Friday, March 6, 2009

Mortgage Help Available For Tulsa Homeowners

Mortgage Help Available For Tulsa Homeowners

Posted: March 5, 2009 04:13 PM

Updated: March 6, 2009 07:39 AM

FEATURED VIDEO
Mortgage Help Available For Tulsa Homeowners


By Scott Thompson and Dan Bewley, The News On 6

TULSA, OK -- President Obama's $75 billion mortgage relief plan is aimed to help close to 9 million homeowners refinance their mortgages.

Real estate Web site Zillow.com says 38 percent of homeowners in Tulsa and Creek counties are eligible for part of the plan.

But a local mortgage banker says it may not be the best option for area homeowners.

The plan includes two programs and is intended to help one in every nine U.S. homeowners.

One program is aimed to help homeowners with a loan through Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac refinance their loans to lower or fixed interest rates.

The other program allows for the loan to be modified and has strict qualifications: you must have signed your mortgage before Jan. 1; you must be the owner and live in the home; you can't owe more than $729,750 on the loan; you must be able to prove that you can't pay the mortgage because of a financial hardship, like a reduced income or medical problems; and your monthly payment must be more than 31 percent of your monthly income.

Tell us your story. Click here if you plan to use the President's plan to refinance your home.

Not everyone thinks the plan will make a difference.

"I am dubious as to how much it will be able to help even on a national basis," said Tim Epps, a mortgage banker with Fairway Mortgage.

Epps says Tulsa remains insulated from the national housing crisis.

"We've actually still had year over year growth over the last eight years ... moderate, small, but it's been responsible growth," he said.

The numbers back him up. Zillow.com says 5 percent of Tulsa mortgage holders are underwater, meaning they owe more than their home is worth.

The national average is 20 percent.

Epps says there are other options in the area. With interest rates dipping about 5 percent, he recommends homeowners contact their mortgage broker professional and ask for a simple refinance.

He says it may be easier than the government's new plan.

President Obama's mortgage relief plan is intended to help one in every nine U.S. homeowners.
President Obama's mortgage relief plan is intended to help one in every nine U.S. homeowners.
Zillow.com says 5 percent of Tulsa mortgage holders are underwater.
Zillow.com says 5 percent of Tulsa mortgage holders are underwater.
Tim Epps says the mortgage relief plan may not be the best option for area homeowners.
Tim Epps says the mortgage relief plan may not be the best option for area homeowners.
Tim Epps
918-528-4010

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Black Swans, Pink Dolphins, & the Making Home Affordable Program for Oklahomans

Okay.  It is out. The Obama administration's plan to help homeowners that are underwater (owe more on their home than what it is worth). Will this plan help Tulsa homeowners?

The Tulsa market (as well as the whole state of Oklahoma) has enjoyed fairly stable appreciation of their home values over time. Most of what we get exposed to in the national press refers to the Case-Shiller Index which studies value change in the largest 10 and largest 20 markets in the entire USA. Unfortuneately, our local media often runs the national report each month without reporting the local data that is so important to our local market. While all mortgages are national (subject for a future post), all real estate is local. Even the data that is presented here from Zillow is for the Tulsa MSA (Metropolitan Statistical Area) as a whole. Individual communities (Jenks, Broken Arrow, Owasso, etc.) and even subdivisions will see some differences from the MSA data, but it provides a good basis for our market in comparison to the national values.

The chart below shows that home values have made responsible, steady growth in the Tulsa MSA over this decade. And, while median owner equity has fallen (partly because new buyers are putting smaller amounts down), the Tulsa, OK MSA is not experiencing the extent of negative owner equity being reported elsewhere in our country.


This graphic shows that there is one area of our market that reports over 10% of homeowners having negative equity, or underwater with their mortgage. As with the data above, we are well below the Case-Shiller numbers as well as the national averages.


So, how will Making Home Affordable plan help Tulsans and other Oklahomans with their mortgages? Fewer than most will be able to take advantage of this program. Given our market conditions we are the black swan or pink dolphin of the nation's real estate condition - a beautiful rarity.

Mortgage rates are still very low and most homeowners in our area can qualify for a great refinance without one of these new programs. If you have any questions about whether or not you could benefit from refinancing, call me for a no-obligation consultation.

Check back later for more details (they still are sketchy) on the program, including the Home Affordable Refinance Program, and what it may be able to do for you and your mortgage here in Tulsa, OK. If you can't wait, you can read the fact sheet.

Tim Epps
918-528-4010