Are Mormons betting the farm?
In the NYT:
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/23/bu...xkP+M5/ZJfmmzg Sure, this is a CA thing, but the swath of risky financing also cuts right through Mormon country. In SLC, 58% (higher than in SanFran, Oakland and Los Angeles) of homeowners are refinancing with exotic adjustable-rate mortgages where the loan balance actually GROWS. This housing madness can't last forever, and then what? |
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I took out an ARM last year. The rate is locked for 5 years. We'll be moving in 3.
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I certainly don't look forward to economic disaster for this country, but as the kind of fool who didn't crunch the numbers in the first place, who was an ignorant first-time home buyer, we have a 30-year fixed in a home that we are definitely going to sell LONG before 30 years are up (it was only a $75k loan, so the cost of our error isn't too deadly), we will be in a good position to pick up a 2nd home for cheap if the market ever goes belly up. |
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The way I see it... Living somewhere costs money. I can pay rent for the 3 years or interest on a mortgage for three years. The way I've done the math the interest comes out cheaper and I get to deduct it from my taxes. Ergo... Even if I only break even on the house it was still cheaper than renting. Even if we take a hit when we sell the house, the hit would have to be fairly substantial to overcome the benefit of having the home vs. renting. |
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Someone is going to get left holding the card, no? |
for the housing market to crash, there must be a surplus of housing. That's the issue: it's still a tight market.
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There is one big thing you're missing. This isn't just debt passing hands. The loan is based on the value of some real property. Investors are "betting" that the real property will increase in value. The only way somebody could get left "holding the bag" is if they buy the property for more than it is worth.
Other ARM loans require that you pay off the interest (at a minimum). The idea "should" work on two levels. 1- Real property values usually increase. 2- The future value of the $$ you borrow will decrease. I wouldn't go for an ARM loan if I planned to stay in the house longer than 3 years. |
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