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Nailing Down Housing Costs

The federal agency charged with maintaining stability and public confidence in the nation’s financial system can help you feel stable and confident about your home loan — at the lowest possible cost.

‘FDIC Consumer News Special Edition: 51 Ways to Save Hundreds on Loans and Credit Cards’ suggests consumers consider mortgages, credit cards and other loans as not just financial services, but tangible products requiring before-you-buy scrutiny and careful use after you sign on the dotted line.

The FDIC’s timely treatise offers advice on financial services from auto loans and credit cards to fraud and small business loans, and there’s a heavy dose of advice on mortgages.

The information comes in the midst of a mortgage market meltdown that makes home loans tougher to land and more expensive own.

Here’s how to cut costs in a number of areas.

Many borrowers are discovering today what Mortgage-X.com reveals on its charts of indexes used to set interest rates — that indexes can double, even triple quickly.

‘Most of the time people don’t read documents and don’t get the idea that these indexes could really go up. How could you anticipate they would double so quickly?’ said Warren Winsness, president of the Santa Clara County Association of Realtors in San Jose, CA.

Janet Kincaid, FDIC’s senior consumer affairs officer, agrees.

‘If you are thinking about an ARM, make sure you know how much and how often the interest rate and payment could go up before you sign on, and be comfortable that you can meet those higher monthly payments. Don’t let a low teaser rate lure you in; you may be surprised later,’ she said.

Likewise avoid ‘no-doc,’ or ‘NINJA’ (no income, no job or assets) mortgages that require little or no documentation of your income or assets. The extra risk the bank takes is passed onto you in the form of higher costs.

‘If you have income that’s easy to document, such as regular statements from your employer or a monthly Social Security payment, it’s probably not worth paying extra over the long term of the loan just to save a few days during the application period,’ said Mira Marshall, an FDIC senior policy analyst.

Consider a loan with a shorter term, 15 instead of 30 years, 30 years instead of 40 years, provided you can afford the higher payment. Over the term of the loan you’ll pay less interest.

Also consider paying off your existing mortgage sooner with extra payments earmarked for the principal each month.

‘This is an easy way to pay off the loan and save thousands of dollars in interest charges without incurring the cost of refinancing,’ said Marshall.

Consult with a financial or tax advisor to learn the pros and cons of each approach.

Written for www.RealtyTimescom. Copyright

This post was last modified on 02/03/2015 11:23 am