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Chapter 8

Chapter 8. The Housing Decision. Your Personal Housing Requirements. Where do you want to live? Lifestyle: leisure and work activities Commuting distance/time Taxes Vary across different states & local communities Public services Health care, police/fire protection, parks, etc .

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Chapter 8

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  1. Chapter 8 The Housing Decision

  2. Your Personal Housing Requirements • Where do you want to live? • Lifestyle: leisure and work activities • Commuting distance/time • Taxes • Vary across different states & local communities • Public services • Health care, police/fire protection, parks, etc. • Schools • Some believe good system helps maintain property values, but may pay higher property taxes

  3. Your Financial Resources • Experts suggest that you spend no more than 30% of your monthly take-home pay on housing • Decline in mortgage interest in 1990s let more people afford houses • Amount required for down payment is usually more of a hurdle than the monthly payment • While there are ways to reduce the needed down payment, you should plan on paying at least 10% of purchase price in a down payment (plus closing costs, which can easily reach 2.5%)

  4. The Kind of Home You Want and Need • Important to do a needs vs. wants analysis • Housing needs change over the life cycle • Single person versus family with children versus retired couple

  5. Major Housing Options • Single Family Homes • About 2/3 of American households are of this type • Typically about 2,225 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths • Typically sells for $145,000 • Varies widely throughout the country • More than 90% are bought via financing with the property serving as collateral (mortgage)

  6. Major Housing Options • Condominiums and Co-ops • Condo buyers receive title to unit plus joint ownership in all common areas • Owners belong to a homeowners association • Co-op dwellers own shares in a corporation that owns the building • Resident leases unit from corporation

  7. Major Housing Options • Manufactured homes • 95% are permanent structures • Much cheaper than site-built houses • If built after June 1976 must conform to national building code • Rental option • Most rentals are unfurnished • Average rental in U.S. is $788/month • Varies substantially based upon • Type of unit • Location • Lease defines rights and obligations of landlord and tenant

  8. Buy-vs.-Rent • Advantages of renting • Mobility (no need to be concerned with selling house, although length of lease is a consideration) • No large up-front costs involved • Little or no repair and maintenance costs • Advantages of buying • ‘Pride of ownership’ • Ability to decorate to your satisfaction • Potential price appreciation (but depreciation can occur) • Tax savings (itemize deduction for mortgage interest) • Build up equity • The current value of the house minus the loan balance

  9. Buy-vs.-Rent • In many areas of the country buying is cheaper than renting even if appreciation in value is not considered • This could change if interest rates rise or mortgage interest deduction is eliminated

  10. Web Links • Checkout Buying a Home: Settlement Costs and Helpful Information at: • www.hud.gov/buying/index.cfm • www.pueblo.gsa.gov • Interactive guide to the home buying decision • www.fanniemae.com

  11. Financing the Purchase of a Home • Determine how much you can afford in terms of the total purchase price • Dependent upon your income, down payment, interest rates • Lenders don’t want monthly mortgage payment, real estate taxes and homeowners insurance to exceed 28% of your gross monthly income • Also, make sure you can afford the monthly upkeep • Utilities, repairs, maintenance

  12. Financing the Purchase of a Home • Down payment • First-time buyers usually pay about 12% • Average down payment is  25% for all buyers • If you have a lower loan-to-value ratio may get a better interest rate on mortgage • If you purchase Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI) you may be able to reduce the size of your down payment • Expensive, but can be canceled after a point

  13. The Monthly Payment • Most mortgages are fully amortized • Each payment goes partly to principal reduction and partly to interest • Over life of loan, principal is reduced to zero • Initially most of monthly payment goes toward interest but this decreases (slowly) over the life of the loan

  14. Table 8.1

  15. Figure 8.5

  16. Closing Costs • Include fees involved with the transfer of ownership (such as loan origination fee, credit report, etc.) • Most are paid at the closing meeting • Points • Fees paid (usually by buyer) to lender (AKA as a loan origination fee or loan discount) • Typically considered interest and are tax deductible • Stated as a % of the loan amount

  17. Closing Costs • Prepaid Interest • Generally over a month passes before your first mortgage payment is due • However, your mortgage is accruing interest charges during that time • If mortgage closed on June 15 and 1st payment was due July 30th, it would cover interest from June 30th to July 30th, but not June 15th to June 29th • Sales Commission • Usually paid by seller • Compensates real estate agents for their services • Quite expensive (about 6 or 7% of purchase price) • Title Charges • Normally split between buyer and seller

  18. Sources of Mortgage Loans • Can be obtained through • Commercial banks • Savings banks • Mortgage companies • Some credit unions • Shop around • Mortgage broker will search for best loan to meet your needs • Check the Internet • Lender doesn’t have to be local • Loan application is rather detailed • May have the option of locking-in the current mortgage rate

  19. Types of Mortgages • Fixed-rate loans—interest rate remains constant over the life of the loan • 30-year • 360 identical payments are made, generally once a month • 15-year • Are about 33% of all new mortgage loans • Interest rates are slightly less than a 30-year mortgage • Monthly payment is larger than 30-year

  20. Types of Mortgages • Adjustable-Rate Mortgages (ARMs) • Interest rate changes at preset intervals, depending on whether interest rates have increased or decreased • Tied to a specific index • Limits (caps) to how much the interest rate can change per period and over the life of the loan • The initial (teaser) rate is far below the rate of fixed-rate loans

  21. Types of Mortgages • Choosing between an ARM and Fixed-Rate loan • Many consumers dislike ARMs because interest rate can change—adds uncertainty • However, may be a good choice for some consumers • The shorter the amount of time you plan to keep the house, the more attractive an ARM

  22. Sources of Mortgage Loans • Federal Housing Administration (FHA) • Federally insured mortgages made by private lenders • Down payment is usually quite low (because receive insurance via federal government) • Buyer pays an FHA insurance premium each month • Ceilings on the amount of money that can be borrowed • Exactly what the ceiling is depends on geographic location

  23. Sources of Mortgage Loans • Veterans Administration • Guaranteed by the Veterans Administration and loans are made through private lenders • Only available to veterans • Guarantees 100% of the loan amount • Subject to ceilings which vary by region • Limits on closing costs • Low down payments (sometimes as low as 0%)

  24. Sources of Mortgage Loans • Conventional Mortgages • One that is not FHA or VA insured • If borrow more than 80% of purchase price most lenders require PMI • If property is sold for less than the loan balance, borrower is still obligated to pay the rest

  25. Refinancing a Mortgage • Involves taking out a new loan while paying off the old loan • Costs associated with refinancing • Closing costs • Are there pre-payment penalties on your current loan • Will there be pre-payment penalties on new loan? • Generally if interest rates have dropped to 2% or more from your current rate, it makes sense to refinance but depends on time you plan to remain in house

  26. Second Mortgages • Tax Reform Act of 1986 eliminated interest deductions on car loans, credit cards, etc. • May make sense to obtain a second mortgage on your house to finance car purchases, make home improvements, pay for college costs, etc. • Interest is tax-deductible • Similar to home equity loans, except home equity loans are basically a credit limit • An amount up to which you can borrow without reapplying each time • Interest is tax deductible

  27. Second Mortgages • Warning: • Even if you pay your primary mortgage payments on time, you can lose your house if you fail to pay your second mortgage payments on time • If your house drops in value the amount you owe stays the same • 125 loans • Loans up to 125% of the market value of the house • Risky!

  28. 125 Loans • Recently 125 loans have become available • Before the most you could borrow was 80-85% of the home owner’s equity • Example: If your home is appraised at $150,000 and you owe $135,000 on the mortgage, you can borrow $18,750 (125% x (150,000 – 135,000) • Disadvantages • Charge high interest rates • Not all the interest is tax deductible (the % above the value of the home is not) • If you are having a financial crisis you can stop paying your credit card debt (or pay the minimum) but you can’t stop paying this loan without losing your home • You can’t sell your home if you can’t repay the 125 loan • If you file for personal bankruptcy, your credit card debt would be wiped out (probably) but mortgage debt remains (usually)

  29. Finding the Right House to Buy • Recommend that you pre-qualify for mortgage before you start looking • Know the max you can afford so you won’t waste time • Lets you quickly arrange financing once you find the house you want

  30. Using a Real Estate Agent • You can either find houses yourself that you are interested in or • Tell an agent what you’re interested in and have them contact you with a list of prospects • Once you’ve selected a house, agent will help you make a formal offer • Prepare a contract stating offer price, desired closing date, etc. • Seller will either accept offer, make counteroffer or reject offer • You’ll have to put up earnest money • A security deposit (which you’ll probably lose if you recant offer)

  31. Home Inspections • You’ll definitely want the house inspected before you buy it, even if it is brand new • You can ask seller to fix things that are found during the house inspection, or lower the purchase price to adjust for these items • Expect to pay $150-$500 for a home inspection

  32. Warranties • Most new homes come with a one-year warranty • For an older home you could either buy a warranty (for about $350) that covers certain items (water heater, stove, etc.) • Some sellers now buy these warranties and offer as a sales incentive

  33. Selling a Home • Should you use a real estate agent? • Agents charge between 6 and 7% of selling price • If you don’t use a real estate agent, you have to advertise the house, arrange for viewing, negotiate with buyer, etc. • About 80% of houses are sold via an agent • Setting the asking price • Agent will help establish this • Selling costs • May include real estate commission, title insurance, real estate taxes

  34. Web Links • References associated with selling a house: • www.realtor.com • www.hud.gov/selling/index.cfm

  35. Fixing Up Your Home • Why do home improvements? • Satisfy you • Increase potential selling price • Bathroom/kitchen improvements tend to recover the best • Don’t improve your home too much • If the value is more than 10-15% of average home price in neighborhood, probably won’t get that much for it • Shop around

  36. Taxes and the Sale of Your Home • Most homeowners will never pay federal taxes on the sale of their home • However, it is important to keep good records

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