Archive for June, 2009

Almost 2 years ago my inlaws had to go thru bankruptcy and lost their home. My husband and I took our entire savings and purchased the property adjacent to our home and then had a modular moved onto the property which is financed in our name. The problem is since then, my father in law lost his job and refuses to get another one unless "it pays what he needs". So needless to say they are alwyas late with the payment and we have had to make it several times ourselves. They are now making us out to be the bad guys because we have suggested that it may have to be put up for sale. We cannot continue to make 2 house payments. We have 3 kids and bills of our own. My mother in law speaks ill of us and when we try and talk to them about it she claims we are making her sugar go up or because of us adding stress to her life are going to cause he to get cancer. UUGGHH, I am lost as what to do???? Anyone have any answers?
I need to add that both my husband and I work. And my husband is less understanding of this situation than I am.

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We've been living her for 4 years now. Always made our payments on time. The mortgage company we have doesn't refinance mobile homes. We've looked into other companies, but unless you have brick underpinning they won't do anything for you. I've tried selling this place but no real estate agent will talk to me because it's so hard to sell a mobile home. When we bought this place, the company said we could always refinance in a few years to get a lower payment. They weren't willing to do brick underpinning because it wasn't within the loan amount, and we got the least expensive home on there lot. I admit we had bad credit at the time, but our credit has improved considerable since buying this home. We have 3 kids and one on the way and it's only a 3 bedroom home. I want to add on to this home or find a home that we can afford and is bigger. What do you suggest?

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My boyfriend and I are in the process of buying a home. We found a double wide trailer close to work in the city. (Not in a park. It is on its own acre of private land in city limits.) It sits on a permanent foundation with a crawlspace. The property is Very well maintained and landscaped. It also has a large front porch and patio. Honestly, you can not even tell its a trailer. It looks like one of those modular type homes. It has been recently built (within the last 3 years) and has top of line everything inside. Its over 1800 sq feet and beautiful inside and out. The current owner pays property tax and is hooked up to city water and sewer. It is in a very nice residential area. (New homes.) However, our real estate agent claims there is no way to get financing on a trailer because it will lose value. Right now it is valued over 100,000! Pretty good for a 3 year old trailer, I thought. My question is, Is there anybody in NC who has a similar property and got regular financing for it??
I also add that we have good credit and do qualify for a regular "stick built" home. Its just that our real estate agent said we can not get financing on mobile/modular homes. She claims it is because they have a higher foreclosure rate than a "stick built" and lose value quickly. It sounds strange to us since the mobile home is not movable or in a park. Also, since its selling/valued at 3 or 4 times the cost of an old single wide trailer. The price is that of a regular home. I'm just a bit confused because we are young first time home buyers. Thanks for any help you can offer!
M2, Thanks! It is on a permanent brick foundation. The "crawspace" is just under the back patio area. The seller is selling the land and trailer together but no lender we have talked to (5!) want to do a loan for a trailer. They all tell us to stick with a "stick built" home. They don't want to "risk" a trailer. Our real estate agent has already found us the "perfect house" to suit our needs so she doesn't want to check into finding trailer financing. Well, she claims she has and there are no options. It is just hard to believe that a home permanently attached to the land with a high resale value (for a trailor anyway, 9,758) can't be financed! We checked and it has never been a "moveable" trailer aside from when it was brought from the factory to the land site and attached to the foundation. We will look into realty.com and a mortgage broker before giving up…Thanks for the advice!
loslunas87031, Are credit scores are very good and it is considered real estate. I think you are very right. That seems to be exactly what they do. The houses they seem to keep steering us towards are quite a few thousand more than we want to pay. Our agent always claims that since we are "quailifed" for a certain amount that we should be looking for 5,000 – 10,000 higher because we can offer a bit lower. Everytime we find something for less we are faced with head shakes and a hundred reasons why that property isn't "good". Home buying has been more of headache than I would have dreamed! It is so frustrating to find something perfect and affordable and told, "I really don't think that is a good investment." Maybe we should just start demanding detailed explaination as to why they won't finance a trailer and try to "barter" them into it…. I don't know. Thanks for your help!

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My husband and I are considering this and we have no idea where to start. Can someone share the process — do we have to get a bank loan first, then find land ourselves, then choose the home, or what? And can anyone recommend a builder? We're looking to build in or around Levittown, PA.

Please help!

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and put another home(possibly modular home due to limited income) in it's place. But should I build a two car garage with an apartment on top of it first to have somewhere to stay while the house is being demolished and rebuilt? How long does it take to demolish a house and put a modular home in it's place? And do you have any idea how much all of this will cost? I'll probably have to finance everything, and could probably only afford an 80,000 mortgage. Thanks in advance!

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I want to consolidate my mobile home payment with my cars payment. I owe @6,500 on the home & ,300 on the car. Please help. I've tried many many places and get no where cause of my bad credit and mainly the year of my home. It is a very well maintained place on a lot that we rent. It does not feel like its 30+ years old. We love this place but need to work out our monthly budget.

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We know about TBW, Flagstar Bank, but we would like more.

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I am purchasing a peice of property and a modular home that is not new, it is maybe 10 years old. I am doing the whole owner finance/contract for deed deal so I am having to pay 120,000 for the place. I think it is worth less. But hey, that is what bad credit gets you. Anyway he said I would have to buy homeowners insurance and I asked how much and he said 120,000. This home itself without the land especially is not where near worth 120,000!!!! Why would I need that much? And if something happened to home would it be right for insurance company to pay 120,000 for a 10 year old modular home. May be even a little older for all I know but it is not 120,000!!!! What is the minumum that I should get? I don’t have much money and never had homeowner’s insurance.
It is not being loaned on by a bank. The owner is financing it to us.
Waiting to repair our credit really is not an option because we live in a 2 bedroom mobile home with a 4, 3, and 1 year old. We live in the ghetto of a small town in a trailer park. I have to get out of here NOW!!!! It is not safe.

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we have 3 children. just moved to the area a planned on being long term tenants. I got a notice in February that our landlord didnt really want us to rent anymore cause they wanted to sell the house because they could buy another unless this is sold one.

then all of the sudden they said okay we can stay for 300 more a month. we already pay 1000 so we decided to buy a house instead. not knowing that wed find the one as fast as we did we bid on the home and the offer was accepted.

Also in not knowing finances are going to be tight because of the closing costs and 3.5% down. paying for inspections ect homeowners up front so on so forth. I asked the landlord if shed make some arrangment with us on the last two months of rent since this happened.

She is in a uproar because we dont want to buy this house. so she types me back this smorning say her LAYWER advised them that they can not make an arrangment we have to pay in full. She was always so nice untill we didnt want to buy this house. come to find out it is a modular home and we couldnt get finaced for one of these homes and it is too small! well the reality is is that we can not afford to do both at the same time.

what would you do?

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I took out a HELOC for a property investment at the exact wrong time. My investment property still has not sold in a year and a half, meanwhile my HELOC is at full capacity and I am/have been paying interest on it the whole time. Now I have run out of money, should I offer owner financing and how do I go about it?

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We were looking into buying a home from a company. We had been denied an FHA loan initially with a lender. We decided to look into the option of a modular home because they had a different set of financing.

We were approved easily enough and everything sounds great.

No down payment. (up front)
No closing cost.
But the catch is, we give them the 8,000 dollar house credit we will recieve "as the down payment."

Now, I may be thinking about this all wrong, but with the amount of our loan, the fact that it is FHA (through them) and the closing cost I really don't think all that would add up to 8,000.

When we looked at a similar house, they quoted us at around 3,000 dollars as a down payment for the FHA loan.
Even if our closing costs were 3,000 dollars that still doesn't add up to the 8,000 that they're asking from us in the end..

Is there something I'm over looking in the procedure that makes this a good deal or am I right about my gut instinct that something seems fishy?

Thanks in advance!
What I'm wondering about is if this is actually a reasonable deal? We've never bought a home before so we don't know all the fees and other things that go along with it. For all I know, 8,000 dollars is the right amount to make it happen. I'm just not entirely sure. It would be great b/c we don't have a down payment at the moment, but I'm unsure.

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The homes are on a lot in the Berkshires it seems every lending place we have gone to or got in touch with online say the same thing we don't lend on mobile homes, we don't understand we had it appraised it comes out to be worth alot so why won't anyone finace it. Confused in Mass.

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I need architechtural plans and realistic way to cost out a "green" home less than or about 2000 or so sf.

Here is what I want:
-passive solar
-Depending on costs:
–gray water recycling
–under floor radient heating
–consider alternative construction like straw bale/rammed earth or modular
–recycled materials for insulation
–bamboo
–natural materials
–solar panels
–heat pump
I'd really like to do it right but I'm of moderate income and single middle aged woman.

I need it to be affordable. I'm in Alabama and few do this. I need to keep humidity and heat and climate in mind.

Under or around 2000 sf

Any info on financing for green homes would be welcome too;

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Hi All,
I am trying to help my mom out but I'm not sure where to go and what to ask. Her mortgage is on a 5-1 ARM and she is currently on her ARM which will expire again in December of 09 (6 months). She refied at 5.25% 5 years ago (with Wells Fargo) but it went up to 6.5 with the ARM. She currently owes 122k with an estimated value at 215k. She has always paid her mortgage, never late and has excellent credit. However the challenge is that she was recently laid off and is receiving unemployment. I checked into the HASP (home affordable refinance program) a bit and it doesn't look like she can qualify for the refinance but potentially the modification? but again I am not sure if that will help as she is on an ARM. Oh and I have verified the loan is not guaranteed by Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae.

P.S. This is a manufactured home placed on a foundation with land if that makes a difference

Any advise would be greatly appreciated

Thanks
Gordon

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By home loan I mean a home loan and not a personal property loan like on a trailer home/manufactured home in a trailer court. I qualified for a home loan and I want to keep it cheap, so I want to purchase a piece of land and a manufactured home. Wil this work as a home loan if its on private land?
Wow, there is quite the array of scams out there! Why would anyone take out a loan from the internet without talking to someone face to face?

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My wife and I both enjoy excellent credit and we desire to purchase a doublewide manufactured home. However, there seems to be a problem with finding lenders for manufactured homes. One lender offered us 25 yrs at 11% with 10% down. Thats insane to me. Our credit scores ( high 700s) calls for a rate far lower even if it is a manufactured home.
Can someone out there with experience help us? We need some lending institutions that WILL finance a manufactured home so we can find the best rate possible.

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We will be able to put down between 6 to 10 thousand on either property or a house. Our credit scores are both in the low 500's, I have a repossession judgement and some few old small bills but no credit cards. I have nothing that shows good payments.
If we buy property at 30 percent down could we get financed for the remaining 70 percent and how likely would we be able to get financing for the improvements and a modular home or a double wide trailer using the land for the collateral?

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I was laid off from my job at the end of March…1 of about 90 (automotive manufacturing). I honestly didn't think it would get up to me, I was pretty high on the list and there's only about 150 people that work for our company. They told us on a Wed that Fri would be our last day, so when I got off work Wed I went to a local Credit Union to see about refinancing my house to get a lower intrest rate and lower my house payment, I had HR at work send proof of employment to the bank before I signed my papers that Friday (the loan manager said that was fine, I didn't tell him I was getting laid off). I haven't heard back from him and its been over a month and I've called several times questioning him about it, he keeps saying he'll have to get back with me. Anyway, I'm not holding my breath on him to call me back, are there any programs I can look into? I have already talked with my mortgage company and they said they won't refinance anything if I don't have income. And for the people that are going to say GET A JOB!!!! Well, I would but I'm going back to school M-F from 8-3 so I can better my life doing something I want to do and not something I have to do, I don't want to work in a factory my whole life and now I have actually got the chance to better my life…I'm also a single parent taking care of 2 kids, I'm at school while their at school and we get home at the same time. A part time job would be hard because I don't have anyone to watch them while I work. And as long as I'm in school, they'll pay me unemployment. but with losing my job I lose 0 each week and that makes it harder for me to pay the house payment. Only serious people, please don't be mean, tell me I'm lazy because at least I'm trying to make a better life for me and my kids and I don't want to lose our home and I don't want to put it up for sale, and I've worked so hard to get this house. I've used my savings to make up for what my unemployment doesn't pay and wouldn't even have the money to put down on another place if I did sell it, and if I have to forclose on the house, it'll look bad on my credit that I worked so hard on for the past few years to get good so I could buy this house. I'll only be in school for a year and I'll have my diploma and be able to get a decent paying job, but I need to lower that house payment so we won't be in such a bind until after I graduate and get the job.
To let you know I talked to the guy at the Credit Union today, he said there was a program out there for people that have been laid off that will lower their intrest rate and will be fixed rate until they get back on their feet. He's looking into that for me and thank you to everyone that helped. Hopefully this newly discovered information will help someone else and we'll still get to stay in our home. ***PRAYING***

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1. Swine Flu Second Wave: Typically, influenza outbreaks come in waves, getting worse with each one. The very ease with which we seem to have survived the first wave of swine flu may make us vulnerable to a horrific second wave.

2. Commercial Real Estate Collapse: Various commercial real estate deals face trillions in refinancing obligations over the coming years. But the market is practically closed, ensuring massive bankruptcies and restructuring.

Why are lenders so freaked out? Because existing loans are going sour at a pace unlike anything we've seen in history. Because of that, even commercial real estate properties with strong cash flows are finding financing extremely difficult to come by.

3. The Option Adjustable Rate Mortgage Explosion: Anyone referring to the "subprime crisis" has got to get with the program. The subprime wave of defaults is basically over. Now the question is, what about all the other types of mortgages? You know, Option ARM, Alt-As and of course, good old fashioned prime mortgage.

The big wave of Option ARM resets has yet to come, and given the drop in home prices, refinancing won't be realistic. Let's hope the homeowners can afford their new monthly payments.

4. Global Food Crisis: As we saw last year, the global food supply teeters on the edge of adequacy. Any serious shock–floods in the Midwest, a war in Asia, social unrest in China, political upheaval in Thailand or Egypt–could result in shortages in countries that import large amounts of their food.

5. Israel Bombs Iran: The Obama administration's openness to the Iranian regime may have the perverse effect of emboldening its nuclear ambitions. Very likely, the fears of the nuclear Iran are over-stated. It would probably behave like most members of the global nuke club, cowed by its own destructive power into behaving responsibly.

But Iran isn't the only country to worry about in the region. Israel may not be willing to tolerate a nuclear armed Iran, and may choose to strike out to destroy Iran's nascent nuclear capabilities. This would obvious raise tensions throughout the Middle East. At the very least, oil prices will likely spike and remain elevated following any military action against Iran. This, in turn, will slow the global economy.

6. A Wave of Municipal Defaults: Historically, cities and states don't default on their loans very much. But as Warren Buffett pointed out, historical results don't mean jack because muni insurance wasn't around. Unless it gets a bailout, California may go bankrupt, causing the muni market to seize up, bringing public works and spending to a halt, kneecapping GDP.

At that point, with no ability to borrow, the other states will rush to default themselves, sparing their taxpayers any more pain.

7. Another Bank Run: It seems unlikely, given the government's implicit guarantee of the banking sector, but it's always possible that investors or lenders could lose confidence in one of the banks again, prompting a financing run a la Bear Stearns.

If this happened, we'd be back to square one with all the confidence and bailouts since Lehman's collapse — only, the government would have fewer bullets left in the gun.

8. Runaway Inflation: The Federal Reserve seems confident that it can "land the recovery." Is it right?

There's good reason to be skeptical that the Fed will be able to reduce the monetary base before it floods out into the economy, driving up prices and destroying savings. For one thing, the Fed has never really been very good at doing this. By the time the Fed realizes that inflation is taking off, it may be too late.

9. North Korean Missile Launch: Wee dictator Kim Jong II has lulled the world to sleep, performing missile tests on a seemingly daily basis. What was once a cause for alarm now barely merits a bulletin on CNBC. In fact, the dollar has rallied on the nervousness.

But his neighbors in China, South Korea and Japan are freaked out and an actual war, or genuine provocation, could wreak havoc on far eastern trade. This might cause investors to flee towards the dollar, but it would be terrible for markets and economic activity.

10. Chinese Financial Crisis: Most economic discussion of China these days is about how dependent the US government has become on China buying Treasury bonds. But China has lately learned that its own economy is dangerously leveraged on foreign demand for Chinese manufactured goods. The global downturn has helped expose the fragility of the Chinese economic miracle, and worse might be coming.

A collapse of profits in China could very well spark a banking crisis, much like the collapse of real estate prices did to US financial institutions. Very little attention has been paid to the fragility of the Chinese financial system, which is dominated by large, slow, non-transparent, often corrupt state-run banks and centralized decision making. Slowing exports could be the tide that goes out and reveals whi

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