Posts Tagged ‘Mortgage Loans’
Home Buyer Tax Credit update
As is often the case, misinformation can make a wave when it shouldn’t be a ripple. I heard two people discussing today the ending the the Home Buyer Tax Credit. They were saying that it ended March 31, which is wrong. The Eugene/Springfield, Lane County, Oregon real estate market has been benefited by the extension of the First Time Home Buyer Tax Credit and expansion to the “move-up” home buyers. Those tax credits are available to qualified buyers on accepted offers until April 30 on purchases that close on or before June 30, 2010. Read More
Good Faith Estimate on January 1, 2010
Interestingly, the Good Faith Estimate, a backbone of the mortgage industry, will be changing on January 1, 2010 with some very major changes, designed to help consumers compare loans from one lender to another. Very major changes but unfortunately, we still don’t know what all of them are or how they are being interpreted because HUD hasn’t released the final information yet. This is something that will have a direct bearing on your Real Estate transactions in the Eugene/Springfield area and is supposed to make shopping for a mortgage easier, but will it? Read More
Are you losing money by not moving up?
If you are a current homeowner in the Eugene/Springfield area, you probably don’t want to sell your home right now to buy a new, bigger home because it will cause them to lose money on that sale, right? So, what can I possibly say that would make you want to do that? Even if you really need a bigger place, why would you want to take a loss on the one your live in? Read More
Oregon First Time Home Buyer Key People – Pt 2
Your Mortgage Advisor (or loan officer, or mortgage planner, or loan consultant, etc.) will be your guidepost in what you can and may pay for a home. The mortgage advisor will determine the kind of program that you qualify for to become an Oregon First Time Home Buyer, so it is important you chose your mortgage advisor carefully.
As a mortgage advisor, I will weight your specific circumstances (income, credit, and down payment) with your needs and desires and recommend the best loan package for you. There are many steps in a successful loan application and it starts with the application and interview. For instance, just because you might qualify for a $300,000 house, it doesn’t mean that you will be happy with the payment on this much home. That is where getting to know you and what you are trying to accomplish is so important in the process. The process ends when the loan is funded, but the relationship doesn’t end there as I keep in touch with you over the years to make sure you are still in the best product available. Read More
Why I love being a mortgage banker
I started in the finance industry in a finance company that soon became TransAmerica Finance and progressed to manager with the company. I then started an independent finance company in LaGrande Oregon that was owned by a savings and loan in the 80s. Those that remember the 80s know that almost all of the savings and loans were taken over a lot like the banks are being taken over today. This, in a round about way, is how I came back to the Willamette Valley and into the mortgage business in Eugene/Springfield. Read More
What is a First-Time Homebuyer?
Believe it or not, a first time home buyer is not necessarily someone that has not owned a home previously. A first-time homebuyer is any person who has not owned a home in the previous three years. So even if you have owned a home in the past but have not owned a home in the last three years you qualify as a first-time homebuyer. Just so you know, this is 36 months at closing, not 35 and a half. So you could qualify for the $8,000 tax credit if you purchase a home before December 1, 2009 and haven’t owned a home in three years. Read More







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