Real Estate News

Educated Homeowners Surviving Housing Crisis

If the experts have said it once, they"ve said it a thousand times, but they can"t say it enough. Homeownership doesn"t come with a manual. It"s up to you to learn what you are getting into before you embark on what"s likely the most valuable acquisition you"ll ever complete. It"s no surprise new mortgage modification programs, foreclosure assistance and bankruptcy laws come with mandated homeownership counseling. When you get schooled on the issues of homeownership, you have much greater chance to continue as a homeowner -- even when the economy crashes down around you. The foreclosure rate for low-income homeowners who attended homeownership education programs had a foreclosure rate that was 20 times less severe than that for subprime borrowers and three times better than that found in the prime mortgage market during the second quarter of 2008, according to data from NeighborWorks America, a staunch non-profit advocate for healthy communities. "The facts tell the real story," says Kenneth D. Wade, CEO of NeighborWorks. "The vast majority of mortgages facilitated by NeighborWorks organizations are to buyers with low and moderate incomes and less than perfect credit scores, yet by obtaining quality mortgage advice these homeowners have been able to sustain homeownership during the most severe housing crisis since the Great Depression," Wade added. Long before homeownership counseling was de rigueur, South County Housing, a chartered NeighborWorks member in Gilroy, CA, was doling out a heavy curriculum of homeownership studies along with sweat-equity programs and loans that look a lot like subprime mortgages. However, thanks to smarts the group gave its largely Latino buyers, South County"s portfolio foreclosure rates today hover around zero, belying rates in the rest of foreclosure-hammered California. There"s more. When NeighborWorks compared its total loan portfolio"s foreclosure start rate of 0.21 percent in the second quarter of 2008, it found the overall nationwide homeowner market had a foreclosure rate more than five times as much, 1.08 percent. Nationwide, the foreclosure start rate for only conventional conforming loans was 0.61 percent, compared to NeighborWorks" portfolio rate of 0.21 percent. Buying a home today without learning what it takes to keep it, is like a trip to a Vegas -- for insights on both the money-losing potential in the casinos and the kind of widespread homeownership devastation that comes with ignorance. Learned homeowners consistently out perform those without the lessons. Says Wade, "The idea that some observers now are pointing to low-income people as the cause of the financial crisis we’re facing today is just wrong. NeighborWorks organizations have a track record of providing one-on-one mortgage advice, encouraging homebuyers to avoid loans that they can not afford for the long term." The message is brutally simple. Seek accredited homeownership counseling now and prepare in advance for your own home. Even if you already own your home, enroll in a counseling session. There"s plenty of counseling available. In October, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) doled out, to more than 2,300 local housing counseling agencies, $50 million in housing counseling training and housing counseling grants for first-time home buyers. It"s your tax money. Use it. Get home schooled.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Protect Household Valuables With Photographic Records
Your insurance broker has undoubtedly advised you to create a thorough inventory of your household possessions. You can certainly keep written records and save those records in a safety deposit box, but it"s best to back-up documents with a photographic inventory.
Popular Articles
Futuristic furniture stores in da

The best homes for sale in Namibia can be found on our website!
NAR"s Optimism Over Housing Outlook Grows
The chorus is growing in the chant that housing has struck bottom and will slowly rise again. A new report by the National Association of Realtors suggests rising existing home sales through 2007 and 2008 and a turn-around for new home starts by summer 2007, but homes won"t appreciate over inflation rates for the first time in decades. And that"s a little scary.
Discounted accommodation in Kiev hotels
Ask Realty Times
Question: I was told by our real estate broker that if the buyer fails to purchase the house per the terms of the contract, the house cannot go back on the market until arbitration is completed over the earnest money deposit, which can take months. Is this true?