Posts Tagged ‘Financial Crisis’

Facing the Financial Crisis | KETC | Home Equity Loans

FacingMortgageCrisis asked:


The only time you should consider taking out a home equity loan is if it will increase the value of your home. While taking out a home equity loan to help pay down other debt may help in the sort term, it is not a long term solution to a debt problem. Ifyou have more questions, you can call the United Way’s helpline at 1-800-427-4626 or 2-1-1 for information about trusted community resources in the Greater St. Louis area you can turn to.

Duane

 

Facing The Mortgage Crisis Spot – Home Equity Loans

wmfetv asked:


WMFE is helping the Orlando community face the on-going mortgage crisis by connecting people those in need with trusted community resources to help them address or prevent a foreclosure situation and deal with other aspects of the current financial crisis. Our work continues here at our new interactive web site – wmfe.org/mortgage. Youll find all the same great content, and hopefully even more resources to help you or those you know. As we all face the mortgage and financial crisis, we will continue to bring you information from experts, trusted resources, and the Orlando community United Way 2-1-1 & Elder Helpline is a free, one-stop source for referrals to approximately 800 health and human service agencies and 2000 programs and services in Central Florida. United Way 2-1-1 is accessed toll-free from anywhere in Orange, Seminole or Osceola counties by simply dialing 2-1-1. It operates 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. Multilingual call specialists and TDD access is available. Central Florida residents call 2-1-1 for many different types of help. Professional call specialists help callers with such complex issues as substance abuse, gambling, domestic violence programs, suicide prevention, financial problems, mortgage foreclosure assistance and much more. By dialing 2-1-1, a caller is connected with a highly trained call specialist who helps the caller assess their situation and find the community services in their area that can assist them. Visit wmfe.org/mortgage for

Gerald

 

The Use of Home Equity Loans – Wise or Not Wise?

Gerald Greene asked:


Over the past few years many Americans have established lines of credit secured by the equity in their homes or have borrowed a lum sum amount secured by their home. For marginal borrowers this can turn out to be highly risky as it exposes these families to the loss of their homes.

Lenders tend to quickly change colors from friend to foe in times of financial crisis and will “take it away if you can’t pay”.

Prior to mortgaging or refinancing a home you should consider what your families finances would look like if one or more of your family members living in the home lost their job or came down with a serious illness.

How long could you keep the home payments current if there was an unfortunate long term loss of family income?

In spite of the dangers of refinancing or taking out a home equity loan there are times when it may in fact be wise.

Perhaps credit card debt has gotten out of hand. You can get a home equity loan at much lower rates, pay off the credit card debt, and lower your monthly payments, perhaps as much as by 50%.

A word of warning, however. You must not run up your credit card balances once again or you will end up in even worse financial shape than you were to begin with. The second time around trying to carry high credit card debt and a home equity loan payment may be more than painful. It may be financially fatal.

It would be far safer to avoid temptation by cutting up your credit cards and using a debit card instead.

There are other occassions when a home equity loan may be justified. Perhaps you wish to start your own business and are willing and able to take the risk that things may not work out as you plan.

Your home equity will likely be the cheapest source of start up capital that you will find other than going hat in hand to family members. For most families a “friendly” family loan is not recommended as the resulting strife that often takes place if things don’t go as planned causes painful family problems.

Even when all does go well you may get tired of listening to advice from your unofficial business partners.

Perhaps you wish to purchase an existing business, one that should earn you a good income for a long time to come. Again your cheapest source of capital would likely be a home equity loan.

In general, one should consider a home equity loan when the loan proceeds are used to very likely improve ones financial position. This would be a wise use of the loan proceeds.

One should use extreme caution in using a home equity loan to purchase additional consumer goods, say a large expensive flat screen TV set or a new SUV.

The worst example of the use of a home equity loan that I know of was a couple who took out a loan in order to go to the Superbowl. Just think of how much that Superbowl trip will really cost over the years as interest payments are added in. What a terrible short sighted financial decision.

My advice. Use a home equity loan only to improve your financial position or to raise funds in a true emergency situation. Using a home equity loan to purchase things that will only lose value is a misuse of the loan proceeds that could cost you what is probably your most useful and valuable possession … your home sweet home.



TIMMY
 

Does anyone actually know anyone who took out a second mortgage to buy a new flat screen?

KimberlyJ asked:


I don’t buy the idea that we are in a financial crisis because people used their home equity to fund inappropriate spending. I think that people took out second mortgages to pay for their kids’ overpriced college education, to pay off credit card debt accumulated as a result of job losses or health problems, etc. Many of these people simply would have gone bankrupt if the run up in housing prices had not given them lots of paper equity.

In short, I think the middle class is being scapegoated. People I know aren’t trying to keep up with the Joneses, they’re just trying to survive in a poor jobs market brought on by globalization.

Please share your thoughts, not parroting what you hear in the media, but actually sharing stories from your own life or people you know. Thanks.

HARRY