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Wow! The credit market is brutal.
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Thread: Wow! The credit market is brutal.

  1. #1
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    Default Wow! The credit market is brutal.

    My wife and I are in the process of buying a new house in upstate NY. I'm 32 and have been buying houses for investment (flipping) since I was 23. The last house I bought was about five years ago, pre-housing market/credit crash. My wife and I have very good credit, long term employment, and our only debt is our (very small) current mortgage. I have previously been dealing with only short term loans with as little down as possible since I rarely keep an investment house for more than six months. Since this will be our primary home, I am putting down 20%. This morning I received an email from my bank stating that in addition to the 20% down, I need to show the bank that I have assets totaling 50% of the amount financed. Luckily, we're in a position to do that but this just totally blew my mind. I bought my first home with less than $10k down including my closing costs. My how the times have changed. On a good note, the interest rates are incredibly low. Sorry for the rant, I'm still coming to terms with reality.
    Patrick

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    There are several economic factors affecting this:

    The debt to capital ratio for most banks is too unfavorable for the banks. This is due to the many non-performing loans on their books now. The Fed has now defined non-performing loans as loans that are 90 days past due or no longer accruing interest...the latter which the banks have strenuously objected to.

    The Fed has also required banks to up their reserve funds significantly to cover their non-performing loans (at or near 100% of the outstanding debt on these assets). Hence, the bad debt to capital ratio.

    All of this has caused the banks to pull back in an attempt to shore up their own assests.

    And here's the real kicker....

    The big banks are currently borrowing money from the Fed at 0% interest and making risk free loans to the Treasury @ 3% interest. Why should they take a chance on you when the federal government is paying them not to?
    Ah, nothing relieves the discomfort of GAS pains like the sound of the UPS truck rumbling down your street. It's like the musician's Beano.

  3. #3
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    Blooz, I have a background in economics and finance. You are right on. The reality doesn't set in until it hits home (pun intended).
    Patrick

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    My Dad was a real estate appraiser most of his career and was wanting me to re-finance my mortgage from the current 6% fixed to a 4% 15 year fixed.
    It sounded like a perfect opportunity until they demanded 20-25% down. Sorry, but not too many people have that kind of cash, especially not me!
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    50% collateral really what a joke that is..........
    It appears things have went to far to the right after being to far to the left.
    With most folks houses being upside down where do they expect people to get that kind of collateral. Looks like only the top 10% will be getting new and refinancing home loans what a joke.
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    Reading this thread has pretty much dashed my hopes of owning a home anytime soon. Well, I guess there's always the shining beacon of hope of everyman; the "Manufactured" home. Still, I'd rather not live in something that has wheels under it. Call me old fashioned, but I like my foundation to be immobile.
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    Heh, when we bought our summer house we didn't have a penny to pay on advance (I never have any money just creditcard debt) but they accepted a mortgage to our house to equal amount. Just made sure it's a non-forcible mortgage meaning they cannot force selling the house if we don't pay etc. so it's safe. After 3 years now, though, the value of the summer house exceeds our mortgage debt by at least 50k though. I'm constantly thinking whether to pay off the debt in the next 5 or so years and then live debt free, or instead withdraw more debt money for living now and keep paying the debt for 15-20 years more. I sure would like a newer car at some point etc. and for that we do need to take more debt I guess.
    Dee

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    That's crazy, showing assets totaling 50% in addition to your 20% down. I wonder how that'll affect my ability to sell my house when the time comes. I hope things calm down within the next year or so, but I'm not holding my breath.

    Anyway, I'm glad you could swing it regardless.
    Quote Originally Posted by Spudman
    Does anyone read the original post?
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    Remember this the next time a politician whines about how slow home sales are.
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  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by FrankenFretter
    ....the shining beacon of hope of everyman; the "Manufactured" home. Still, I'd rather not live in something that has wheels under it. Call me old fashioned, but I like my foundation to be immobile.
    Yep, you can get a 'Modular Home' delivered on a couple or 3 flatbed trailers to be set on a foundation, even with a basement under it, or, if you don't mind being labeled 'Trailer Trash' by myopics like my ex-son-in-law, go for a 'Mobile Home' because it's delivered on its own wheels, like this 1,456 sq. ft. 3 BR/2BA 'double-wide', hauled in by 2 truckers:



    But a week later, the axles and wheels get pulled, the 2 modules get zipped together & about 100 or so piers are set to hold it up:


    Then a block foundation gets built around that to 'set' it all, and you throw a 2-car garage up next to it:



    And eventually, you do a few more things to make it home and it looks like this:



    It doesn't get a 'conventional' mortgage because it's a 'Manufactured Home'...only certain lenders (like US Bank) offer 'Manufactured Housing Loans', sorta like a car loan for 20 years, and you can't get standard 'Homeowners' Insurance, you gotta find 'Mobile Home' Insurance (Allstate).

    But it was half the price of a 'Real House' , it's home...and we're not waiting for an eviction notice like that ex-son-in-law for defaulting on the mortgage for his palace ...who may soon be 'homeless', while we'll just be 'trailer trash'.
    ^^
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    Pre-fab houses have come a long way. They can be quite stylish and are well made and well insulated. As WD said....they bring it in on flatbeds and will put it ON a concrete foundation if you'd like.

    My niece has one and it's a beaut.

    Quite frankly, at prices today, and problems getting loans.....it's a wonder anyone can afford to buy a house. I paid my mortgage off 6 years ago and I get the willies just hearing how much people pay for their mortgage.

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    Over here I think most houses are more or less pre-fabricated. You just need to dig a hole six feet deep and fill it with plumbing and concrete and insulation etc. infrastructure, then you get custom built wall pieces from the factory, put them up, add rafters, then cover everything with whatever you like for surface materials.

    I was actually shocked when I was in the U.S. that even upstate N.Y. where it's just as cold as here in the winter, many houses seemed to be built quite flimsily compared to how most houses are built here. I mean, the walls seemed at best half the thickness of what we use, and often there were mere single or double glassed windows, when we always have 3 or 4 layers. And the whole house might be built with no basement/deep concrete base that extends under the earth frost (3-4 feet), just on stilts of some kind. I suppose the cold time of the year is much shorter there or something, not warranting for more insulation.
    Dee

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    Quote Originally Posted by deeaa
    Over here I think most houses are more or less pre-fabricated. You just need to dig a hole six feet deep and fill it with plumbing and concrete and insulation etc. infrastructure, then you get custom built wall pieces from the factory, put them up, add rafters, then cover everything with whatever you like for surface materials.

    I was actually shocked when I was in the U.S. that even upstate N.Y. where it's just as cold as here in the winter, many houses seemed to be built quite flimsily compared to how most houses are built here. I mean, the walls seemed at best half the thickness of what we use, and often there were mere single or double glassed windows, when we always have 3 or 4 layers. And the whole house might be built with no basement/deep concrete base that extends under the earth frost (3-4 feet), just on stilts of some kind. I suppose the cold time of the year is much shorter there or something, not warranting for more insulation.
    And that's what makes America great - cutting costs at any cost in order to increase the botom line.....

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    Wing, there's nothing wrong with manufactured homes. They aren't my thing, but that's just because I like houses with history. My current house is in a neighborhood that's on the historical register. It was built in 1889. The house I'm buying is in a town of 300 people and was built in 1850. There's something about living in a house that's been cared for by generations of people that appeals to me. I feel as though I'm continuing the houses legacy.
    Patrick

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    Hurricanes like manufactured homes. They're the second course right after the mobile home appetizer...

    Actually, all new homes down here are supposed to be built to a code that used to be called the "Miami/Dade" code. It just means that there are more stringent specs for building materials now and your house shouldn't blow away in less than 130-140 mph winds. The manufactured homes are supposed to meet the new standards...but so are mobile homes, and every hurricane that crashes through blows a bunch of those to Oz.

    My home that was built well before the Miami/Dade code went into effect here has withstood three direct hits from hurricanes and came through with barely a scratch (except for the flimsy aluminum screen pool enclosure. But even that has been rebuilt to the new code now).

    Now, I have been to places that had no building code at all. None. Zip. Nada. Like north Georgia where we used to have a second home. We found a builder who constructed his homes to the North Carolina building codes which were almost identical to Florida at the time. He built homes in north Georgia and North Carolina only a couple of miles away, so it was easier for him to standardize them all.
    Ah, nothing relieves the discomfort of GAS pains like the sound of the UPS truck rumbling down your street. It's like the musician's Beano.

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    BC, is there a relatively easy way to retrofit braces and reinfocing palates to, say, roofs, even on an older code structure?
    My impression (tv show?) was that *some* securing was going a long way.

    A similar type of issue is houses where the soleplate is not bolted down or into the foundation. I think it is common in older houses (like mine, 1930's).
    This may surprise a lot of folks in case of a mild earthquake, someday, finding their houses just slipping off the foundation.
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    Wingsdad I hear you brother, we have been in our factory built home for over 20 years, no one believes that it was brought in on two flat beds but it has been and still is a great home.

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    Quote Originally Posted by poodlesrule
    BC, is there a relatively easy way to retrofit braces and reinfocing palates to, say, roofs, even on an older code structure?
    My impression (tv show?) was that *some* securing was going a long way.

    A similar type of issue is houses where the soleplate is not bolted down or into the foundation. I think it is common in older houses (like mine, 1930's).
    This may surprise a lot of folks in case of a mild earthquake, someday, finding their houses just slipping off the foundation.
    Yes, there are hurricane straps that can be attached to the trusses that will bring them up to code. Of course "up to code" assumes that the rest of the roof substructure is not sub-standard in that it was constructed in accordance with the building codes of the last 20-30 years.
    Ah, nothing relieves the discomfort of GAS pains like the sound of the UPS truck rumbling down your street. It's like the musician's Beano.

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    Also, if your home's trusses use gang nail gussets, do yourself a favor (as well as your local fire department) and reinforce the ones you can get to with screws or heavy brads. These substandard POS systems fail quickly in a fire and are not all that strong under high wind or heavy snow loads.
    If possible, reinforce them with galvanized plates and long screws, but without removing the old gussets, of course.

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