us your comment below by clicking the "Comments" link.  We'd love to hear from you, and don't worry.. we will NOT publish your Email Address or URL on this site for your privacy and protection.

 

 

 

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Pay Off Your Mortgage or Invest the Money?

 

As you invest your money, shop for a home or tackle any one of the many financial decisions you have to make over your lifetime, do you sometimes wish you'd paid more attention in math class?  Do you find yourself having to "run the numbers" and wondering what's best?

 

The solution isn't always black and white, and the "right" answer may depend on things you can never know for sure, like your tax bracket in 2020 or how much your investments will grow.

 

When it comes to paying off your mortgage early or investing the extra money, the "feel-good choice" is not necessarily the smartest choice.

 

Paying off your mortgage (or any loan for that matter) is an investment, and your return is essentially the interest rate on the loan.  If you have 25 years left on a 30-year mortgage with a fixed rate of 6.2 percent and you deduct your interest payments on your taxes, you'll earn 4.5 percent by prepaying the loan (assuming you're in the 28 percent tax bracket).

 

Now let's say you invest your spare cash in stocks instead.  You'll pay a 15 percent tax rate on your long-term capital gains and dividends. (At least that's the current rule… what the future rate(s) will be is anyone's guess)… So to beat the 4.5 percent return you'd get from prepaying your mortgage, you'd have to earn just 5.3 percent a year on your stocks before taxes.

 

The odds of your doing that over the 25-year remaining term of your mortgage are excellent: Historically, a portfolio of 80 percent stocks and 20 percent bonds has returned 7.5 percent a year after taxes.

 

Remember, though, that by prepaying your mortgage, you are reducing your liquid assets.  If you suddenly need money for something, it's easier to sell a mutual fund than it is to pull cash from your home, and you can always pay off your mortgage later with the money you invest now.

 

The bottom line - Investing wins.

 

What do you think?  Have an opinion on this article?  We'd love to hear from you.  Simply leave us your comment by clicking the "Comments" link below.  Your email address will never be displayed on our site, so no worries about that.

 

 

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Pending Home Sales Rise Unexpectedly

 

Pending sales of existing U.S. homes rose modestly in October, bucking Wall Street forecasts, but the decline from a year ago was the third largest on record, a reminder of just how far the housing market has fallen.

 

The National Association of Realtors reported recently that its Pending Home Sales Index, based on contracts signed in October, was up 0.6 percent at 87.2 from an upwardly revised index of 86.7 in September.

 

The forward-looking indicator of home sales was more upbeat than expected by economists, who had forecast a decline of 1.0 percent.

 

Still, the boost in pending sales was not enough to increase analysts' hopes for a housing recovery anytime soon.

 

Year-over-year, pending sales were down 18.4 percent, the third-largest drop since the trade group began keeping such records in January 2001.  Only the declines registered in August and September were deeper.

 

Existing home sales in 2008 should hit a pace of 5.70 million, compared with an expected 5.67 million this year.  The NAR said median home prices would likely fall 1.9 percent this year, but rise 0.3 percent in 2008 to $218,300.

 

This year's home price decline would be the first annual decline since the Great Depression.

 

 

 

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