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December 16, 2010 at 1:46 PM #641069December 16, 2010 at 2:42 PM #641584
paramount
ParticipantI just refinanced at 4.875% 30 year fixed Wells Fargo with a LTV of 103%.
New Payment: Just over $1100 PI.
December 16, 2010 at 2:42 PM #641129paramount
ParticipantI just refinanced at 4.875% 30 year fixed Wells Fargo with a LTV of 103%.
New Payment: Just over $1100 PI.
December 16, 2010 at 2:42 PM #641266paramount
ParticipantI just refinanced at 4.875% 30 year fixed Wells Fargo with a LTV of 103%.
New Payment: Just over $1100 PI.
December 16, 2010 at 2:42 PM #640548paramount
ParticipantI just refinanced at 4.875% 30 year fixed Wells Fargo with a LTV of 103%.
New Payment: Just over $1100 PI.
December 16, 2010 at 2:42 PM #640477paramount
ParticipantI just refinanced at 4.875% 30 year fixed Wells Fargo with a LTV of 103%.
New Payment: Just over $1100 PI.
December 16, 2010 at 2:55 PM #640517treehugger
ParticipantBut the refi didn’t cost me anything. I have only owned the home 6 months and now I pay 250+ less a month. Even without the PMI drop I would save over $70 a month which is significant over the life of 30 year fixed loan, right?
December 16, 2010 at 2:55 PM #640588treehugger
ParticipantBut the refi didn’t cost me anything. I have only owned the home 6 months and now I pay 250+ less a month. Even without the PMI drop I would save over $70 a month which is significant over the life of 30 year fixed loan, right?
December 16, 2010 at 2:55 PM #641624treehugger
ParticipantBut the refi didn’t cost me anything. I have only owned the home 6 months and now I pay 250+ less a month. Even without the PMI drop I would save over $70 a month which is significant over the life of 30 year fixed loan, right?
December 16, 2010 at 2:55 PM #641306treehugger
ParticipantBut the refi didn’t cost me anything. I have only owned the home 6 months and now I pay 250+ less a month. Even without the PMI drop I would save over $70 a month which is significant over the life of 30 year fixed loan, right?
December 16, 2010 at 2:55 PM #641169treehugger
ParticipantBut the refi didn’t cost me anything. I have only owned the home 6 months and now I pay 250+ less a month. Even without the PMI drop I would save over $70 a month which is significant over the life of 30 year fixed loan, right?
December 16, 2010 at 5:50 PM #640611UCGal
ParticipantWhether you have to put money in to get a good rate depends on several factors – but the biggest factor is the size of your loan.
I have several coworkers who were getting quotes for refi’s from Sheldon and others mortgage brokers a few months ago. 3 of the guys had similar credit, but one had a small balance, one had a medium balance, and one had a higher balance. It was going to cost the small balance guy money – the guy with the bigger balance got cash back (not cash out, but a credit)… the guy in the middle was a break even proposition. (2 of these guys went with Sheldon by the way.)
A 4th guy’s home didn’t appraise to give him 80% (despite having put more than 20% down when he purchased) – so he went FHA and didn’t go through Sheldon.
I talked to Sheldon in this time frame… my balance is pretty low. It would cost money (appraisal, credit check, etc.) and I didn’t qualify for any credits back… the payment savings weren’t large enough to justify.
Another reason not to refi – if you’re significantly into your mortgage – you might not want to reset the clock. Not everyone is disciplined enough to make extra payments to pay it off in the same time frame. I can see why someone with 10 years left on the mortgage, and in their 50’s would NOT want to refi into a 30 year mortgage. Who wants to have a mortgage payment in retirement?
December 16, 2010 at 5:50 PM #641401UCGal
ParticipantWhether you have to put money in to get a good rate depends on several factors – but the biggest factor is the size of your loan.
I have several coworkers who were getting quotes for refi’s from Sheldon and others mortgage brokers a few months ago. 3 of the guys had similar credit, but one had a small balance, one had a medium balance, and one had a higher balance. It was going to cost the small balance guy money – the guy with the bigger balance got cash back (not cash out, but a credit)… the guy in the middle was a break even proposition. (2 of these guys went with Sheldon by the way.)
A 4th guy’s home didn’t appraise to give him 80% (despite having put more than 20% down when he purchased) – so he went FHA and didn’t go through Sheldon.
I talked to Sheldon in this time frame… my balance is pretty low. It would cost money (appraisal, credit check, etc.) and I didn’t qualify for any credits back… the payment savings weren’t large enough to justify.
Another reason not to refi – if you’re significantly into your mortgage – you might not want to reset the clock. Not everyone is disciplined enough to make extra payments to pay it off in the same time frame. I can see why someone with 10 years left on the mortgage, and in their 50’s would NOT want to refi into a 30 year mortgage. Who wants to have a mortgage payment in retirement?
December 16, 2010 at 5:50 PM #641719UCGal
ParticipantWhether you have to put money in to get a good rate depends on several factors – but the biggest factor is the size of your loan.
I have several coworkers who were getting quotes for refi’s from Sheldon and others mortgage brokers a few months ago. 3 of the guys had similar credit, but one had a small balance, one had a medium balance, and one had a higher balance. It was going to cost the small balance guy money – the guy with the bigger balance got cash back (not cash out, but a credit)… the guy in the middle was a break even proposition. (2 of these guys went with Sheldon by the way.)
A 4th guy’s home didn’t appraise to give him 80% (despite having put more than 20% down when he purchased) – so he went FHA and didn’t go through Sheldon.
I talked to Sheldon in this time frame… my balance is pretty low. It would cost money (appraisal, credit check, etc.) and I didn’t qualify for any credits back… the payment savings weren’t large enough to justify.
Another reason not to refi – if you’re significantly into your mortgage – you might not want to reset the clock. Not everyone is disciplined enough to make extra payments to pay it off in the same time frame. I can see why someone with 10 years left on the mortgage, and in their 50’s would NOT want to refi into a 30 year mortgage. Who wants to have a mortgage payment in retirement?
December 16, 2010 at 5:50 PM #641264UCGal
ParticipantWhether you have to put money in to get a good rate depends on several factors – but the biggest factor is the size of your loan.
I have several coworkers who were getting quotes for refi’s from Sheldon and others mortgage brokers a few months ago. 3 of the guys had similar credit, but one had a small balance, one had a medium balance, and one had a higher balance. It was going to cost the small balance guy money – the guy with the bigger balance got cash back (not cash out, but a credit)… the guy in the middle was a break even proposition. (2 of these guys went with Sheldon by the way.)
A 4th guy’s home didn’t appraise to give him 80% (despite having put more than 20% down when he purchased) – so he went FHA and didn’t go through Sheldon.
I talked to Sheldon in this time frame… my balance is pretty low. It would cost money (appraisal, credit check, etc.) and I didn’t qualify for any credits back… the payment savings weren’t large enough to justify.
Another reason not to refi – if you’re significantly into your mortgage – you might not want to reset the clock. Not everyone is disciplined enough to make extra payments to pay it off in the same time frame. I can see why someone with 10 years left on the mortgage, and in their 50’s would NOT want to refi into a 30 year mortgage. Who wants to have a mortgage payment in retirement?
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