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August 21, 2008 at 12:11 PM #13628August 21, 2008 at 12:21 PM #259522peterbParticipant
Given the state of the housing market and the availability of credit, I’ve wondered what the market will do as demand dries up for mortgages at the same tims as they’re considered risky investments? I am starting to think that rates will have to come down to induce business, but perhaps they will demand stronger documentation and much bigger down payments to mitigate the risk?
Anyone have some insight on this??
August 21, 2008 at 12:21 PM #259819peterbParticipantGiven the state of the housing market and the availability of credit, I’ve wondered what the market will do as demand dries up for mortgages at the same tims as they’re considered risky investments? I am starting to think that rates will have to come down to induce business, but perhaps they will demand stronger documentation and much bigger down payments to mitigate the risk?
Anyone have some insight on this??
August 21, 2008 at 12:21 PM #259778peterbParticipantGiven the state of the housing market and the availability of credit, I’ve wondered what the market will do as demand dries up for mortgages at the same tims as they’re considered risky investments? I am starting to think that rates will have to come down to induce business, but perhaps they will demand stronger documentation and much bigger down payments to mitigate the risk?
Anyone have some insight on this??
August 21, 2008 at 12:21 PM #259716peterbParticipantGiven the state of the housing market and the availability of credit, I’ve wondered what the market will do as demand dries up for mortgages at the same tims as they’re considered risky investments? I am starting to think that rates will have to come down to induce business, but perhaps they will demand stronger documentation and much bigger down payments to mitigate the risk?
Anyone have some insight on this??
August 21, 2008 at 12:21 PM #259729peterbParticipantGiven the state of the housing market and the availability of credit, I’ve wondered what the market will do as demand dries up for mortgages at the same tims as they’re considered risky investments? I am starting to think that rates will have to come down to induce business, but perhaps they will demand stronger documentation and much bigger down payments to mitigate the risk?
Anyone have some insight on this??
August 21, 2008 at 12:58 PM #259736HarryBoschParticipantI cant say I have any insight but I can provide one story.
My nephew and his wife recently purchased their first house in Orange County a month ago. He works, has a degree and makes maybe $50K-$60K/year. His wife is working on her masters and is not working. They have no debt.
But in order to buy their first-time home ($320K house) they had to have his parents as co-signers on the loan. I’m sure they did not put 20% down – something much less.
I suspect there will be more co-signers for first time home buyers as we go forward. Unless prices continue to drop to the point that co-signers are not needed.
August 21, 2008 at 12:58 PM #259750HarryBoschParticipantI cant say I have any insight but I can provide one story.
My nephew and his wife recently purchased their first house in Orange County a month ago. He works, has a degree and makes maybe $50K-$60K/year. His wife is working on her masters and is not working. They have no debt.
But in order to buy their first-time home ($320K house) they had to have his parents as co-signers on the loan. I’m sure they did not put 20% down – something much less.
I suspect there will be more co-signers for first time home buyers as we go forward. Unless prices continue to drop to the point that co-signers are not needed.
August 21, 2008 at 12:58 PM #259798HarryBoschParticipantI cant say I have any insight but I can provide one story.
My nephew and his wife recently purchased their first house in Orange County a month ago. He works, has a degree and makes maybe $50K-$60K/year. His wife is working on her masters and is not working. They have no debt.
But in order to buy their first-time home ($320K house) they had to have his parents as co-signers on the loan. I’m sure they did not put 20% down – something much less.
I suspect there will be more co-signers for first time home buyers as we go forward. Unless prices continue to drop to the point that co-signers are not needed.
August 21, 2008 at 12:58 PM #259543HarryBoschParticipantI cant say I have any insight but I can provide one story.
My nephew and his wife recently purchased their first house in Orange County a month ago. He works, has a degree and makes maybe $50K-$60K/year. His wife is working on her masters and is not working. They have no debt.
But in order to buy their first-time home ($320K house) they had to have his parents as co-signers on the loan. I’m sure they did not put 20% down – something much less.
I suspect there will be more co-signers for first time home buyers as we go forward. Unless prices continue to drop to the point that co-signers are not needed.
August 21, 2008 at 12:58 PM #259839HarryBoschParticipantI cant say I have any insight but I can provide one story.
My nephew and his wife recently purchased their first house in Orange County a month ago. He works, has a degree and makes maybe $50K-$60K/year. His wife is working on her masters and is not working. They have no debt.
But in order to buy their first-time home ($320K house) they had to have his parents as co-signers on the loan. I’m sure they did not put 20% down – something much less.
I suspect there will be more co-signers for first time home buyers as we go forward. Unless prices continue to drop to the point that co-signers are not needed.
August 21, 2008 at 5:11 PM #259783snailParticipantA 60K/year income should not buy a 320K house, even with 20% down = its still more that 4 times annual salary. Lets say 20% tax, take home about $4000/month, his mortgage with taxes is about 50% of his net (Yes, I know you should use the gross income, but let be conservative here). What am I missing?
August 21, 2008 at 5:11 PM #260037snailParticipantA 60K/year income should not buy a 320K house, even with 20% down = its still more that 4 times annual salary. Lets say 20% tax, take home about $4000/month, his mortgage with taxes is about 50% of his net (Yes, I know you should use the gross income, but let be conservative here). What am I missing?
August 21, 2008 at 5:11 PM #260079snailParticipantA 60K/year income should not buy a 320K house, even with 20% down = its still more that 4 times annual salary. Lets say 20% tax, take home about $4000/month, his mortgage with taxes is about 50% of his net (Yes, I know you should use the gross income, but let be conservative here). What am I missing?
August 21, 2008 at 5:11 PM #259978snailParticipantA 60K/year income should not buy a 320K house, even with 20% down = its still more that 4 times annual salary. Lets say 20% tax, take home about $4000/month, his mortgage with taxes is about 50% of his net (Yes, I know you should use the gross income, but let be conservative here). What am I missing?
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