Real
Estate News
Daily Real Estate News | October
1, 2007
For Most Buyers, the Mortgage Market Is Healthy
The widespread notion that the entire mortgage
market is in crisis is just plain wrong, say lenders
in various parts of the country.
The majority of mortgage products have been
unaffected by troubles in the subprime segment. Interest rates for
30-year, fixed-rated loans remain in the low 6 percent range for
people with reasonably good, though not necessarily perfect, credit
records, according Kenneth R. Harney, managing director of the National
Real Estate Development Center and syndicated columnist.
While there is plenty of money to lend, Harney
says underwriting standards are more strict than they were a year
ago. Jumbo loans, for example, often require two appraisals one by
an appraiser selected by the lender and the other by one working
for the investor.
Similarly, FICO credit-score standards generally
are higher than a year ago, stated-income mortgages with no verifications
are hard to find and lenders are especially wary of excessive "layering of risk" combining
low down payments with marginal credit scores and high debt-to-income
ratios in markets where prices are trending lower.
Source: The Washington Post Writers Group, Kenneth R. Harney (09/29/07)
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