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  • I Advice - High Risk Mortgages - Was 2006 A Wakeup Call?

    What Is The Role Of Online Sales Profiling Tools In The Overall Hiring Process
    A good online sales profiling tool will actually provide you with a recommendation as to whether or not you should or should not hire a particular candidate and how well they are aligned with the requirements of a specific job.Often times the most troubling aspect of a search is being hot on a candidate and believing he or she is a good fit for a specific job assignment, only to have those hopes dashed by a non-hire recommendation coming back from your profiling tool. In those circumstances what do you do? Well, the real issue is that such a tool should not be used as the only set of information on which to base a hire/no hire decision. When we get back a no hire recommendation from our sales profili
    will have to pay for the growing number of defaults.

    2006 is now real estate history -- will the realization that home values can and have dropped significantly in a short period of time serve as a wakeup for homebuyers to not take risky mortgages for granted? The short-term answer is, No, it likely won’t. As long as these mortgages are easy to get and the penalties for foreclosure, light, many buyers will still choose to gamble that 2006 won’t happen again until their home appreciates and creates a cushion. It will take more than a few stories of hardship to sway the buying masses. The ultimate question is: will lending and real estate institutions step in and intervene to save buyers from themselves. As lenders begin to feel the pinch of their own programs over the next few years, we may see a move away from high-risk mortgages and towards better counseling and a more in-depth qualifying process. This will be a welcome trend and will help create more informed and capable homeowners. While it won’t completely prevent buyers from getting in over their heads, it might get them to think twice before making a pur

    Relief From Debts- Credit Card Debt Consolidation
    Credit card helps you to meet your needs every time and everywhere. It is indeed the most lucrative way to spend money. Now as long as you have one credit card, things will be all right. But the problem will knock your door once you have more than one credit card without being able to make regular payments. This leads you to credit card debts, which give nothing but pain and frustration. And to help you get out of such adverse situation, credit card debt consolidation has emerged in the loan market. It help borrower to remove their debts and gifts a fresh life. Let us have a look of what this consolidation is all about.With credit card debt consolidation, you get a chance to consolidate all your unpaid
    2006 will be known in the annals of real estate as the year of the slump. Home values fell in many markets around the country -- in some cases, significantly. This negative appreciation will, without a doubt, have a lasting effect on borrowers with high-risk mortgages. But will the hardships facing current homeowners with these types of loans be enough of a wakeup to new homebuyers thinking about similar financing? Owning your own home is part of the American Dream but sometimes choosing the wrong type of financing can turn that dream into a nightmare.

    For the past half-decade, the housing market has sizzled. Appreciation has been solid and predictable. During those hot years, many home buyers turned to higher risk mortgages for a variety of reasons. Some buyers chose interest-only loans in order to afford bigger homes. Yet others financed homes up to 100% in order to get in on the action, even when savings were low or non-existent. While the market was cooking along and appreciation was strong, many were able to justify these and even riskier loans. However, when 2006 hit, things changed.

    In 2006, many homes throughout the United States actually lost value. For those homeowners that financed at or near 100% shortly before the slump, this often meant that they now owed more than the home was actually worth -- in some cases, much more. The average American moves every 5-7 years, most often due to changes in job, position or career. In normal market conditions with normal appreciation, it takes, on average, 2-3 years of positive appreciation for a home to build up enough equity to offset the costs of selling. The loss of equity or even just the loss of positive appreciation experienced in 2006 will force homeowners to wait longer before moving or face the strong possibility that they might owe more on the home than can be recovered with a sale. In some markets where value lost was severe -- 25-50% -- homeowners may not break even for a decade or more if the market turns around and begins to appreciate at a steady rate again.

    For many homeowners, waiting to move just isn’t an option. Job relocation, family responsibilities or even financial hardship (as well as many other situations) can force a move. If that happens before enough equity can build in the home to offset closing costs, more and more homeowners may choose foreclosure over bringing money to the closing table. It’s no surprise that many financial experts are predicting a large spike in foreclosures over the next decade.

    How and why has foreclosure become such a viable option? In conventional 80% LTV (loan-to-value) financing, the buyer puts 20% of the value of the home down and finances the remaining 80%. This type of loan creates a cushion to guard against depreciation or the necessity of a quicker-than-expected move. Because homeowners that obtain 80% LTV financing have a full 20% equity invested in the home, foreclosure is likely not the best option. Usually a good portion of that 20% can be recovered with a traditional sale -- even immediately after purchase.

    However, today, a buyer putting the full 80% or more down on a home is a rarity. With median home values exceeding $200,000, buyers -- especially first-time homebuyers -- often don’t have $40,000 in savings to put down on a home. Due to the ease, flexibility and prevalence of today’s loan programs, many homeowners are choosing the risk of financing at a much higher loan-to-value ratio just to be able to get into the game. The elimination of the 20% cushion means that if homeowners get into a pinch, foreclosure is a much more likely proposition. And why not? I know plenty of lenders that will work with buyers only a year out of foreclosure. Let’s face it: the penalties for foreclosure and bankruptcy are not as daunting and prohibitive has they once were.

    Other than the homeowners themselves, the lender is the first to bear the brunt of a loan default -- especially in 100% LTV situations. This includes months of lost mortgage payments, legal fees and ultimately, the likely need to try to sell a defaulted home that might not even be worth the money that was loaned to purchase it. Some lenders may be able to write this off as an expense of doing business -- on occasion. But if the rates of foreclosure go up as predicted, I’m not naive enough to believe that those costs won’t be passed on to us -- the collective buying public -- in the form of additional processing fees or higher rates. Ultimately “we” will have to pay for the growing number of defaults.

    2006 is now real estate history -- will the realization that home values can and have dropped significantly in a short period of time serve as a wakeup for homebuyers to not take risky mortgages for granted? The short-term answer is, No, it likely won’t. As long as these mortgages are easy to get and the penalties for foreclosure, light, many buyers will still choose to gamble that 2006 won’t happen again until their home appreciates and creates a cushion. It will take more than a few stories of hardship to sway the buying masses. The ultimate question is: will lending and real estate institutions step in and intervene to save buyers from themselves. As lenders begin to feel the pinch of their own programs over the next few years, we may see a move away from high-risk mortgages and towards better counseling and a more in-depth qualifying process. This will be a welcome trend and will help create more informed and capable homeowners. While it won’t completely prevent buyers from getting in over their heads, it might get them to think twice before making a purc

    Term Verses Whole Life – When it Comes to Life Insurance it Pays
    There has been an age old battle between the virtues of term life insurance verses whole life insurance. The proponents of term life insurance often lead with the argument that it would be better to buy term insurance and invest the difference. The whole life advocates attack the temporary nature of term insurance and are skeptical about people investing properly to achieve what the whole life product does on its own. The insurance industry has come up with several variations of life insurance to appease these two opposing schools of thought. The Universal life policy was created in the 1980’s. It is a flexible premium policy that gives the insured the option of changing premiums and adjusting the performance
    homes throughout the United States actually lost value. For those homeowners that financed at or near 100% shortly before the slump, this often meant that they now owed more than the home was actually worth -- in some cases, much more. The average American moves every 5-7 years, most often due to changes in job, position or career. In normal market conditions with normal appreciation, it takes, on average, 2-3 years of positive appreciation for a home to build up enough equity to offset the costs of selling. The loss of equity or even just the loss of positive appreciation experienced in 2006 will force homeowners to wait longer before moving or face the strong possibility that they might owe more on the home than can be recovered with a sale. In some markets where value lost was severe -- 25-50% -- homeowners may not break even for a decade or more if the market turns around and begins to appreciate at a steady rate again.

    For many homeowners, waiting to move just isn’t an option. Job relocation, family responsibilities or even financial hardship (as well as many other situations) can force a move. If that happens before enough equity can build in the home to offset closing costs, more and more homeowners may choose foreclosure over bringing money to the closing table. It’s no surprise that many financial experts are predicting a large spike in foreclosures over the next decade.

    How and why has foreclosure become such a viable option? In conventional 80% LTV (loan-to-value) financing, the buyer puts 20% of the value of the home down and finances the remaining 80%. This type of loan creates a cushion to guard against depreciation or the necessity of a quicker-than-expected move. Because homeowners that obtain 80% LTV financing have a full 20% equity invested in the home, foreclosure is likely not the best option. Usually a good portion of that 20% can be recovered with a traditional sale -- even immediately after purchase.

    However, today, a buyer putting the full 80% or more down on a home is a rarity. With median home values exceeding $200,000, buyers -- especially first-time homebuyers -- often don’t have $40,000 in savings to put down on a home. Due to the ease, flexibility and prevalence of today’s loan programs, many homeowners are choosing the risk of financing at a much higher loan-to-value ratio just to be able to get into the game. The elimination of the 20% cushion means that if homeowners get into a pinch, foreclosure is a much more likely proposition. And why not? I know plenty of lenders that will work with buyers only a year out of foreclosure. Let’s face it: the penalties for foreclosure and bankruptcy are not as daunting and prohibitive has they once were.

    Other than the homeowners themselves, the lender is the first to bear the brunt of a loan default -- especially in 100% LTV situations. This includes months of lost mortgage payments, legal fees and ultimately, the likely need to try to sell a defaulted home that might not even be worth the money that was loaned to purchase it. Some lenders may be able to write this off as an expense of doing business -- on occasion. But if the rates of foreclosure go up as predicted, I’m not naive enough to believe that those costs won’t be passed on to us -- the collective buying public -- in the form of additional processing fees or higher rates. Ultimately “we” will have to pay for the growing number of defaults.

    2006 is now real estate history -- will the realization that home values can and have dropped significantly in a short period of time serve as a wakeup for homebuyers to not take risky mortgages for granted? The short-term answer is, No, it likely won’t. As long as these mortgages are easy to get and the penalties for foreclosure, light, many buyers will still choose to gamble that 2006 won’t happen again until their home appreciates and creates a cushion. It will take more than a few stories of hardship to sway the buying masses. The ultimate question is: will lending and real estate institutions step in and intervene to save buyers from themselves. As lenders begin to feel the pinch of their own programs over the next few years, we may see a move away from high-risk mortgages and towards better counseling and a more in-depth qualifying process. This will be a welcome trend and will help create more informed and capable homeowners. While it won’t completely prevent buyers from getting in over their heads, it might get them to think twice before making a pur

    Saying Thank You to Your Clients
    “Thanking your customers” - Why you should do it and how...Your customers make up 100% of your sales and 100% of your profits. Yet we spend a lot of money and time beating the bushes for new customers and not much time thanking those responsible for 100% of our business! One lesson your mother taught you was to say "thank you" when someone did something nice. We tend to give lip service to saying thank you to our customers by using phrases like "Thank you and have a nice day." But after using the same phrase repeatedly, it becomes rote, and not very heartfelt. So what can you do?Customer Service Experts say that people complain more than they praise. Taking the time to show customers how much yo
    pens before enough equity can build in the home to offset closing costs, more and more homeowners may choose foreclosure over bringing money to the closing table. It’s no surprise that many financial experts are predicting a large spike in foreclosures over the next decade.

    How and why has foreclosure become such a viable option? In conventional 80% LTV (loan-to-value) financing, the buyer puts 20% of the value of the home down and finances the remaining 80%. This type of loan creates a cushion to guard against depreciation or the necessity of a quicker-than-expected move. Because homeowners that obtain 80% LTV financing have a full 20% equity invested in the home, foreclosure is likely not the best option. Usually a good portion of that 20% can be recovered with a traditional sale -- even immediately after purchase.

    However, today, a buyer putting the full 80% or more down on a home is a rarity. With median home values exceeding $200,000, buyers -- especially first-time homebuyers -- often don’t have $40,000 in savings to put down on a home. Due to the ease, flexibility and prevalence of today’s loan programs, many homeowners are choosing the risk of financing at a much higher loan-to-value ratio just to be able to get into the game. The elimination of the 20% cushion means that if homeowners get into a pinch, foreclosure is a much more likely proposition. And why not? I know plenty of lenders that will work with buyers only a year out of foreclosure. Let’s face it: the penalties for foreclosure and bankruptcy are not as daunting and prohibitive has they once were.

    Other than the homeowners themselves, the lender is the first to bear the brunt of a loan default -- especially in 100% LTV situations. This includes months of lost mortgage payments, legal fees and ultimately, the likely need to try to sell a defaulted home that might not even be worth the money that was loaned to purchase it. Some lenders may be able to write this off as an expense of doing business -- on occasion. But if the rates of foreclosure go up as predicted, I’m not naive enough to believe that those costs won’t be passed on to us -- the collective buying public -- in the form of additional processing fees or higher rates. Ultimately “we” will have to pay for the growing number of defaults.

    2006 is now real estate history -- will the realization that home values can and have dropped significantly in a short period of time serve as a wakeup for homebuyers to not take risky mortgages for granted? The short-term answer is, No, it likely won’t. As long as these mortgages are easy to get and the penalties for foreclosure, light, many buyers will still choose to gamble that 2006 won’t happen again until their home appreciates and creates a cushion. It will take more than a few stories of hardship to sway the buying masses. The ultimate question is: will lending and real estate institutions step in and intervene to save buyers from themselves. As lenders begin to feel the pinch of their own programs over the next few years, we may see a move away from high-risk mortgages and towards better counseling and a more in-depth qualifying process. This will be a welcome trend and will help create more informed and capable homeowners. While it won’t completely prevent buyers from getting in over their heads, it might get them to think twice before making a pur

    Speaking to the Press
    If you get the hang of speaking to the press and you can establish a few good relationships, their contacts and outreach can be extremely beneficial to the marketing of your organization.If you've never spoken to the press before – it can be an intimidating task. Let us be the ones to tell you from experience that reporters are far too busy to help ease your anxiety, or extract the highlights of a story from you, before determining whether or not it's something worth writing about. It's YOUR job to sell your story. If you don't sound like you have faith in your own press release and can't present it in a manner that makes it sound like it's important news, how can you expect a news reporter to view it a
    grams, many homeowners are choosing the risk of financing at a much higher loan-to-value ratio just to be able to get into the game. The elimination of the 20% cushion means that if homeowners get into a pinch, foreclosure is a much more likely proposition. And why not? I know plenty of lenders that will work with buyers only a year out of foreclosure. Let’s face it: the penalties for foreclosure and bankruptcy are not as daunting and prohibitive has they once were.

    Other than the homeowners themselves, the lender is the first to bear the brunt of a loan default -- especially in 100% LTV situations. This includes months of lost mortgage payments, legal fees and ultimately, the likely need to try to sell a defaulted home that might not even be worth the money that was loaned to purchase it. Some lenders may be able to write this off as an expense of doing business -- on occasion. But if the rates of foreclosure go up as predicted, I’m not naive enough to believe that those costs won’t be passed on to us -- the collective buying public -- in the form of additional processing fees or higher rates. Ultimately “we” will have to pay for the growing number of defaults.

    2006 is now real estate history -- will the realization that home values can and have dropped significantly in a short period of time serve as a wakeup for homebuyers to not take risky mortgages for granted? The short-term answer is, No, it likely won’t. As long as these mortgages are easy to get and the penalties for foreclosure, light, many buyers will still choose to gamble that 2006 won’t happen again until their home appreciates and creates a cushion. It will take more than a few stories of hardship to sway the buying masses. The ultimate question is: will lending and real estate institutions step in and intervene to save buyers from themselves. As lenders begin to feel the pinch of their own programs over the next few years, we may see a move away from high-risk mortgages and towards better counseling and a more in-depth qualifying process. This will be a welcome trend and will help create more informed and capable homeowners. While it won’t completely prevent buyers from getting in over their heads, it might get them to think twice before making a pur

    Spiral Binders
    Spiral Binders are known for durability. They are most widely used in blank notebooks. Spiral notebooks prove to be quite handy when you need to take quick notes. Spiral Binders are basic constructions of loose-leaf paper bound by a spring-like wire that runs through the holes along the sides of the pages. These wires could be made of either plastic or metal.Spiral binding is a great way to present documents in a long-lasting and attention-getting way. They are ideal for intensive use and perfect for all environments. They are designed in such a manner that they are able to provide the highest standards of quality for all types of mid-volume binding. Besides notebooks, these are often used for preservin
    will have to pay for the growing number of defaults.

    2006 is now real estate history -- will the realization that home values can and have dropped significantly in a short period of time serve as a wakeup for homebuyers to not take risky mortgages for granted? The short-term answer is, No, it likely won’t. As long as these mortgages are easy to get and the penalties for foreclosure, light, many buyers will still choose to gamble that 2006 won’t happen again until their home appreciates and creates a cushion. It will take more than a few stories of hardship to sway the buying masses. The ultimate question is: will lending and real estate institutions step in and intervene to save buyers from themselves. As lenders begin to feel the pinch of their own programs over the next few years, we may see a move away from high-risk mortgages and towards better counseling and a more in-depth qualifying process. This will be a welcome trend and will help create more informed and capable homeowners. While it won’t completely prevent buyers from getting in over their heads, it might get them to think twice before making a purchase with a loan that doesn’t provide any viable escape option other than foreclosure.

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