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	<title>Portland Home Mortgage Guide &#187; Portland Refinance Market</title>
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	<description>Portland Home Mortgage Guide is dedicated to bringing you all you need to know about purchasing or refinancing your home in the Portland area</description>
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		<title>Portland Mortgage Loans &#8211; The recent &#8220;Mark to Market&#8221; Decision Could Be Good News For the Economy</title>
		<link>http://portlandhomemortgageguide.com/portland-mortgage-loans-the-recent-mark-to-market-decision-could-be-good-news-for-the-economy/</link>
		<comments>http://portlandhomemortgageguide.com/portland-mortgage-loans-the-recent-mark-to-market-decision-could-be-good-news-for-the-economy/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 05 Apr 2009 16:15:34 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Finding the Right Portland Home Mortgage]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Portland Refinance Market]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Portland home loan]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[If you have been watching the news at all lately (and it&#8217;s probably safe to  assume that most people with a Portland home loan have been), you have probably  heard a lot of discussion (bickering) about the concept “Mark to Market” and if  changes need to be made.
What exactly is Mark to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>If you have been watching the news at all lately (and it&#8217;s probably safe to  assume that most people with a <a href="http://portlandhomemortgageguide.com/">Portland home loan</a> have been), you have probably  heard a lot of discussion (bickering) about the concept “Mark to Market” and if  changes need to be made.</p>
<p>What exactly is Mark to Market and what does it  mean? Is this going to have any affect on the housing market, and more  importantly, how might it directly affect your <a href="http://portlandhomemortgageguide.com/is-it-time-for-a-new-portland-home-mortgage/">Portland home mortgage</a>?</p>
<p>We are going to attempt to give an explanation of it below so you can  better understand what it is, and more significantly, comprehend how it has  played such a important role in our existing economic crisis, which includes the  Portland mortgage market. It may come as a surprise to you to find that this  accounting rule (i.e. law) has much more to do with the economic down turn than  possibly anything else.</p>
<p>Before we even begin to look at how Portland  mortgage rates get affected, we’re first going to discuss why Mark to Market  exists at all</p>
<p>To understand Congress’ inspiration behind the creation of  this accounting requirement, we need to go back and look at the stock market  crash of 2000 – 2002.</p>
<p>At the time, before this rule was devised,  companies such as Arthur Anderson, Enron and others found methods for ‘cooking  their books’ so as to make their balance sheets appear significantly healthier  than they truly were. This, in turn, made their stock values to be artificially  high, contributing to the ‘bubble’ that, as we all know, eventually popped. When  that occurred,many, many people lost tons of money. To insinuate that they were  unhappy is a huge understatement. Something had to be done.</p>
<p>The concept  of &#8220;Mark to Market&#8221; accounting was created in an effort to make things more  transparent and to ensure fair valuation of companies as well as all their  assets. To summarize, what it means is that all assets are required to be valued  as if they were sold on a daily basis. For those who opted not to do this  conservatively, they put themselves at risk for potential jail  time.</p>
<p>Let’s now look at how this regulation can cause a problem affecting  the whole economy, including Portland mortgages.</p>
<p>When you consider the  huge amounts of money handled by banks &#8211; and the wide (and odd) variations of  financial instruments they use, &#8211; it’s difficult to try to get one’s mind around  exactly what it is they do. It will be much easier to illustrate how this  accounting strategy works using an analogy more realistic to the rest of  us.</p>
<p>We’re going to pretend you live in a neighborhood where all the homes  are similarly worth right around $200,000. Let’s also imagine your neighbor owns  his house outright.</p>
<p>All of a sudden you neighbor has some serious, major  medical expenses and needs to sell his house to pay forit. He needs his money  right now and doesn’t have the luxury to shop for a Portland refinance, and he  isn’t in any position to wait for the best offer he can get. Instead of waiting,  he sells his home for $150,000 to get the money right away, even though it is  clear that the property is worth quite a bit more than that.</p>
<p>If you  happened to live two houses down in an identical house, does the fact that your  neighbor’s house sold for $150,000 indicate your house just lost 25% of its  value? Of course it doesn’t. If you decided you were going to sell your house,  you would be able to take your time and get a fair price for it; you would not  be forced into a “fire sale” situation.</p>
<p>On the other hand, if you were a  public company and were forced by law to go by the Mark to Market accounting  rules, you, and all your neighbors too, would now be forced to claim that the  house you live in was now only worth $150,000 and not the $200,000 everyone  knows to be the true value.</p>
<p>Now we are going to see how this applies to a  bank.</p>
<p>Allow me to stretch the hypotheticals a bit further.</p>
<p>Let’s  pretend you decided to start a new bank, we’re going to call it YOUR BANK. You  get started with a $2 million initial investment to get Your Bank started. Your  plan to make money as a bank is to take in people’s money as deposits, paying  them a low but safe rate of return, and then use that money to create other  loans, such as Portland home loans, that pay you a higher rate of return. The  difference between the two is the profit you get to keep.</p>
<p>Let’s say that  from our $2 million of deposits, we create $30 million of loans. Our Capital  Ratio (the ratio of loans to capital on hand) is at a respectable 15:1 ($15  million in loans for every $1 million in deposits). This ratio is completely  acceptable by banking standards.</p>
<p>We are going to say that you run an  extremely conservative bank, and the Portland loans Your Bank agrees to make are  limited to those of only the very highest standards. For example, you require a  30% down-payment (normal is 20%, or sometimes even less), a credit score over  800 (this would be a VERY high credit score), you demand full documentation of  all income and assets and will only tolerate a DTI(debt-to-income) ratio of ten  percent (industry norm is 40%).</p>
<p>It’s clear, Your Bank will only make a  superior quality Portland loan. And it shows. All your borrowers pay on  schedule, no one is unhappy and Your Bank is making plenty of money. This causes  Your Bank stock to continue to climb.</p>
<p>All of a sudden, the Portland real  estate market begins to slow down and go soft, and Portland home values begin  dropping (however, your borrowers still make all their payments on time, no  problem).</p>
<p>The problem is, with the systemic drop in home values, you  have to re-assess the value of your loan portfolio. Now, rather than the loans  being 70% of the value of the home, they are at 90% (your equity position in the  home went down considerably). This means these loans are considerably riskier  than when you had more equity, and because they are more risky investments,  investors are less interested in buying them than they were before and because  of that they have less value.</p>
<p>In comes your accounting team to tell you  that, according to law, you must “Mark to Market” if you don’t want to risk a  serious penalty (such as jail time!) In their Mark to Market analysis, the  estimated value is now at $1,000,000; it has been reduced by 50%!</p>
<p>Do not  forget, nothing has changed regarding your borrowers or your loans (everyone  continues to pay on time so the funds are still coming in as it always has). Now  however you now must reflect the fact that Your Bank’s ‘value’ has been cut by  50% to only $1,000,000.</p>
<p>The problem is, you still have $30 million in  loans outstanding, and with a valuation of $1,000,000, your capital ratio is now  at at 30:1 which is a LOT different than 15:1.</p>
<p>Red flags begin to go off  everywhere because it’s a concern that with just a couple of bad loans that you  would be required to cover, you might quickly run out of funds. This would place  depositorsin danger of losing their deposits.</p>
<p>So now suddenly the FDIC  is starting to look into Your Bank and then the SEC (Securities and Exchange  Commission) starts asking all sorts of questions. Your Bank stock begins to to  fall hard. All the financial news networks hear of the story and just add fuel  to the fire.</p>
<p>Your Bank is in deep trouble.</p>
<p>The trouble is, Your  Bank is ‘over leveraged’, and to compensate for that you are forced to start  selling some assets. (You could try raising capital, but when you think about  the way the situation appears and your capital ratios totally out of whack, no  one in their right mind is going to be willing to lend you the $1,000,000 you  need).</p>
<p>Since you need to get that money as soon as possible, you find  yourself in a similar situation to that of your neighbor who was forced to  ‘dump’ his house very quickly at a a lower than market price. As you sell off  your assets to raise capital as fast as possible, at the same time you are  reducing the value (i.e. quantity) of your remaining assets, further skewing  your capital ratios even further.</p>
<p>This is a kind of death spiral that is  nearly impossible to stop once it gets started. The thing is, the problem  doesn’t end with just Your Bank.</p>
<p>Now let’s say that my Portland mortgage  company (called &#8220;My Bank&#8221;) purchased those assets from you. You were selling at  such a great price that My Bank got the feeling we were getting such a great  deal that we could not resist, so we bought a whole bunch of them.</p>
<p>The  trouble is, with the Mark to Market regulations, the loans My Bank just acquired  from Your Bank at such a good price must be used as comparables that all other  financial institutions also use to value their assets. So every $200,000  Portland mortgage loan that My Bank was holding (not just the ones I purchased  from Your Bank) now only are worth $150,000 each despite the fact that they were  loans that were performing perfectly.</p>
<p>So now we have a situation where  the value of My Bank goes down. As this happens it disrupts My Bank’s capital  ratios and makes me to sell assets as quickly as possible in order to generate  money… and so the cycle continues.</p>
<p>It’s not hard to see how fast and  wide spread the problem gets, despite the fact that there weren’t necessarily  any ‘bad business decisions’ made. It’s all caused by a well intentioned, but  over reaching, accounting regulation.</p>
<p>When considering the scenario  above, you might ask, “Why don’t they have everyone just quit buying the  discounted assets from the other guy and simply stop the cycle?” This is a good  question.</p>
<p>If the cycle is stopped, not only do some financial  institutions fold, but the whole flow of money just stops. This is the ‘credit  freeze’. When there is no credit available at all, mortgage lending comes to a  crawl, car and truck sales all but stop, jobs are lost and the whole economy  slips into a recession.</p>
<p>We’ve been in, and gotten ourselves out of a  recession before. Why don’t we do the same thing we did to get out the last  time?</p>
<p>Our ‘mini’ recession of 2001 recovered pretty quickly because the  Fed lowered interest rates and mortgage lending standards were considerably more  relaxed, which led to roughly $3 trillion worth of cash being withdrawn in the  form of equity from homes and put right back into the economy.</p>
<p>In  today’s world, mortgage loan guidelines everywhere (not just the ones Portland  mortgage brokers are dealing with) are far more restrictive, home values are way  lower (and they have been heading in the wrong direction for a while). And as  was mentioned above, the truth of the matter is that there is simply not very  much money available out there for Portland mortgage companies to access for  either home purchase loans or for a Portland mortgage  refinance.</p>
<p>However&#8230;</p>
<p>Some good news for a change!</p>
<p>04/02/09  – The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) voted favorably regarding  relaxing the Mark to Market standard. They are going to allow financial  companies to use alternatives such as cash-flow analysis in valuing assets. This  change will significantly reduce the write downs banks have been forced to take  on assets and investments like mortgages. This could very well mean more options  will soon be available to your local Portland mortgage companies. We&#8217;ll hope  so.</p>
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		<title>The Portland Refinance Market is Getting Ready to Sizzle</title>
		<link>http://portlandhomemortgageguide.com/the-portland-refinance-market-is-getting-ready-to-sizzle/</link>
		<comments>http://portlandhomemortgageguide.com/the-portland-refinance-market-is-getting-ready-to-sizzle/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 31 Mar 2009 05:27:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Portland Refinance Market]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Portland home appreciation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Portland home owners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Portland mortgage rates]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Portland refinance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[refinance in Portland]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[refinancing in Portland]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[refinancing your Portland house]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://portlandhomemortgageguide.com/?p=14</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Over the past 30 years, Portland mortgage rates have ebbed and flowed  significantly in a financial tide of home mortgage offerings. Near the beginning  of the 1980s, for example, mortgage rates for regular thirty year, fixed rate  mortgages were right around 18%. Today, though, we see rates for the same type  [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Over the past 30 years, Portland mortgage rates have ebbed and flowed  significantly in a financial tide of home mortgage offerings. Near the beginning  of the 1980s, for example, mortgage rates for regular thirty year, fixed rate  mortgages were right around 18%. Today, though, we see rates for the same type  of mortgage loan roughly 5% &#8211; and even sometimes, in the 4 percent  range.</p>
<p>Numerous Portland home owners who got their mortgage when interest  rates were way higher are now looking at a Portland refinance in order to reap  the benefit of the lower rates of today. If you are one of these people, know  that there are some expenses that will be involved in refinancing your home,  such as a home appraisal, getting title insurance, and a loan origination fee,  just to name some. To figure if these expenses will off-set with the potential  cash you can save by refinancing your mortgage, you can use the general rule of  thumb referred to as the 2 percent rule.</p>
<p>In plain English, this rule suggests  that the percentage difference between your current rate on your loan and the  new interest rate being suggested should be at least 2 points. If you were among  those borrowers in the 1980’s who boughtan interest rate in the teens (and today  you can get a rate around 5%), it would make very good sense to  refinance.</p>
<p>What you will find below are three benefits why people are  refinancing in Portland with a lower rate:</p>
<p>1) Lowering monthly payments &#8211;  By lowering the interest rate of your loan, you can see a dramatic difference in  your monthly mortgage payment. And, every little bit helps. Some people who  refinance have saved thousands of dollars over the course of their loan period.  How much you will personally save, though, totally depends on your specific  numbers.  So, make sure to talk to a mortgage specialist who is able to do the  number crunching for you to see how much you can potentially save by  refinancing.</p>
<p>2) Changing the type of loan you have &#8211; Some people make the  decision to refinance in Portland even though they won&#8217;t save much money by doing so.  Consider of the large number of people who got an ARM (Adjustable Rate  Mortgage). seeing tons of these people refinancing simply to switch to the fixed  rate mortgage. Also, some people who have a balloon worked into their mortgage  are choosing to refinance when it gets nearer to the date to make that balloon  payment.</p>
<p>3) Pulling cash from your equity &#8211; If you&#8217;ve lived in your house  for 10 years or more, there’s a good chance you have a sizeable bit of equity  because of the overall Portland home appreciation (even with the existing dip in  house values) and to the fact that you&#8217;ve made those monthly mortgage payments  for some time. This is why some folks choose to withdraw cash out when they  refinance their mortgage loan in order to help with retirement or with college  expenses for the children.</p>
<p>If you are thinking about refinancing your  Portland house, be sure to talk with a seasoned loan officer &#8211; someone  experienced in refinancing who can talk to you and go over your situation and  your numbers as well as the the various options you have. And know, that each  situation is unique. Your mortgage professional should inquire about short term  and long term benefits (or consequences) that are specific to you and adjusted  towards your financial future.</p>
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