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Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Your Mortgage Checklist

Whether you are interested in buying a home or getting a lower interest rate on your current mortgage, the following items will most likely be required by the lender to determine eligibility or to process the loan.
With underwriting guidelines being more conservative than ever, it is essential to provide all documentation upon the initial loan submission - if you wish to acquire a new mortgage as easily and efficiently as possible.

(Provide clear, legible copies of the following for each borrower).
Here is the Checklist that would cover most applicants:
  1. driver’s license
  2. 2nd I.D. - such as social security card, passport, car registration
  3. most recent paystubs covering 30 days
  4. all 2009 & 2010 W2s
  5. 2009 & 2010 Federal tax returns (all pages, all schedules, state returns not needed)
  6. 2 year history of part-time, bonus, or overtime income (if applicalble)
  7. a recent statement (all pages) of your 401K, IRA, - or other retirement account(s).
  8. 2 months’ most recent monthly checking account statements, & liquid Stocks, Funds, etc. (all pages, not internet summary)
  9. If self-employed, name and tel. number of your accountant
(Additional  items required  for refinance transactions) -

  1. recent homeowner’s insurance bill
  2. recent property tax statement or bill
  3. recent HOA/Common Charge bill  (if applicable)
  4. copy of your most recent monthly statement or payment coupon for your current 1st mortgage
  5. copy of most recent payment coupon for your 2nd mortgage / homequity line (if applicable). If your homequity line has a zero balance, provide a copy of the original note.
  6. copy of a recent statement for any other account that is intended to be payed off through this transaction (if applicable)

Why We Need Your Tax Returns

     If you're shopping for a home mortgage loan, be prepared to provide proof of your taxable income.
During the housing boom, lenders rarely required borrowers to provide copies of federal tax returns.  Now, lenders ask the borrower for the entire federal tax returns covering a 2 year period, with all schedules, because a person’s full income picture is contained in the entire set of documents, not just the first two pages.  If a borrower has K-1 income/loss, those forms are also required.  If you have filed an extension, you should also provide a copy of the extension- and cancelled check(s) showing any estimated payment(s).
     Borrowers are often required to sign a Form 4506-T as well, which allows the lender to retrieve a tax transcript from the Internal Revenue Service.  Lenders use the 4506-T tax transcript to compare the borrower’s W-2s to reported income.  If the numbers match, all is well.  If not, the lender will dig deeper.
     Why the sudden interest in borrowers’ tax returns? The short answer is lenders are looking for income irregularities and evidence of loan fraud.  All aspects of the tax return are subject to examination - to determine what the borrower’s income is.  That means the lender not only will look at reported income, but also at other items such as:

Unreimbursed employee business expenses. 2106 business expenses are subtracted from income.  Examples include uniforms, union dues, mileage, expenses related to a cell phone used for business, marketing costs and training costs.  If somebody writes off $20,000 in business expenses, the underwriter would subtract the $20K for qualifying purposes.

Rental property income. This income must be documented and shown on the tax return, unless the property was purchased in the current calendar year. In that case, the rent must appear on a certian number of consecutive monthly bank statements.   Also of note - If you don’t report income that should have appeared on your tax returns, you can’t use that income at all.
If you plan to keep your present home, and rent it out when trading up to a new home, you need a min. 30% equity in that property in order to use the rental income.  You'll be required to pay for an appraisal on the current home to establish the equity percentage, and to provide a fully-executed lease agreement - with a paper-trailed security deposit from the tenants.

Business losses. These can include losses incurred by a spouse’s business.  The lender will subtract those losses to yield a combined taxable income for the household,  In some cases, that might not be enough income to be approved for a loan that a borrower may have otherwise qualified for.

Depreciation expenses. On the flip side, depreciation expense can often increase a borrower’s qualifying income, because it's a non-cash expense.

Capital gains. These also may be counted as income — or not.
If a capital gain is a one-time event, it probably won't count as income because it won't meet criteria for continuation into the future.

Self-Employment
Scrutiny of tax returns can be a big challenge for borrowers who are self-employed. Many are having a really difficult time getting loans because their accountants and bookkeepers are trained to minimize their income to save them on taxes.

Too Many Write-Offs
Many potential borrowers are faced with the challenge of building up their taxable income for two years before they can qualify for a loan. Some may have to forego certain deductions so they can show more income on their tax return to qualify for a loan.
But beware, borrowers who try to amend a prior year’s tax return to show more income is a strategy that won’t work. Instead, an amended tax return can trigger a loan denial.  There's a new rule that says you cannot qualify for a mortgage if your tax return has been amended.

Bonus Income
Bonus income is scrutinized - and anything that is non-cash (such as stock options) do not count.  The cash component should be ok - but it is averaged over a 2 year period.  If the most recent annual bonus is lower than the previous year, then averaging is not done - and the lower amount is utilized.

Monday, March 28, 2011

Six Ways to Improve Your Chances of Getting a Mortgage


Remember how Spring was always the home-buying season? Don't count on that happening this year and you can point the finger, at least in part, at the new lending hoops buyers must jump through. It's projected that one out of three home buyers will fail to get a mortgage in the spring of 2011.

Understanding the mortgage process and meeting lenders' more stringent qualification requirements have become big obstacles for applicants, according to a survey the site conducted. Most recent home buyers -- 70% -- described the mortgaging process as more difficult than they expected. And those who bought homes during the bubble years, when mortgage loans were given out like candy at Halloween, are especially shell-shocked by the new lending standards.

One of the biggest problems home buyers run into today concern their credit scores and how, in general, they don't work to improve them before applying for a loan. In the same vein, a recent Fannie Mae survey found that poor credit was the top reason that renters gave for not buying a home.

(Following closely behind poor credit was the self-awareness that they couldn't actually afford to buy or keep up a home and the perception that now is not really a good time to buy. Hooray for enlightenment on the first point, but with home prices back to 2002 levels and interest rates among the lowest ever seen, how isn't this a good time to buy?)

Back to the mortgagematch.com study: A full 35% of successful buyers said they didn't even know their credit scores when they started to look for houses to buy. Somewhere, a Realtor is clenching his or her teeth just reading that. These buyers decide they want to buy a house but don't know their credit scores? Home-buying is a process that starts with getting your financial house in order and then hitting the brick and mortar ones.


Search Homes for Sale
See photos of homes for sale in your area and across the country on AOL Real Estate
Sue Stewart, senior vice president for Move, Inc. said, "Buyers who prepare themselves financially early before they start looking for a home will have a better chance of succeeding. If you want to be in a position to land the best mortgage ... get your documentation together and find a lender you trust."

Some tips before you apply for a mortgage to help you beat the odds:
  1. Pay down your debt. Reduce your total debt -- your monthly payments on cars, student loans, credit cards -- before you start the mortgage application. The goal is to reduce your overall debt-to-income ratio and improve your credit score. The somewhat unrealistic guideline that lenders want everyone to toe is that your total housing expenses not exceed 28% of your monthly gross income. For decades, people have exceeded that quite happily but now the lenders believe they know best and they control the money.
  2. Clean up your credit. Start with figuring out what your reported scores are. Obtain your free credit report from each of the three credit bureaus (Equifax, Experian and TransUnion) and carefully review them, noting all negative items. Correct inaccurate or outdated items. Your credit score needs to be a minimum of 680 -- preferably 720 or higher -- to qualify for a lower interest rate on a mortgage.
  3. Delay any large purchases, don't apply for any new credit until you close on your house. Lenders check credit reports at the time you apply and then again right before closing. A last-minute spending spree is going to be flagged. Once you clear the mortgage hurdle, feel free to move about the cabin and decorate your new house to your heart's content. (That's said in jest; charge wisely.)
  4. Increase your down payment. This reduces the loan-to-value ratio and improves your chances of getting a loan. How do you do this? You save up for it or call up your rich relatives. There are also a lot of community programs to help first-time buyers, so check around.
  5. Get your paperwork together. Your lender will want to see pay stubs, bank statements, assets, credit documents, income tax returns, all financial statements and possibly your fourth grade report card. OK, I made that last one up, but you get the idea. This is paperwork central. And you better make copies of everything you send them in case they ask you for it a third time.
  6. Develop some patience. You're going to need it.

Real Estate: It's Time to Buy Again

March 28, 2011
Forget stocks. Don't bet on gold. After four years of plunging home prices, the most attractive asset class in America is housing. From his wide-rimmed cowboy hat to his roper boots, Mike Castleman fits moviedom's image of the lanky Texas rancher. On a recent March evening, Castleman is feeding cattle biscuits to his two pet longhorn steers, Big Buddy and Little Buddy, on his 460-acre Bar Ten Creek Ranch in Dripping Springs, a hamlet outside Austin in the Texas Hill Country. The spread is a medley of meandering streams, craggy cliffs, and centuries-old oaks. But even in this pastoral setting, his mind keeps returning to a subject he knows as well as any expert around: the housing market. "I'm a dirt-road economist who sees what's happening on the ground, and in 35 years I've never seen a shortage of new construction like the one I'm seeing today," declares Castleman, 70, now offering a biscuit to his miniature donkey Thumper.
"The talking heads who are down on real estate will hate to hear this, but America needs to build a lot more houses. And in most markets the price of new homes is fixin' to rise, not fall."
Castleman is in a unique position to know. As the founder and CEO of a company called Metrostudy, he's spent more than three decades tracking real-time data on the country's inventory of new homes. Each quarter he dispatches 500 inspectors to literally drive through 45,000 subdivisions from Baltimore to Sacramento. The inspectors examine 5 million finished lots, one at a time, and record whether they contain a house that's under construction, one that's finished and for sale, or a home that's sold. Metrostudy covers 19 states, or around 65% of the U.S. housing market, including all the ones hardest hit by the crash: Florida, California, Arizona, and Nevada. The company's client list includes virtually every major homebuilder and bank -- from Pulte and KB Home to Bank of America and Wells Fargo.
The key figures that Metrostudy collects, and that those clients prize, are the number of homes that are vacant and for sale in each city, and the number of months it takes to sell all of them. Together those figures measure inventory -- the key metric in determining whether a market has a surplus or a shortage of new housing.
Today Castleman is witnessing an extraordinary reversal of the new-home glut that helped sink prices just a few years ago. In the 41 cities Metrostudy covers, a total of 78,000 houses are now either vacant and for sale, or under construction. That's less than one-fourth of the 343,000 units in those two categories at the peak of the frenzy in mid-2006, and well below the level of a decade ago. "If we had anything like normal levels of buying, those houses would sell in 2½ months," says Castleman. "We'd see an incredible shortage. And that's where we're heading."
If all the noise you're hearing about housing has you totally confused, join the crowd. One day you'll read that owning a home has never been more affordable. The next day you'll see news that housing starts have plunged to nearly their lowest level in half a century.
After four years of falling prices and surging foreclosures, it's hard to know what to think. Even Robert Shiller and Karl Case can't agree. The two economists, who together created the widely followed Case-Shiller Home Price indices, are right now offering sharply contrasting views of housing's future.
Shiller recently warned that the chances were high for a further double-digit drop in U.S. home prices. But in an interview, Case took a far brighter view: "The lack of new home building is a huge help that a lot of people are ignoring," says Case. "People think I'm crazy to be optimistic, but housing is looking like the little engine that could."
To see where real estate is truly headed, it's critical to keep your eye firmly on the fundamentals that, over time, always determine the course of prices and construction. During the last decade's historic run-up in prices, there were repeatedly warned that things were moving too fast. The fundamentals are now pointing in the opposite direction.
So let's state it simply and forcibly: Housing is back.
Two basic factors are laying the foundation for dramatic recovery in residential real estate. The first is the historic drop in new construction that so amazes Castleman. The second is a steep decline in prices, on the order of 30% nationwide since 2006, and as much as 55% in the hardest-hit markets. The story of this downturn has been an astonishing flight from the traditional American approach of buying new houses to an embrace of renting. But the new affordability will gradually lure Americans back to buying homes. And the return of the homeowner will start raising prices in many markets this year.
Of course, home prices are low and home construction is weak for a reason: incredibly low demand. For our scenario to play out, America will need a decent economy, with job creation and consumer confidence continuing to claw their way back to normal.
One big fear is that today's tight credit standards will chill the market. But we're really returning to the standards that prevailed before the craze, and those requirements didn't stop prices and homebuilding from rising in a good economy. "The credit standards are now at about historical levels, excluding the bubble period," says Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody's Analytics. "We saw prices rising with fundamentals in those periods, and it will happen again."
To see why, let's examine the remarkable shift in home affordability. A new study by Deutsche Bank measures affordability in two ways: first, the share of income Americans are paying to own a home. And second, the cost of owning vs. renting. On the first metric, the analysis finds that homeowners now pay just 9.8% of their income in after-tax mortgage, tax, and insurance payments. That's down from 17.2% at the bubble's peak in 2007, and by far the lowest number in the Deutsche Bank database, going back to 1999. The second measure, the cost of owning compared with renting, should also inspire potential buyers. In 28 out of 54 major markets, it's now cheaper to pay a mortgage and other major costs than to rent the same house. What's most compelling is that in all of the distressed markets, owning now wins by a wide margin -- a stunning reversal from four years ago. It now costs 34% less than renting in Atlanta. In Miami the average rent is now $1,031 a month, vs. the $856 it costs to carry a ranch house or stucco cottage as an owner.
Not all markets will bounce back equally, of course. Housing resembles the weather: The exact conditions are different in every city. But in general the big U.S. markets fall into two different climate zones right now. We'll call them the "nondistressed markets" and the "foreclosure markets." A more detailed look shows why the forecast for both is favorable.
No cities went untouched by the collapse in prices over the past few years. But markets such as Northern Virginia, Indianapolis, Minneapolis, San Diego, the San Francisco suburbs, and virtually all of Texas held up reasonably well. In those areas prices spiked far less than in bubble cities -- the foreclosure markets we'll get to shortly -- chiefly because they didn't get nearly as many speculators who thought they could flip the homes or rent them to snowbirds.
The nondistressed markets will be able to get prices rising and construction growing far faster than the harder-hit areas for a simple reason: Although some of these markets are still suffering from foreclosures, they don't need to work through the big overhang haunting a Las Vegas or a Phoenix. The number of new homes for sale or in the pipeline is extraordinarily low in nondistressed markets. San Diego is typical. It has just 921 freestanding homes for sale or under construction, compared with 4,425 in late 2005. The challenge for these cities is to generate enough demand to reduce inventories of existing, or resale, homes. In the entire country the resale supply stands at 3.5 million houses and condos. That's a fairly high number, since it would take more than eight months to sell those properties; seven months or below is the threshold for a strong market.
But in the nondistressed cities, the existing home inventory is lower, closer to seven months on average. So a modest increase in demand will translate into strong gains in both prices and new construction. That should happen quickly, because most of those markets -- including Silicon Valley, Northern Virginia, and Texas -- are now showing good job growth.
Zandi of Moody's Analytics expects that prices will rise three to four points faster than inflation for the next few years in virtually all of the nondistressed markets. His view is that prices will increase in line with rents, which are now growing briskly because apartments are in short supply. Those higher rents will encourage buyers to cross the street from an apartment to a home of their own.
In Northern Virginia, Chris Bratz, an engineer, and his wife, Amy DiElsi, a publicist, are planning to leave their rental apartment and become homeowners for the first time. The main reason? Buying has simply become a far better deal than renting. "The market got completely inflated, then it crashed, so prices are coming back to where they should be," says Chris. As the couple have watched prices fall, they have also watched the rent on their apartment spiral upward, reaching $2,700 a month. They calculate that they should be able to purchase a townhouse for between $400,000 and $500,000 and pay less per month for a mortgage.
The nondistressed markets will also lead the way in construction. Zandi predicts that for the nation as a whole, single-family housing "starts" -- measured when a builder pours a foundation for a new home -- will rise from 470,000 in 2010 to as much as 700,000 this year. A large portion of that activity will happen in nondistressed markets where a tightening supply of resale houses will start making new homes look like a good deal. "Our main competition is from resales," says Jeff Mezger, CEO of KB Home. "The prices of those homes have stayed so low, because of low demand, that it's hampered the ability of builders to sell new houses."
But many would-be buyers simply prefer a brand-new house. Eventually they'll move from renters to buyers, and the trend will accelerate now that prices are no longer dropping. In Minneapolis, Yuan Qu and her husband, Xiang Chen, a researcher at the University of Minnesota, just moved from a two-bedroom rental to a new light-blue four-bedroom ranch with a chocolate-colored roof on a spacious corner lot. They paid $400,000, a bargain price compared with a few years ago. The couple, both in their early thirties, moved to Minnesota from China six years ago. "We wanted to buy a house, and we've been waiting and waiting and waiting," says Qu. "The prices went down for so long, we finally thought they couldn't keep falling." For Qu the only choice was new construction. "We're not very handy people," she admits.
Foreclosures put downward pressure on the market far out of proportion to their numbers because of markdown pricing. "We had levels of inventory even higher than this in 1990 and 1991," says MIT economist William Wheaton. "But they were traditional listings, not foreclosures, so they didn't create the big discounts you get with foreclosures."
Wheaton reckons that we'll see a flow of around 1 million foreclosures a year, at a fairly even pace, from now through 2013. That figure is frequently cited as evidence that the market is doomed for years in most markets. Not so. The reason is that the vast bulk of those units, probably over 600,000, according to Gleb Nechayev, an economist with real estate firm CB Richard Ellis, are being converted to rentals either by investors or their current owners. Those properties are finding plenty of renters, since the rental market is still extremely strong across the country. Remember, the millions who lost their homes to foreclosure still need somewhere to live.
A typical investor is Alex Barbalat, a Russian immigrant who's purchased seven homes east of San Francisco in the towns of Bay Point, Antioch, and Pittsburg. His average purchase price is around $100,000 for homes that once sold for between $300,000 and $500,000. But he has no trouble finding renters, since his tenants can commute to jobs in San Francisco on the BART transit system. Barbalat is pocketing rental yields on the prices he paid of around 12%, and he's in no hurry to sell. "I'm holding them until prices drastically rise," he says.
Investment funds are also entering the game. Dotan Y. Melech looks for bargains in Las Vegas for UnitedASM, a firm he co-founded that manages apartments and other real estate investments. The firm has raised more than $20 million from outside investors to purchase distressed properties. So far, Melech has bought around 300 houses and plans to purchase another 200 this year. He has no trouble renting the houses he buys, since, he estimates, occupancy rates in Las Vegas are touching 95%. The "cap rate," or return on investment after all expenses, is between 8% and 10% -- twice the rate on 10-year Treasuries. Melech rents to people who lost their homes but are reliable renters. "A lot of people can't be buyers because their credit got hurt," he says.
Even with investors jumping in, buying activity in foreclosure markets hasn't yet increased enough to bring inventories down. It will soon. Zandi thinks prices will fall a couple of percentage points lower in the distressed markets in the short run. "But that will be overshooting," he says. "It's like an elastic band. If prices do drop this year, they will need to bounce back because they'll be far too low compared with rents and replacement cost." Renters will come off the sidelines to purchase homes in the years ahead, precisely the opposite trend of the past few years.
Consider the example of Michael Dynda, a retired Air Force avionics technician who now works for a government contractor in Las Vegas. Dynda, 49, is a first-time buyer who put off purchasing for years, in part because prices were falling so rapidly in Las Vegas, with no bottom in sight. But last year the combination of bargain prices and low mortgage rates became too good to resist. He ended up purchasing a 2,300-square-foot stucco home for $240,000, or about half what it would have fetched in 2007. Dynda got a 4.38% home loan, and pays the same amount on his mortgage as on the rent on the house he left to become a homeowner. "The timing was about as good as it could get," says Dynda.
Back on the ranch, Mike Castleman is lounging in his creek-front mansion, built from "a hundred tons of fine central Texas limestone." As he shows off his collection of custom-made guitars, including one crafted to resemble the skin of a rattlesnake, the homespun housing guru once again returns to his favorite topic.
Castleman claims that this recovery will look like all the others: It will bring a severe shortage of housing. He invokes the livestock business to explain. "It takes three years between the time a bull mates with a cow and when you get a calf ready for market," he says. "That's how it is in housing too. We'll get a big surge in demand and the drywall companies will take a long time to ramp up, and it will take years to get new lots approved. Buyers will show up looking for a house in a subdivision, and all the houses will be sold. The builders will tell them it will take six months to deliver a house." But those folks, says Castleman, will be set on buying a place. "And they'll want it so bad they'll bid the prices up!" In other words: Beat the crowd.
Mike Castleman, the Texan with the best realtime view of housing in the U.S., tells editor-atlarge Shawn Tully that the naysayers are about to get a big surprise: rising prices for new homes.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

MBA Purchase Applications

Released  3-9-11  - A.M.

                                                                        Prior                         Actual
Purchase Index – W/W Change                 -6.1%                         12.5%
Refinance Index                                           -6.5%                         17.2%
Composite Index                                          -6.5%                         15.5%

Highlights
One week’s data is only one week’s data, but the Mortgage Banker’s Assoc. believes that job market improvement is starting to pave the way for housing market improvement.   MBA’s purchase index, which measures volume of mortgage applications for home purchases, surged 12.5% in the week of March 4th – it’s best reading of the year.  Rates remain favorable, at an avg. 4.93% for 30 yr. loans.  The refinancing index also revived in the week – up 17.2% - the best reading since mid-January.

Definition  
The MBA compiles various mortgage loan indexes. 
The purchase applications index measures applications at mortgage lenders.  This is a leading indicator for single family home sales and housing construction.