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Ilyce N. Powell, CMPS™ - Certified Mortgage Planning Specialist

Can You Guess What Percentage Of Mortgages Are Still Paid On-Time?

Mortgages 60 days past due, as reported by TransUnionMortgage delinquencies are on the rise nationwide, but the news may not be as bad as it appears at first glance.

Using anonymous data from its national credit database, TransUnion reports that 4.58 percent of American homeowners were at least 60 days past due on mortgage payments last quarter.

Comparing the statistic to the data from a year ago, the credit reporting agency goes on to say that mortgage delinquencies are up 53 percent.

Although fair, the comparison carries a distinct, negative connotation because if we flip the data to its positive, the statistics don't seem nearly as menacing.

Consider: In the last quarter of 2008, 4.58 percent of homeowners were delinquent on their respective mortgages. The positive sign, therefore, is that 95.42 percent of homeowners were not delinquent on their home loans.

Furthermore, in looking at TransUnion's data for the 5 largest states in the Union, it's clear that the national delinquency rate is being skewed by California and Florida. New York and Texas, for example, exhibit delinquency rates below the national 4.58 percent marker.

North Dakota's delinquency rate hovers near 1 percent.

Headlines are designed to attract eyeballs and nothing else. To get the complete story, therefore -- the real story -- it never hurts to dig a little deeper into the facts.

(Image courtesy: TransUnion)

What's Ahead For Mortgage Rates This Week : March 2, 2009

Job losses are expected to exceed 600,000 in February 2009Mortgage markets worsened last week, taking interest rates with them.

A steady drip of sour economic news plus concerns about the banking system outmuscled Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke's congressional testimony in which he said the recession would likely end later this year.

Overall, mortgage rates have risen in 9 of the last 12 trading days.

This week, it's unclear in what direction mortgage rates will go. However, it won't be because of a lack of action.

The week starts with the 8:30 A.M. ET release of the Personal Spending report, a closely-monitored report that should make a broad market impact. Economists expect that spending increased in February, providing key support for economy.

If economists are wrong, though, and spending fell, it will cast doubt on the speed at which an economic recovery will occur. Consumer spending, after all, makes up two-thirds of the economy. No spending means no recovery.

Next, on Wednesday, the White House is expected to release the details of the Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan. Again, markets are watching for the broader impact of the news. If analysts and traders deem the plan effective, watch for stock markets to improve and bond markets to weaken.

This would cause mortgage rates to rise.

Then, Friday, we'll get to see February's official jobs number. Job loss is expected to exceed 600,000 for the month and unemployment may reach 8 percent. On many levels, if the jobs data meets the expectations, it would be okay with respect to mortgage rates.

As always, it's recommended that you float your mortgage rate cautiously. Wall Street is nervous for its turf and hyper-sensitive to Beltway influence. Markets can change in an instant and when they do, they usually change for the worse.

This week, have a game plan. It'll be easier to take advantage of daily mortgage rate movement.

(Image courtesy: USA Today)

The Key Fact Missing From Today's Existing Home Sales Headlines

Existing home sales for January 2009In reading the headlines this morning, you'd think that last month's Existing Home Sales figure signaled more trouble ahead for the housing market.

Quite the contrary.

Beyond the attention-grabbing headlines is the real story; the one that shows -- once again -- that housing market fundaments are coming back into balance.

As home values tick lower, it appears, value buyers are stepping in and snapping up supply. It's true that the number of homes sold fell to its lowest levels in 12 years, but we can't ignore the fact that the number of homes available to buy fell, too.

  • Banks have put the brakes on foreclosures
  • Economic uncertainty is reducing job-related relocations
  • Builders have all but stopped building new homes

The national housing supply is as low as it's been in more than a year.

Based on the current rate of sales activity, the national housing supply would be 100% sold in 9.6 months -- a two-month improvement from the high point set in June 2008.

Demand for homes is expected to rise, too:

  • The Federal Reserve is trying to hold mortgage rates low
  • Fannie Mae is opening its checkbook to real estate investors
  • The stimulus package is granting tax credits to first-timers

So, it's not that the headlines are wrong; it's just that they're incomplete.

In looking at all of the data and not just one sliver of it, we can find hope. Falling supply plus rising demand leads home values higher and that's the basis for a recovery.

(Image courtesy: Wall Street Journal Online)

The Relative Cost Of Owning Versus Renting Is Back At Historical Norms

The cost of owning a home versus renting one is returning to historical levelsOne popular housing theory is that -- before a bona fide housing recovery can begin -- the cost of owning a home versus renting one must return to historical levels.

If that belief is a truth, a national return to rising home prices may be in store for 2009.

Falling home prices coupled with falling mortgage rates, too, have dropped the relative, after-tax cost of owning a home to 125% of the cost of renting a home.

This is the exact 18-year historical average and not since 2001 has the gap been this small.

As reported by the Wall Street Journal, though, the study has some flaws. For example, the data doesn't account for ongoing home maintenance costs, nor does it consider real estate tax bills and insurance policies.

But, combining a relatively low cost of ownership with the government's $8,000 tax credit for first-time home buyers is likely to convert long-time renters into never-before homeowners.

This, too, is thought to be a key element of the housing recovery.

In many markets (but not all), home prices are expected to edge lower through 2009. Provided mortgage rates stay low, the cost gap between owning and renting will shrink even more.

(Image courtesy: Wall Street Journal)

County-By-County: The 2009 "High-Cost" Conforming Loan Limits

The OFHEO set the 2009 conforming loan limits for all US countiesAs part of the stimulus package passed last week, Congress authorized a temporary increase to conforming loan limits in certain high-cost parts of the country.

"High cost" is defined by a regions' median sales price.

With the temporary increase, a greater share of Americans can now qualify for Fannie Mae- and Freddie Mac-backed loans, usually the least expensive source for mortgage money.

Higher loan limits can be good for the housing market and the broader economy for two reasons:

  1. Cheaper money can spur new home demand, supporting home values.
  2. Higher loan limits render more homeowners refinance-eligible, freeing up cash for spending, saving, or investing.

The complete county-by-county loan limit list is available on the OFHEO website.

Of the 3,232 U.S. counties, 10 percent are considered "high-cost". Residents of these areas can expect the same low rates offered to the rest of the country, but with a slight premium. Be sure to ask your loan officer about how it works.