You may have, just maybe, heard a news story or two (thousand) about the economy. In broadcast journalism, the practice of coining a few catchy phrases and repeating them ad nauseum, has become the rule of the day. You know what I mean. One begins to wonder if certain words can be uttered without certain others. Try to say “downpour” without saying “torrential”, or “controversy” without “firestorm of”. Or “credit” without “meltdown”.
Go ahead. Just try.
But the thing is, there can be downpours that aren’t torrential and not all credit is in meltdown.
There is mortgage money to be loaned. And the lenders want to make you these loans. They don’t make money unless they loan money. (Commercial credit, now that’s another creature and is not to what I refer here.)
The catch is that you have to have a job, a decent FICO score and some money to put down, none of which is unreasonable if you want to borrow money. And it’s the way it always was up until things got wacky in the lending world, what with the “no doc” loans, borrowers with FICO scores lower than their bowling scores and 0% down.
But things are mostly back to normal in regards to lending requirements. And rates are great. My friend and colleague, Christie Caldwell, sent out these rates a couple of hours ago.
Assuming a purchase price of $250,000 rates looked something like this, using the FICO/LTV/Interest Rate model:
- 680/95%/5.50%
- 680/90%/5.50%
- 680/80%/6.00%
- 700/95%/5.50%
- 700/90%/5.50%
- 700/80%/5.875%
- 720/95%/5.375%
- 720/90%/5.375%
- 720/80%/5.50%
- 740/95%/5.375%
- 740/90%/5.375%
- 740/80%/5.50%
If your FICO is below 680, you can still get a loan, but you’ll be looking at paying more for ‘points’. And a gold star to the first one to see where things may seem a bit odd in this. [HINT: put down more, pay higher rate?]
Keep in mind that rates can change frequently. As in, several times a day. But these are good guidelines for where things are in general. Also, a borrower’s rate will be impacted by the amount financed, debt/income ratio, etc.,
Again, these numbers are a guide for today. Around noon. Before I go get another cup of coffee.
Just know that the torrential downpour of news items covering the firestorm of controversy about the credit meltdown may be missing some of the facts regarding mortgages.


{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }
Thank you for the color help on your numbers there.
But what is LTV?
Lots of numbers without colors makes me get hysterical blindness. Or maybe just hysterical overall.
Thanks for the feedback. I’ll link “LTV” to the ‘real estate terms’ page.