Re: Ping or Calling Jeff Strickland Please Help

Re: Ping or Calling Jeff Strickland Please Help

  Home | Guides | Register Now! | Search | About
 alt.org.natl-assn-mortgage-brokers    Post an article   get this group's latest topics as an RSS feed add this group's latest topics to your My MSN content add this group's latest topics to your My Yahoo content
 Re: Ping or Calling Jeff Strickland Please Help Jeff Strickland Reply Send to a Friend   Print
 
Subject Author Date
Ping or Calling Jeff Strickland Please Help Bill Poston 04-16-2006

"$cott" <ezmortgageloanz@aol.com> wrote in message
news:1145476512.042158.312980@i39g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
>
>> You might run into issues with qualifying because your income is on the
>> low
>> side, as you already acknowledged.
>
> RESPONSE: There is no might about it, he will not qualify if he
> followed your advice (took a 3/1 or 1/1 ARM on the existing property)
> unless he went no doc.
>

Agreed.




>> In any case, I suggest a 3/1 on the new property, and your choice of the
>> 3/1
>> or 1/1 on the existing property. Take both with an Interest Only note.
>> This
>> will get the payment to its lowest possible number, for two reasons. The
>> 3/1
>> product represents more risk for you, and less risk for the lender, they
>> reward you with a lower rate, and the interest only has no principle
>> repayment. YOU CAN ALWAYS ELECT TO ADD PRINCIPLE REPAYMENT IF YOU WANT,
>> JUST
>> WRITE A LARGER CHECK. But, you want the lowest possible payments to
>> calculate your qualification. Assuming the SAME rate, 6.5%, the Interest
>> Only payment will be $400, or about 20% less than the fully amortized
>> payment. When the existing house is sold, then refinance the new house to
>> a
>> 30-year fixed.
>
> RESPONSE: I suggest that consider taking a HELOC instead of a 1/1 or
> 3/1 in your instance because, 1) You can access the money for free
> (HELOCs are no cost/low cost borrowing instruments; a 1/1 or 3/1 would
> cost several thousands of dollars to access the money in your existing
> home); 2) You can borrow just what you need for the downpayment with a
> HELOC; some lenders impose a min. loan amount that might require that
> you borrow more then you require with the 1/1 and 3/1; 3) You are only
> borrowing the money on the short term (HELOCs are not recommended for
> long term lending for a number of reasons that aren't important to you
> because you are borrowing short term). You will be in a stronger
> qualification position with only a 10-20K HELOC balance on the books as
> opposed to a 30-40K 1/1 or 3/1 ARM.
>

These are all good points. My only counter is that a HELOC might turn out to
be more costly IF the term gets stretched to the 3 year time frame. I
have not run the numbers, and only suggested the 3/1 and 1/1 as viable
alternatives to consider.






other useful resources:
Government National Mortgage Association - Ginnie Mae
The National Home Equity Mortgage Association
Fannie Mae Mortgage
Movie-Corner.com Movie Blog