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Archive for the 'Adjustable Rate Mortgages' Category

30-Year Mortgage Rates Rise, Adjustable Rates Fall

Friday, September 28th, 2007

Rates on 30-Year fixed rated mortgages rose for a second straight week. (more…)

Lock in your fixed rates now

Thursday, September 20th, 2007

With all the bad mortgage and housing market news, FloridaHomeLoan.com would like to offer you some positive mortgage advice. (more…)

Owners Fight to Make Adjustable-Rate Florida Mortgage Payments

Tuesday, September 4th, 2007

The state’s Florida mortgage crisis hasn’t hit bottom yet - but many homeowners have. (more…)

A Farewell to Adjustable-Rate Florida Mortgages

Thursday, August 30th, 2007

Consumers are shunning adjustable-rate Florida mortgages in droves as rates surged to levels not seen in over six years, data from an industry trade group showed yesterday. (more…)

A One Percent Florida Mortgage?

Monday, June 25th, 2007

The official-looking notice appeared in his mailbox last year, and the promise of a Florida mortgage rate as low as 1 percent was too good to ignore. (more…)

An Adjustable-Rate Florida Mortgage Story Gone Bad

Friday, June 22nd, 2007

The official-looking notice appeared in his mailbox last year. To Denith Harrigan, the promise of a Florida mortgage rate as low as 1 percent was too good to ignore. (more…)

Florida Mortgage Rates Rise on Adjustable Loans, Spell Trouble

Sunday, June 17th, 2007

Turmoil in the housing market is swirling around an increase in troubled Florida mortgage loans and a new threat, rising interest rates. (more…)

Inside the World of Adjustable-Rate Florida Mortgages

Wednesday, May 30th, 2007

Why are so many Florida mortgage holders falling into foreclosure? Far too many are unfamiliar with the terms of their documents.

With that in mind, let’s take a look at the key terms that comprise adjustable-rate Florida home loans. This should help you avoid confusion… (more…)

Option Adjustable Rate Florida Home Loans: Trouble Emerges

Saturday, April 21st, 2007

Subprime Florida home loans have dominated headlines this year, but now investors and consumers are growing wary of another risky type of home loan: the option adjustable-rate mortgage, or option ARM.

(more…)

Adjustable-Rate Florida Mortgage Problems? Call Your Lender to Negotiate

Wednesday, April 4th, 2007

The day of reckoning is near for millions of Americans - many of them in Florida - who financed their property via adjustable-rate mortgages.

Their mortgage rates are already resetting higher, and in some cases, payments so small in 2004-2005 are now pushing homeowners to their limit… or beyond.

Florida MortgageWhat is a borrower to do? You can try to make ends meet by cutting back on expenses like premium cable channels and going out to eat. Hey, every little bit helps when it comes to your mortgage payments.

But don’t despair. There is another, much more simple way to look at this problem: You, the borrower, are not powerless.

“Consumers get the feeling it is a lost cause to do anything, but it is pretty much the opposite,” Harry H. Dinham, president of the National Association of Mortgage Brokers, said.

“The most motivated people are the lenders.”

Homeowners should seek a lower rate or switch to an interest-only mortgage for a spell. They might even ask for more time to pay, just as long as it does not create negative amortization, or letting the debt increase.

The biggest mistake a Florida mortgage holder can make is the act of dodging the loan officer when trouble arises.

Know this: Your Florida mortgage lender does not want to get stuck with your property. They really don’t. They have to maintain it, list it, sell it on the open market and probably take a loss.

Some analysts say that it costs a bank an average of $40,000 to foreclose on a Florida home loan. That amount gives the borrower room to negotiate - if they’re smart enough to swallow their pride.

Christopher Cagan, director of research at First American CoreLogic, a mortgage research firm in Santa Ana, Calif., has studied databases with information on 58 million mortgages and sees a wave of mortgage resets moving through the system between now and 2010.

First, it will be mortgages with low teaser rates, followed by subprime loans and finally, the loans to homeowners with good credit.

This transition is not enough to hurt the overall economy - about $112 billion will be lost, he estimates - but it is a world of pain for the households and the people left holding the Florida mortgage.

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