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HLS
ParticipantUCO,
Assuming that the OP knows their rate, they have an impound account of $505, which is what I already factored into my comment above. It’s not fishy at all…
and you don’t pay “points” in a monthly payment.Most loans that have a prepayment penalty allow for paying up to 20% of principal per year without any penalty, so there is never a problem paying an extra payment here or there.
February 26, 2008 at 12:26 AM in reply to: Income to Mortgage Ratios in the new Banking System??? #160027HLS
ParticipantPW:
I have NO concerns about money drying up, where/when did I say that ?? There is no shortage of money for qualified borrowers.It is and will continue to be harder to qualify than it was 2 yrs ago, but just back to traditional guidelines that were in place for decades before the feds turned the faucet on and broke the handle and didn’t bother calling a plumber for 5 years.
I’m in no denial about what’s going on, trust me.
February 26, 2008 at 12:26 AM in reply to: Income to Mortgage Ratios in the new Banking System??? #160323HLS
ParticipantPW:
I have NO concerns about money drying up, where/when did I say that ?? There is no shortage of money for qualified borrowers.It is and will continue to be harder to qualify than it was 2 yrs ago, but just back to traditional guidelines that were in place for decades before the feds turned the faucet on and broke the handle and didn’t bother calling a plumber for 5 years.
I’m in no denial about what’s going on, trust me.
February 26, 2008 at 12:26 AM in reply to: Income to Mortgage Ratios in the new Banking System??? #160339HLS
ParticipantPW:
I have NO concerns about money drying up, where/when did I say that ?? There is no shortage of money for qualified borrowers.It is and will continue to be harder to qualify than it was 2 yrs ago, but just back to traditional guidelines that were in place for decades before the feds turned the faucet on and broke the handle and didn’t bother calling a plumber for 5 years.
I’m in no denial about what’s going on, trust me.
February 26, 2008 at 12:26 AM in reply to: Income to Mortgage Ratios in the new Banking System??? #160342HLS
ParticipantPW:
I have NO concerns about money drying up, where/when did I say that ?? There is no shortage of money for qualified borrowers.It is and will continue to be harder to qualify than it was 2 yrs ago, but just back to traditional guidelines that were in place for decades before the feds turned the faucet on and broke the handle and didn’t bother calling a plumber for 5 years.
I’m in no denial about what’s going on, trust me.
February 26, 2008 at 12:26 AM in reply to: Income to Mortgage Ratios in the new Banking System??? #160420HLS
ParticipantPW:
I have NO concerns about money drying up, where/when did I say that ?? There is no shortage of money for qualified borrowers.It is and will continue to be harder to qualify than it was 2 yrs ago, but just back to traditional guidelines that were in place for decades before the feds turned the faucet on and broke the handle and didn’t bother calling a plumber for 5 years.
I’m in no denial about what’s going on, trust me.
HLS
ParticipantDH,
Normal Mortgage loans are ALWAYS interest first, with balance to principal, figured monthly.
I’ve NEVER heard of a loan that re-ams only ONCE a year.
That’s insane.HELOCS are usually figured on daily balances.
The “best source of a direct answer” is rarely the lender.
They often don’t know their azz from their elbow, and only confuse people with incorrect information.
(Even calling the IRS helpline results in wrong tax info)Talk to someone who breathes this stuff, and you’ll get answers.
HLS
ParticipantDH,
Normal Mortgage loans are ALWAYS interest first, with balance to principal, figured monthly.
I’ve NEVER heard of a loan that re-ams only ONCE a year.
That’s insane.HELOCS are usually figured on daily balances.
The “best source of a direct answer” is rarely the lender.
They often don’t know their azz from their elbow, and only confuse people with incorrect information.
(Even calling the IRS helpline results in wrong tax info)Talk to someone who breathes this stuff, and you’ll get answers.
HLS
ParticipantDH,
Normal Mortgage loans are ALWAYS interest first, with balance to principal, figured monthly.
I’ve NEVER heard of a loan that re-ams only ONCE a year.
That’s insane.HELOCS are usually figured on daily balances.
The “best source of a direct answer” is rarely the lender.
They often don’t know their azz from their elbow, and only confuse people with incorrect information.
(Even calling the IRS helpline results in wrong tax info)Talk to someone who breathes this stuff, and you’ll get answers.
HLS
ParticipantDH,
Normal Mortgage loans are ALWAYS interest first, with balance to principal, figured monthly.
I’ve NEVER heard of a loan that re-ams only ONCE a year.
That’s insane.HELOCS are usually figured on daily balances.
The “best source of a direct answer” is rarely the lender.
They often don’t know their azz from their elbow, and only confuse people with incorrect information.
(Even calling the IRS helpline results in wrong tax info)Talk to someone who breathes this stuff, and you’ll get answers.
HLS
ParticipantDH,
Normal Mortgage loans are ALWAYS interest first, with balance to principal, figured monthly.
I’ve NEVER heard of a loan that re-ams only ONCE a year.
That’s insane.HELOCS are usually figured on daily balances.
The “best source of a direct answer” is rarely the lender.
They often don’t know their azz from their elbow, and only confuse people with incorrect information.
(Even calling the IRS helpline results in wrong tax info)Talk to someone who breathes this stuff, and you’ll get answers.
HLS
ParticipantI wouldn’t pay for the program to make bi-weekly mortgage payments. Just make extra payments IF you understand what you are doing and it fits your personal situation AND you can afford it.
You need to look at your TRUTH IN LENDING statement, to see what your payments will be and when they change. They should be clearly indicated.
From your scenario above, I’m guessing that you have a 40YR rate with a balloon payment in 30 years.
Your payment includes impounds. Your payment will be $3018 for the first 10 years, then it goes up to $3460 for the next 30 years (Yrs 11-40)
OR
you have a ballon payment of $260,000 due after 30 years.Sounds like you need help just understanding what you have now, without worrying about bi-weekly payments.
If you have any other consumer debt at non deductible interest rates, it would be foolish to accelerate your mortgage payments.
If you make payments of $3500 from now on, you will pay it off in 30 years instead of 40, saving yourself 10 years worth of payments or over $300,000 in interest.
Your “financial planner” has the advantage of knowing your overall financial situation. Did you FP advise you to get into this loan ?? Are you paying him to tell you to figure out what’s best for you ? WTF ?
I do this stuff for people for free.It isn’t possible to “figure this out” with any mortgage calculator that I know of because they don’t allow for paying principal on an I/O loan.
HLS
ParticipantI wouldn’t pay for the program to make bi-weekly mortgage payments. Just make extra payments IF you understand what you are doing and it fits your personal situation AND you can afford it.
You need to look at your TRUTH IN LENDING statement, to see what your payments will be and when they change. They should be clearly indicated.
From your scenario above, I’m guessing that you have a 40YR rate with a balloon payment in 30 years.
Your payment includes impounds. Your payment will be $3018 for the first 10 years, then it goes up to $3460 for the next 30 years (Yrs 11-40)
OR
you have a ballon payment of $260,000 due after 30 years.Sounds like you need help just understanding what you have now, without worrying about bi-weekly payments.
If you have any other consumer debt at non deductible interest rates, it would be foolish to accelerate your mortgage payments.
If you make payments of $3500 from now on, you will pay it off in 30 years instead of 40, saving yourself 10 years worth of payments or over $300,000 in interest.
Your “financial planner” has the advantage of knowing your overall financial situation. Did you FP advise you to get into this loan ?? Are you paying him to tell you to figure out what’s best for you ? WTF ?
I do this stuff for people for free.It isn’t possible to “figure this out” with any mortgage calculator that I know of because they don’t allow for paying principal on an I/O loan.
HLS
ParticipantI wouldn’t pay for the program to make bi-weekly mortgage payments. Just make extra payments IF you understand what you are doing and it fits your personal situation AND you can afford it.
You need to look at your TRUTH IN LENDING statement, to see what your payments will be and when they change. They should be clearly indicated.
From your scenario above, I’m guessing that you have a 40YR rate with a balloon payment in 30 years.
Your payment includes impounds. Your payment will be $3018 for the first 10 years, then it goes up to $3460 for the next 30 years (Yrs 11-40)
OR
you have a ballon payment of $260,000 due after 30 years.Sounds like you need help just understanding what you have now, without worrying about bi-weekly payments.
If you have any other consumer debt at non deductible interest rates, it would be foolish to accelerate your mortgage payments.
If you make payments of $3500 from now on, you will pay it off in 30 years instead of 40, saving yourself 10 years worth of payments or over $300,000 in interest.
Your “financial planner” has the advantage of knowing your overall financial situation. Did you FP advise you to get into this loan ?? Are you paying him to tell you to figure out what’s best for you ? WTF ?
I do this stuff for people for free.It isn’t possible to “figure this out” with any mortgage calculator that I know of because they don’t allow for paying principal on an I/O loan.
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