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December 21, 2007 at 8:29 AM #121993December 21, 2007 at 8:55 AM #122242vizcayaParticipant
I am doing a REFI right now. I am doing it now since I see that the prices(values) are coming down, and rates are low at this time. I was thinking of waiting till rates fell a bit more, but that may not happen.
December 21, 2007 at 8:55 AM #122220vizcayaParticipantI am doing a REFI right now. I am doing it now since I see that the prices(values) are coming down, and rates are low at this time. I was thinking of waiting till rates fell a bit more, but that may not happen.
December 21, 2007 at 8:55 AM #122168vizcayaParticipantI am doing a REFI right now. I am doing it now since I see that the prices(values) are coming down, and rates are low at this time. I was thinking of waiting till rates fell a bit more, but that may not happen.
December 21, 2007 at 8:55 AM #122141vizcayaParticipantI am doing a REFI right now. I am doing it now since I see that the prices(values) are coming down, and rates are low at this time. I was thinking of waiting till rates fell a bit more, but that may not happen.
December 21, 2007 at 8:55 AM #121997vizcayaParticipantI am doing a REFI right now. I am doing it now since I see that the prices(values) are coming down, and rates are low at this time. I was thinking of waiting till rates fell a bit more, but that may not happen.
December 21, 2007 at 9:42 AM #122190AnonymousGuestDon’t put your debt into your mortgage. The CC companies have great deals out there with super low rates when you do a transfer. The key is to not be even a day late on those accounts. They pray you are late so they can jack up the rate on you. Also, don’t use the credit card after the transfer. It is another trick they use.
What is/are the interest rate(s) on the debt you have?
December 21, 2007 at 9:42 AM #122166AnonymousGuestDon’t put your debt into your mortgage. The CC companies have great deals out there with super low rates when you do a transfer. The key is to not be even a day late on those accounts. They pray you are late so they can jack up the rate on you. Also, don’t use the credit card after the transfer. It is another trick they use.
What is/are the interest rate(s) on the debt you have?
December 21, 2007 at 9:42 AM #122021AnonymousGuestDon’t put your debt into your mortgage. The CC companies have great deals out there with super low rates when you do a transfer. The key is to not be even a day late on those accounts. They pray you are late so they can jack up the rate on you. Also, don’t use the credit card after the transfer. It is another trick they use.
What is/are the interest rate(s) on the debt you have?
December 21, 2007 at 9:42 AM #122247AnonymousGuestDon’t put your debt into your mortgage. The CC companies have great deals out there with super low rates when you do a transfer. The key is to not be even a day late on those accounts. They pray you are late so they can jack up the rate on you. Also, don’t use the credit card after the transfer. It is another trick they use.
What is/are the interest rate(s) on the debt you have?
December 21, 2007 at 9:42 AM #122265AnonymousGuestDon’t put your debt into your mortgage. The CC companies have great deals out there with super low rates when you do a transfer. The key is to not be even a day late on those accounts. They pray you are late so they can jack up the rate on you. Also, don’t use the credit card after the transfer. It is another trick they use.
What is/are the interest rate(s) on the debt you have?
December 21, 2007 at 12:49 PM #122090cooperthedogParticipantMont9210 – You need to provide us with the primary variables in order to get any solid advice:
What are the rate & terms of your existing mortgage & 30k debt? What is your credit score?
Here is a basic decision list:
IF
your 30k of debt’s rate is >= to your existing mortgage rate
AND
your existing mortgage rate is >= to current mortgage rates
AND
the associated refi & third party fees do not increase the new mortgages “basic” APR above your existing mortgage
AND
the true APR over 10-15 years (your loan timeframe) on the new mortgage is less then your existing.THEN refinancing the primary mortgage makes sense, otherwise an equity loan or no action would be best (dependent on variables above).
More points to consider;
Your house value can fall to ~430k (yuk), as this is the 80% LTV mark when including your debt (assuming no systemic credit contraction).Your cash flow if renting should really take into account your 30k worth of debt (which I assume is revolving), as the payments on your existing mortgage and CC debt are almost certainly higher then a consolidated loan.
A poster above mentioned an IO loan. I would stay away from interest only loans, unless you really understand the trade-off between increased cash-flow and the spread you will need to earn on the principal saved to justify it.
The credit card transfer trick is a viable option if you can get a low lifetime rate (and abide by ALL there rules) or if you are willing to risk numerous periodic transfers, with the possibility of teaser rates being higher in the future, adverse changes in your credit score, industrywide credit contraction, etc.
Best of luck.
December 21, 2007 at 12:49 PM #122238cooperthedogParticipantMont9210 – You need to provide us with the primary variables in order to get any solid advice:
What are the rate & terms of your existing mortgage & 30k debt? What is your credit score?
Here is a basic decision list:
IF
your 30k of debt’s rate is >= to your existing mortgage rate
AND
your existing mortgage rate is >= to current mortgage rates
AND
the associated refi & third party fees do not increase the new mortgages “basic” APR above your existing mortgage
AND
the true APR over 10-15 years (your loan timeframe) on the new mortgage is less then your existing.THEN refinancing the primary mortgage makes sense, otherwise an equity loan or no action would be best (dependent on variables above).
More points to consider;
Your house value can fall to ~430k (yuk), as this is the 80% LTV mark when including your debt (assuming no systemic credit contraction).Your cash flow if renting should really take into account your 30k worth of debt (which I assume is revolving), as the payments on your existing mortgage and CC debt are almost certainly higher then a consolidated loan.
A poster above mentioned an IO loan. I would stay away from interest only loans, unless you really understand the trade-off between increased cash-flow and the spread you will need to earn on the principal saved to justify it.
The credit card transfer trick is a viable option if you can get a low lifetime rate (and abide by ALL there rules) or if you are willing to risk numerous periodic transfers, with the possibility of teaser rates being higher in the future, adverse changes in your credit score, industrywide credit contraction, etc.
Best of luck.
December 21, 2007 at 12:49 PM #122260cooperthedogParticipantMont9210 – You need to provide us with the primary variables in order to get any solid advice:
What are the rate & terms of your existing mortgage & 30k debt? What is your credit score?
Here is a basic decision list:
IF
your 30k of debt’s rate is >= to your existing mortgage rate
AND
your existing mortgage rate is >= to current mortgage rates
AND
the associated refi & third party fees do not increase the new mortgages “basic” APR above your existing mortgage
AND
the true APR over 10-15 years (your loan timeframe) on the new mortgage is less then your existing.THEN refinancing the primary mortgage makes sense, otherwise an equity loan or no action would be best (dependent on variables above).
More points to consider;
Your house value can fall to ~430k (yuk), as this is the 80% LTV mark when including your debt (assuming no systemic credit contraction).Your cash flow if renting should really take into account your 30k worth of debt (which I assume is revolving), as the payments on your existing mortgage and CC debt are almost certainly higher then a consolidated loan.
A poster above mentioned an IO loan. I would stay away from interest only loans, unless you really understand the trade-off between increased cash-flow and the spread you will need to earn on the principal saved to justify it.
The credit card transfer trick is a viable option if you can get a low lifetime rate (and abide by ALL there rules) or if you are willing to risk numerous periodic transfers, with the possibility of teaser rates being higher in the future, adverse changes in your credit score, industrywide credit contraction, etc.
Best of luck.
December 21, 2007 at 12:49 PM #122315cooperthedogParticipantMont9210 – You need to provide us with the primary variables in order to get any solid advice:
What are the rate & terms of your existing mortgage & 30k debt? What is your credit score?
Here is a basic decision list:
IF
your 30k of debt’s rate is >= to your existing mortgage rate
AND
your existing mortgage rate is >= to current mortgage rates
AND
the associated refi & third party fees do not increase the new mortgages “basic” APR above your existing mortgage
AND
the true APR over 10-15 years (your loan timeframe) on the new mortgage is less then your existing.THEN refinancing the primary mortgage makes sense, otherwise an equity loan or no action would be best (dependent on variables above).
More points to consider;
Your house value can fall to ~430k (yuk), as this is the 80% LTV mark when including your debt (assuming no systemic credit contraction).Your cash flow if renting should really take into account your 30k worth of debt (which I assume is revolving), as the payments on your existing mortgage and CC debt are almost certainly higher then a consolidated loan.
A poster above mentioned an IO loan. I would stay away from interest only loans, unless you really understand the trade-off between increased cash-flow and the spread you will need to earn on the principal saved to justify it.
The credit card transfer trick is a viable option if you can get a low lifetime rate (and abide by ALL there rules) or if you are willing to risk numerous periodic transfers, with the possibility of teaser rates being higher in the future, adverse changes in your credit score, industrywide credit contraction, etc.
Best of luck.
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