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October 31, 2007 at 9:48 PM #10780November 1, 2007 at 9:48 AM #94154CBadParticipant
Wow, 40 year/100% loan with interest only for the first 10 years and this is considered a good thing? What did you learn in the 6 hours of classes? At least it’s fixed.
November 1, 2007 at 9:48 AM #94190CBadParticipantWow, 40 year/100% loan with interest only for the first 10 years and this is considered a good thing? What did you learn in the 6 hours of classes? At least it’s fixed.
November 1, 2007 at 9:48 AM #94199CBadParticipantWow, 40 year/100% loan with interest only for the first 10 years and this is considered a good thing? What did you learn in the 6 hours of classes? At least it’s fixed.
November 1, 2007 at 9:56 AM #94166CBadParticipantAlso, if you make under 90K, you can’t afford a 475K loan. That’s why it’s interest only.
November 1, 2007 at 9:56 AM #94204CBadParticipantAlso, if you make under 90K, you can’t afford a 475K loan. That’s why it’s interest only.
November 1, 2007 at 9:56 AM #94213CBadParticipantAlso, if you make under 90K, you can’t afford a 475K loan. That’s why it’s interest only.
November 1, 2007 at 11:36 AM #94214NateKParticipantI don’t get it??? Didn’t Countrywide try the same ploy and it blew up in their face. The only difference between you and those subprime loans might be the full doc and a couple of classes.
I wish you luck. I hope you don’t add on to our inventory in the near future.
November 1, 2007 at 11:36 AM #94252NateKParticipantI don’t get it??? Didn’t Countrywide try the same ploy and it blew up in their face. The only difference between you and those subprime loans might be the full doc and a couple of classes.
I wish you luck. I hope you don’t add on to our inventory in the near future.
November 1, 2007 at 11:36 AM #94260NateKParticipantI don’t get it??? Didn’t Countrywide try the same ploy and it blew up in their face. The only difference between you and those subprime loans might be the full doc and a couple of classes.
I wish you luck. I hope you don’t add on to our inventory in the near future.
November 1, 2007 at 11:53 AM #94217bsrsharmaParticipantI think you got a very good loan. 6.1% APR FIXED for a 40 year loan, 100% LTV, no PMI is just insanely great. What are your payments like?
Those who disapprove – remember: he will be paying his loan with $ that is half its value from today in 10 years, quarter its value in 20 years and 1/8th in 30 years. All the time getting a tax writeoff. If this is not a deal, what is it? In effect, he will be paying just a fraction of the amount owed, in terms of purchasing power.
November 1, 2007 at 11:53 AM #94255bsrsharmaParticipantI think you got a very good loan. 6.1% APR FIXED for a 40 year loan, 100% LTV, no PMI is just insanely great. What are your payments like?
Those who disapprove – remember: he will be paying his loan with $ that is half its value from today in 10 years, quarter its value in 20 years and 1/8th in 30 years. All the time getting a tax writeoff. If this is not a deal, what is it? In effect, he will be paying just a fraction of the amount owed, in terms of purchasing power.
November 1, 2007 at 11:53 AM #94263bsrsharmaParticipantI think you got a very good loan. 6.1% APR FIXED for a 40 year loan, 100% LTV, no PMI is just insanely great. What are your payments like?
Those who disapprove – remember: he will be paying his loan with $ that is half its value from today in 10 years, quarter its value in 20 years and 1/8th in 30 years. All the time getting a tax writeoff. If this is not a deal, what is it? In effect, he will be paying just a fraction of the amount owed, in terms of purchasing power.
November 1, 2007 at 12:03 PM #94226djrobsdParticipantWhere’s your logic there, bsrsharma? I’m assuming you talk about the decline of the dollar? Well, when the dollar declines, you don’t think real estate values will stay up do you?! Quite the contrary, they will sink into a big hole, so 1/8th the value of the dollar in 30 years, will probably also mean the property will only be worth 1/8 its original value…
lol
I still see a big flaw in this Acorn program. They are giving you an interest only loan because you can’t afford to pay principal + interest. But, in 10 years, the loan re-casts itself, and you have to begin paying principal. I guess ACORN assumes your income will increase in 10 years and you’ll be able to afford the higher payments?
Looks like the same flawed logic as an ARM to me, only the rate is fixed, but the payment certainly isn’t.
Can a mortgage broker shed some light on how much the payment goes up after the interest only period is done?
November 1, 2007 at 12:03 PM #94264djrobsdParticipantWhere’s your logic there, bsrsharma? I’m assuming you talk about the decline of the dollar? Well, when the dollar declines, you don’t think real estate values will stay up do you?! Quite the contrary, they will sink into a big hole, so 1/8th the value of the dollar in 30 years, will probably also mean the property will only be worth 1/8 its original value…
lol
I still see a big flaw in this Acorn program. They are giving you an interest only loan because you can’t afford to pay principal + interest. But, in 10 years, the loan re-casts itself, and you have to begin paying principal. I guess ACORN assumes your income will increase in 10 years and you’ll be able to afford the higher payments?
Looks like the same flawed logic as an ARM to me, only the rate is fixed, but the payment certainly isn’t.
Can a mortgage broker shed some light on how much the payment goes up after the interest only period is done?
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