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Tuesday, March 2, 2010

A Bad Credit Mortgage

After the home prices turned down:

Then the many renters are looking longingly at the real estate listings and wishing that they'd paid more attention to their credit rating. After several years of real estate BOOM, the bubble seems to have burst – or at least started to deflate. In May, the median single family home price in Boston was an astounding 12% lower than just one year earlier, and that trend was reflected around the country. While that's bad news for anyone who bought their home a year ago with the expectation of turning a profit, the falling price of real estate is very good news for those who have been waiting for prices to come down.
If you've been weighing the difference in price between renting and buying, the market has shifted enough in favor of buyers that the time to buy is now. Interest prices are down as the Feds try to stimulate the economy and encourage people to buy. Home prices are down as sellers have their homes revalued for the realities of the current market and willingly accept far less than they would have last year at this time. When you combine the two, you'll find that the cost of a mortgage PLUS taxes is actually less than what you're paying in rent.
Unfortunately, there's another reality at work in the falling market prices as well. New regulations surrounding the sub-prime mortgage market and the recent rise in defaulted mortgages and foreclosures have made lenders more wary of handing out bad credit mortgages – and made it far harder for prospective home buyers to secure any mortgage at all.
The meaning of "bad credit mortgage" has changed significantly in the new home buying market, with a 'bad credit rating' being considerably higher than it used to be.

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