Saturday, December 13, 2008

State of The Housing Market

Wow its been a very busy two weeks. Starting November 25 rates took a dive and have stayed down to levels not seen since the beginning of the refi boom in 2002. About mid week, rates had only been lower on 5 days in the last 50 years and 6 days where they were the same. this should be some great news for the market but we haven't seen alot of buyers jump back in yet.

I've been so busy with refinances working morning and night. While this is good for business, the whole purpose of the Treasury buying plan was to pull buyers back in helping to reduce our bloated inventory and stabilize home prices. I'm already starting to see some signs of stabilizing home prices and I think we've reached the lowest point we're going to see so and only back up is where we should focus our attention.

You'll hear alot of professionals and economists give their opinion on the market saying we're going to see more declines, mortgages are few and far between, and credit is so tight; just to name a few. I'm not saying credit hasn't been tight, I'm just saying that the media does make it sound alot worse than it is creating even more fear. Fear is the worst thing we need right now.

What happened in the mortgage market needed to happen to flush out the risky loans, bad mortgage brokers, and corrupt title companies. I'm not happy about the record foreclosures but little was done to regulate these people. The few bad apples ruin it for everybody else. Loans are plentiful, especially government insured loans like FHA, VA, and Rural Housing loans.

When shopping for a mortgage make sure you work out your budget, that you have at least 3.5% down (this will be the new FHA requirment Jan 2009), and take into consideration costs that are associated with buying a new home. Its been communicated by the media that you can't get a loan unless you have 20% down. This is simply not true.

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