Getting a Loan Will Get Even Harder for Buyers
Posted at 10:11 AM, Nov. 6, 2008
If you are among the many buyers who are waiting things out, you are in for rude awakening. Opportunity with great real estate prices may continue, but obtaining a mortgage will not. If you are not considered a prime buyer, now is the time to act and get your foot in the door before it's too late. Read the latest from Steven Levitt, Vice President of Lending at Guaranteed Rate.
Planning To Buy A Home In 2009? Expect A Tougher Mortgage Road Ahead. Posted: 05 Nov 2008 09:45 AM CST In a quarterly survey of 84 banks, 75 percent of respondent banks tightened mortgage guidelines over the last 3 months for the most qualified of home loan applicants. "Prime" is a vague term when it comes to mortgages, but, historically, a prime borrower is one that can document: Historically, banks bent over backwards to lend money to this class of borrower. Today, they're thinking twice. The chart's steep ascent reinforces that members of all tax brackets face consequences from the current credit market turmoil. And, although some corners of credit looked poised to recover -- interbank lending, for one -- the mortgage market is yet unaffected and should be among the last to thaw. All prospective home buyers should prepare for the likelihood that mortgage guidelines continue to toughen before they start to ease. Mortgage applicants on the cusp of being approved today will almost certainly be turned down for a mortgage in 2009. Owning real estate can require a tremendous amount of advance planning and, sometimes, looking at the past is the best way to prepare for what's coming ahead. According to the Federal Reserve's survey, what's coming ahead is more mortgage application scrutiny.
Latest From : The Levitt Report
The Federal Reserve confirmed what most of us already knew -- getting qualified for a "prime mortgage" is increasingly more difficult.


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