In the annual mortgage practices report among lending institutions the Federal reserve said that the denial rate was about 32 percent, which was about the same as in 2007. This affects all of us here in the Washington Home loan arena as well as the rest of the nation. Being able to overcome these types of hurdles requires diligence in order to make a living in the Washington home loan area as well as the US. Loan officers must be at the top of their game and be diligent in making certain how to help their clients qualify and how to get them qualified.
Using different organizations one must first help their challenged customers become credit worthy. Using a good credit clean-up organization is key. I know from first hand experience it has made a difference for me in the Washington home loan area.
]]>It looks as though there maybe a new and better credit scoring system that is being considered by the 3 major credit bureaus – Transunion, Equifax, and Experian. Currently the mechanism’s that make up the scoring that is used today is extremely complex and seems to place to much emphasis on the small things that affect credit adversely.
Some of the positive things of the new system will be:
- The new system takes into account more of the borrowers history and will penalize individuals less for single unusual events.
- There are additional scoring card levels which will allow for finer adjustments of an individuals credit score.
- The new system will reduce the power of credit collectors, because of single events that are accidentally reported in error which will result in a less impact on your score.
- With a more accurate means of scoring, the result should mean that there will be less foreclosures, not only here in the Seattle Home Mortgage area but nationally as well.Sea
The major downside to this new scoring system is that it has not been currently adopted by the government agencies of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. It is however being considered by them and will most likely be approved in the near future. The ultimate attribute to this is that it can be a huge boost to the current housing market, because it will give lenders a truer insight as to a respective borrowers credit worthiness in buying or refinancing a home.
]]>Pending sales of previously owned U.S. homes raced to a two-year high in July. The National Association of Realtors said its Pending Home Sales Index, based on contracts signed but not yet closed rose 3.2% to a reading of 97.6. This is the highest reading since June of 2007.
Pending home sales contracts have risen for a record six straight months.
In other housing news, Reuters conducted an independent survey among top economists on the future of home prices. The consensus: Home prices will increase in 2010. This further stresses the point that the time to buy at the bottom might be slipping away. Courtesy of Sierra Pacific.
]]>Housing sales are up, the price of homes has been going up the past five months in a row and the supply of homes for sale are down for both new home and existing homes. Keep in mind, this improved housing data is happening during a recession, raising unemployment and a slight uptick in mortgage rates in the past few weeks, even more reason to believe a turn around has started. This information courtesy of Monitor Rates.com
]]>Today’s mortgage rates are nearing 5.00 percent again according to a survey released today by the Mortgage Bankers Association. Courtesy of Monitor Bank rates.
]]>Mortgage-Rates-Drift-Lower-as-Interest-Rates-Head-Down, Mortgage rates are down this week over last week as 10-year Treasury notes are back below 4.50 percent as of this morning, brought on by a consumer confidence report on Friday showing a surprising drop in the Reuters/University of Michigan index.
Although the recession is expected to end this year, people are feeling less optimistic about their personal finance at anytime in the past 60 years. This information a courtesy of Monitor Bank Rates.com
]]>