Irvine Housing Blog |
How are tomorrow’s buyers going to come up with a 20% down payment? Posted: 27 Jul 2011 03:30 AM PDT With down payment requirements going up, many Americans do not have the required savings to make a down payment on a house. Where will this money come from?
Irvine Home Address ... 35 WONDERLAND Irvine, CA 92620
When the housing market finally bottoms, many will look at the pieces of their shattered lives and wonder how they will ever own a home again. Gone are the days of easy financing and zero money down mortgages. Lenders are now requiring 20% down. First mortgages with lower down payments are still available, but between the higher interest rate and the private mortgage insurance, the costs of these nonconforming products is prohibitively high. To make matters worse, lenders who lost billions on second mortgages are unwilling to extend bridge financing for those who need it to buy a home. Many people still hunger for home ownership, particularly those who still mistakenly see it as a path to riches or unlimited HELOC spending money. However, desire is not demand, and despite the longing for home ownership, those who do not have the necessary savings or a sufficient credit score do not contribute to demand. Many will abandon their dreams of home ownership, but many more will carry on.
Down Payment on Home Out of Reach for Half of U.S., Poll FindsJun. 3 2010 - 1:13 pm -- Posted by Gail Cunningham
How many of you would be able to save the $120,000 down payment on a $600,000 Irvine home? Most American's don't save much, and with the pressures to look prosperous here in Orange County, the ability to save such prodigious sums is largely out of reach. Anyone living paycheck-to-paycheck has the odds stacked against them. Owning a home has traditionally been considered a significant part of a person’s wealth-building strategy. With almost half of the poll respondents indicating that they would never be able to save enough money for a down-payment on a home, the implication is that they feel that buying a house is, and may always be, out of reach for them. Realistically, unless our system changes, FHA loans are the only way first-time homebuyers and former homeowners with insufficient equity will be buying homes. First-time homebuyers have traditionally used the FHA or subprime, but now with so many former owners who lost everything in the aftermath of the housing bubble, many more people will find themselves in need of down payment assistance. Due to today’s turbulent housing market, the problem has now spread to those who currently own a home. Many mortgages are underwater. Thus, even if the homeowner is able to sell their current house, there may be no profit available to satisfy the down-payment on the next home. Exacerbating the problem is that as home prices have decreased, many lenders have increased the down-payment amount required to obtain a mortgage loan. Equity has evaporated at a time when equity is most needed to buy a home. Some of it due to falling prices, and some of it do to irresponsible HELOC borrowing and dependancy. As is always the case at the bottom of a recession, cash is king.
Many people who didn't lose their net worth in the housing bust may have had to spend their savings to survive the recession making the buyer pool with 20% down that much more depleted. Others responding to the survey indicated that their mortgage loan would either have to require a much lower down-payment (20 percent), or they would have to borrow the down-payment regardless of how much it was (18 percent). Further bad news for anyone associated with housing is that the lowest number of respondents indicated that they’d have no trouble coming up with a 20 percent down-payment (12 percent). Very few people have the 20% down. Only 12% of those polled said they could comfortably come up with the money. This is a serious problem for housing demand going forward. Where will the down payment money come from?Realistically, there are only two sources: savings and borrowing. Some may receive gifts, but those who don't have wealthy family members to give them money, they will either need to save it or borrow it. Even in a booming economy, it takes years to save the necessary 20% down payment on a house. Most people are either unable or unwilling to endure the austerity such a sacrifice requires. Many will save their money and follow this path to home ownership. Kudos to those who succeed. Most people will only save the minimum necessary and instead borrow the money. Those that follow this path will get less home than those who save because the borrowers will face much higher costs than the savers. For instance, the current FHA insurance premium is over 1% of the sales price. Its like paying double taxes. This extra expense comes out of qualifying income and thereby reduces the loan balance available to borrow. In the future, demand for second mortgages will prompt some adventurous lenders to try this market again. Currently, lenders hold billions of worthless second mortgages on their books, so originating new ones is not in their business plan. To make these loans today would be to light more money on fire as falling house prices will quickly put these second mortgages underwater. It won't be until well after the market bottoms that second mortgages will be made available to the masses again. For the foreseeable future, mortgage demand will remain weak. At first it will be due to continuing unemployment and weak earnings, but as the economy recovers, the reasons will not be income qualification, it will be the lack of a suitable down payment. More than 25% off it's new 2004 pricei remember watching with amazement as people paid outrageous prices for these Northwood II homes back in 2004 and 2005. Most of these buyers put 20% down as there was so much demand that builders on the Ranch could be choosy. Nearly all of those buyers have lost their down payments, and any who refinanced are underwater. Many of these properties were bought as investments, after all, prices only go up in Irvine -- except when they don't. At the current price, the low interest rates are making this place payment affordable even with the sky-high HOA and Mello Roos. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Irvine House Address ... 35 WONDERLAND Irvine, CA 92620 |
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