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Apr 28, 2004 -- Lenders offering 100 percent plus loans

A recent trend in real estate has Clark very upset. Lenders are now placing ads, offering to loan people more than 100 percent of the purchase price. One recent ad in a Virginia newspaper was offering 107 percent on a home. That is so dangerous. Clark does not recommend that you do 100 percent loans, much less 107 percent. He does like the piggy back loans where you take out two loans – one for 80 percent and another for 20 percent. That way you eliminate Private Mortgage Insurance or PMI. But it’s always better to have a down payment, even if it’s a small one. Think about it. You buy $100,000 home and take out this loan. You instantly owe $107,000 with this plan. So you’re years away from paying it off. There is always someone who will throw you more rope than you can handle. It’s a problem if you get in over your head and you lose your job or you have to move. So, save money for a down payment first. Secondly, buy less house than you qualify for. Clark recommends you step back 10 percent from the qualifying amount. So, if you qualify for a $100,000 home, buy a $90,000 home.

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What others are saying

  • PMI is awful
    I pay over $200 a month to PMI. What am I paying for? The other people in my neighborhood that have said enough and just walked away from their houses. I think lenders should have to pay their own insurance. Essentially that is what it is, I am paying their insurance. Or, they should have said, we deem you an unacceptable risk and will not lend to you. I could not even get a straight answer from my lender about the amount I was paying but a little over $200 is the amount unaccounted for when I called furious that they were increasing my FIXED rate mortgage due to an escrow shortage. I bought a house right out of college with no down payment, thinking it was the right thing to do and now I am very stuck. I am stuck in a place due to this house because I can’t even rent this house for half of my mortgage payment.
  • mortgage insurance
    My mortgage is with Wells Fargo (about the 4th co. to handle the mortgage). I bougt the house for around 43,000 in '93 and owe about 28,000. They said they could not take off the insurance. Also, I thought that the mortgage insurance was in case you died that the house would be paid for and would go to the heirs. They say that isn't so. I don't trust them because a friend of mine has a credit card with them. They ran into a rough patch and got behind. They have talked to them to try and work something out because my friend wants to pay the debt. By the time they add late fees, the interest, and missed payments, it's more than they can afford in one month.
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