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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
Subprime Mortgage freeze. Good or Bad?
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<blockquote data-quote="C6 Vette" data-source="post: 5855470" data-attributes="member: 46522"><p>The Bush Administration,treasury Dept., and the private banking sector have agreed to freeze teaser rates on ARM's for five years that were initiated between Jan. 2005 through July,2007...To qualify, you cannot have any delinquent payments on the mortgage teaser introductory period, must live in the property, and prove that you could not afford the mortgage when it resets to the higher rate...</p><p></p><p>IMO, it seems the U.S. govt. is rewarding irresponsible ppl that bought more than they could afford.....To me, this does'nt fix the problem, it only prolongs it. Sooner or later they will need to start paying down principle.....In five years from now when this "bailout time" has expired, is there any definate proof that interest rates will be the same as they are now? Will the housing market see a steep incline in value in five years? These two things would have to happen in order to make this plan work...</p><p></p><p>With values still inflated above what they should be, I just can't see how many ppl will be able to drop 20% down on a $500K house and be able to pay on a $400K 30 year fixed rate mortgage...Because after the ARM debacle, the traditional 30 year fixed will be the only loan type to get...Which requires a prime credit score and PROOF of income, which in the last few years have been thrown out the window by many underwriting departments..</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="C6 Vette, post: 5855470, member: 46522"] The Bush Administration,treasury Dept., and the private banking sector have agreed to freeze teaser rates on ARM's for five years that were initiated between Jan. 2005 through July,2007...To qualify, you cannot have any delinquent payments on the mortgage teaser introductory period, must live in the property, and prove that you could not afford the mortgage when it resets to the higher rate... IMO, it seems the U.S. govt. is rewarding irresponsible ppl that bought more than they could afford.....To me, this does'nt fix the problem, it only prolongs it. Sooner or later they will need to start paying down principle.....In five years from now when this "bailout time" has expired, is there any definate proof that interest rates will be the same as they are now? Will the housing market see a steep incline in value in five years? These two things would have to happen in order to make this plan work... With values still inflated above what they should be, I just can't see how many ppl will be able to drop 20% down on a $500K house and be able to pay on a $400K 30 year fixed rate mortgage...Because after the ARM debacle, the traditional 30 year fixed will be the only loan type to get...Which requires a prime credit score and PROOF of income, which in the last few years have been thrown out the window by many underwriting departments.. [/QUOTE]
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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
Subprime Mortgage freeze. Good or Bad?
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