Engineer wrote:In the right market and in the right price range, real estate still sells quickly. In the wrong market and in the wrong price range, good luck. As Americans we've gotten used to the easy liquidity of the last decade, but just because lending standards have gone back towards their historical norms isn't a reason to think that the sky has fallen. The simple rule of thumb is that you shouldn't buy in any market where housing prices exceed 3X the prevailing wage, and you should always be careful not to buy in an area where the local industry is in decline. If you follow those two simple guidelines, it isn't too hard to make money on real estate.
[/quote]Engineer wrote:
In my experience banks will lend to you if you have assets to back up the loan. They have learned their lesson in the real estate mess and will do their homework on you before they lend you money unlike before when any minimum wage earner could get a mortgage. This is a good thing. People that are financially responsible (pay their bills on time, low debt, good credit history, employment history, etc.) will be able to get better terms on loans then those that are not.
frugalcanuck wrote:Engineer wrote:
In my experience banks will lend to you if you have assets to back up the loan. They have learned their lesson in the real estate mess and will do their homework on you before they lend you money unlike before when any minimum wage earner could get a mortgage. This is a good thing. People that are financially responsible (pay their bills on time, low debt, good credit history, employment history, etc.) will be able to get better terms on loans then those that are not.
frugalcanuck wrote:Engineer wrote:
In my experience banks will lend to you if you have assets to back up the loan. They have learned their lesson in the real estate mess and will do their homework on you before they lend you money unlike before when any minimum wage earner could get a mortgage. This is a good thing. People that are financially responsible (pay their bills on time, low debt, good credit history, employment history, etc.) will be able to get better terms on loans then those that are not.
68Camaro wrote:A lot of the diffferences of opinion seems to be a strong tendency of people to believe that their personal/local situation applies uniformly to the rest of the country at all times.
68Camaro wrote:To all those in this thread that are saying that secured real estate loans are either "easy" to get, or have returned us back to some "norm". What the banks SAY in their advertising is one thing. What they actually DO is something totally different. Have any of you actually gotten one of those loans within the past two years? If not, you may be missing a lot that has changed in the past few years. I went through it 15 months ago. Before that I had secured loans in 2005, and in the early-mid 90s, and three times in the 80s. The experience of Nov/Dec 2010 was unlike anything I've ever experienced in my life, as well as what I recall of my parents and grandparents experiences. I've related this in detail in a couple of prior threads.
68Camaro wrote:To all those in this thread that are saying that secured real estate loans are either "easy" to get, or have returned us back to some "norm".
68Camaro wrote:To all those in this thread that are saying that secured real estate loans are either "easy" to get, or have returned us back to some "norm". What the banks SAY in their advertising is one thing. What they actually DO is something totally different. Have any of you actually gotten one of those loans within the past two years? If not, you may be missing a lot that has changed in the past few years. I went through it 15 months ago. Before that I had secured loans in 2005, and in the early-mid 90s, and three times in the 80s. The experience of Nov/Dec 2010 was unlike anything I've ever experienced in my life, as well as what I recall of my parents and grandparents experiences. I've related this in detail in a couple of prior threads.
68Camaro wrote: Have any of you actually gotten one of those loans within the past two years? If not, you may be missing a lot that has changed in the past few years.
PMLurker wrote:68Camaro wrote: Have any of you actually gotten one of those loans within the past two years? If not, you may be missing a lot that has changed in the past few years.
My brother just got a mortgage two months ago. Technically it's not me, but I can speak of his experience. He didn't have any major issues but was pretty stressed about the whole process as the bank was in a rush to get all his financial info but took a long time to come through with the appraisal price of the house (which matched what his realtor told him).
Banks will loan good borrowers money. They are a business and this is how they make money. Banks are not giving home loans that do not adhere to 80% of Loan To Value (LTV). The bank has their own appraiser who can have a different opinion than the broker's appraisal. Before closing, if there are foreclosures or short sales nearby, this will drive down the "value" of the home. If the loan falls out of the 80% LTV ratio either the buyer has to pony up the capital to cover the difference or the seller agrees to renegotiate or they will not get the loan.
The sellers, buyers, realtors, appraisers and banks all need to be on the same page for everything to work, but unfortunately this is not always the case.
68Camaro wrote:Exactly... Now what does this really mean? What it means is they want to know EVERYTHING about you. They are completely in your pants. You provide them everything they want, regardless of how stupid it is, how difficult it is, or invasive it is. Provide your tax return - yep you'd better believe it. They don't trust just your bank statements or your pay stubs. Ah, but trust your copy of tax return? - nope. They require you to allow them to request the IRS release the IRS copies of your tax returns directly to them. You do it to their schedule. If they forget to ask something and the schedule is delayed, and something you've provided goes outside the acceptable time window, it's not their problem it's your problem, and you might have to start all over. You might lose the deal because of it. It's ridiculous. It's absurd. It's appalling. And I wouldn't do it ever again if I have a choice. Stressed? If you've not been through it, you have no idea... This is not "normal'.
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