Saturday, January 26, 2008

Use Home Equity Protection

Safe home equity use can stimulate your financial outlook. Excessive spending against the unencumbered value of your home could leave you in, well, financially transmitted distress.

by Broderick Perkins
© 2008 DeadlineNews.Com

Deadline Newsroom - You don't have to abstain from spending against the unencumbered value of your home, but you do have to guard against home equity excess.

Home equity is the difference between your mortgage balance and the value of your home.

When you buy a home with a down payment of, say 20 percent, you have a 20 percent equity stake in your home. Over time, mortgage payments and appreciation can give you a larger equity stake. Likewise, depreciation can reduce your stake.

Lenders allow you to borrow money against some, but not always all of your home equity, provided you qualify with good credit and adequate income.

Home equity can be an emergency fund, investment pot, nest egg for retirement or a way to get out of more expensive debt.

Just keep in mind, when you use it, you lose it.

A home equity loan, by it's very nature, is an equity-depleting loan. You don't have an unlimited amount of equity to bank on.

The most conservative financial planners advise not fooling around with your home's equity. Eventually pay off your mortgage so that when you retire on a fixed income you'll be home free with no mortgage payment.

However, emergencies do arise and it's nice to know you've got something to fall back on, other than credit cards. That's particularly true as you age and your health wanes and during hard economic times that threaten your employment.

Again, the conservative advice suggests, instead of using your equity, even during an emergency, you should have socked away an emergency savings fund of from three to six months worth of your income as part of a sound financial plan.

However, even if you don't use your equity, it's not a bad idea to take out a home equity loan as a financial backup while you are fully employed. Once you are already unemployed or fully aware you will be laid off, it's probably too late.

If employment and income are necessary to qualify for the loan and you lie about your employment status, you are omitting a material fact and defrauding a lender. Lying on an loan application is a federal offense.

The best back up home equity loan is a home equity line of credit (HELOC). Like a credit card, if you don't use it, there are no payments, but it's there if you need it. HELOC's are almost always cheaper than a credit card, but it is a form of revolving credit, often with an adjustable interest rate.

A home equity loan for a fixed amount with a slightly higher fixed rate may be a good deal for set costs, financial endeavors, investments and the like. Because it is an installment loan with fixed payments, however, the loan forces you to begin making payments right away, even if you don't use the money right away.

Either loan could be a good choice for bill consolidation, but only if you have the will power to pay off bills and other credit that comes with higher interest rates and not use them again. The rates are lower than average credit card and retail store card rates.

Conservative and more liberal financial experts alike, say if you must use your home equity, the best use is to reinvest it.

The best investments include certain home improvements, education for the kids, new business finances, a second home and other financial moves that provide an equal or better return on your money than the cost of the loan.

Avoid buying big gas guzzling cars, boats, RVs, vacations, home theaters and other items that don't give you a return on your money.

Finally, don't overlook how economic conditions of the day can affect your home equity. This is especially noteworthy if you combine an adjustable rate mortgage (ARM) first with an adjustable rate home equity loan in a so-called "piggy-back" deal to finance most or all of the cost of a home.

With two mortgages, should interest rates rise and push up both monthly payments, you could quickly reach an affordability point of no return.

For example, in a soft housing market, with flat and falling home prices, there will be little if any home equity growth to bail you out, say with a refinance because your home could be worth less than the mortgages you seek to refinance.

Related news from DeadlineNews.Com
Equity-Saving Home Improvements
Home Equity Meltdown
• DeadllineNews.Com's Home Equity Section

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© 2008 DeadlineNews.Com

Broderick Perkins, an award-winning consumer journalist of 30 years, is publisher and executive editor of San Jose, CA-based DeadlineNews.Com, a real estate news and consulting service, and the new Deadline Newsroom, DeadlineNews.Com's new backshop. In both cases, it's where all the news really hits home.



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Viva, Viva Las Vegas

Las Vegas has become a glass-half-full, glass-half-empty town. Home buying fear now is as pervasive as speculation was under two years ago, but the smart money may be moving back to town.

by Broderick Perkins
© 2008 DeadlineNews.Com

Deadline Newsroom - Think about it.

A record number of homes for sale.

Home sales half what they were a year ago.

Home prices slashed by as much as 30 percent.

It's a sure bet somebody is making a killing in Las Vegas.

Before you pass Sin City off as just another town sand blasted by the housing bust, the National Association of Residential Real Estate Investment Advisors (NARREIA) suggests you take another hard look at the City That Never Sleeps.

Scott Meservey with the investment association's development services says foreclosures, short sales and homeowners who've lost their shirts alls makes for great media drama.

But there's an untold story about the growing number of buyers slipping into town paying 10, 20 and 30 percent less than what homes cost less than two years ago, according to the association.

And they are not high rollers.

Meservey, a Realty Executives agent in Las Vegas, says only a fraction of the owner-occupied homes in Las Vegas were purchased -- in a short time span -- with funny money from the last housing boom.

Most Vegas homeowners, on the other hand, are just that. They didn't gamble on buying a home. They have conventional financing and are prepared to wait out the market.

It's a lot like a hungry snake gulping down a wayward pig.

It will pass.

Meservey said a minority of properties are bringing down home values region wide and the fear of buying is as pervasive as speculative buying used to be, but that's created a real housing market sale in Las Vegas.

Dataquick Information Services said November home sales in the Las Vegas area were at a 12-year low in November and the median price dropped at a record 13.5 percent pace during the year.

NARREIA reported recently, the market was awash with nearly 28,000 listings, almost half of which were vacant, indicating speculators simply bailed on the properties.

One door closes and another opens.

Viva, Las Vegas.

• See DeadlineNews.Com's Regional Markets Section.

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© 2008 DeadlineNews.Com

Broderick Perkins, an award-winning consumer journalist of 30 years, is publisher and executive editor of San Jose, CA-based DeadlineNews.Com, a real estate news and consulting service, and the new Deadline Newsroom, DeadlineNews.Com's new backshop. In both cases, it's where all the news really hits home.



DeadlineNews.Com's Editorial Content Is Intellectual Property • Unauthorized Use Is A Federal Crime


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Digital TV (DTV) One Year Away

In one year, when the nation cans analog TV broadcasts in exchange for digital signals, you'll need a digital TV, digital subscriber service or a digital converter to stay tuned.

by Broderick Perkins
© 2008 DeadlineNews.Com

Deadline Newsroom - If you are still climbing a ladder to adjust your rooftop TV antennae or leaving the couch to reposition those "rabbit ears," your TV will go dark in another year.

To stay tuned with your current equipment, you'll have to get a digital converter to dumb-down the signal for your low-tech TV.

Otherwise all channels will be full of "snow" and white noise.
Luckily, free $40 coupons, two per household, are now available from the federal government to help you defray the $50 to $70 cost of a converter. Converters will be available from electronics retailers and other merchants.

Beginning Feb. 18, 2009, analog TV signals makes way for digital TV (DTV) signals. Congress ordered the transition to digital broadcasting to make more efficient use of the publicly owned airwaves.

You do have some other options in addition to the digital-to-analog converter, which, again, is only necessary to get the digital signal over-the-air via an antennae to your analog TV.

• You will not need the converter if you own a digital TV, even if you get over-the-air antennae signals. The digital TV converts the signal with it's built in digital tuner.

• You will not need the converter if you subscribe to a cable or satellite service, even if you have an analog TV. Your service converts the signal for you.

• The transition does not require you to buy a high definition TV (HDTV), unless you want to take advantage of a high definition video image.

• The transition is from analog to digital, which only requires that your TV has a digital tuner, your service provides digital tuning or that you get a converter for over-the-air digital reception.

• Digital TVs that are not HDTV are priced comparable with the newest analog TVs.
• You can watch HDTV programming with a digital TV, with a digital service or with a digital converter, you just won't get the full HDTV image quality.

Since March 2007, all TV reception devices -- including video cassette recorders (VCRs) and digital video players and recorders (DVRs) -- must be clearly marked as analog, digital or HDTV.

Also, analog products must displayed with or near a consumer alert label that designates it as analog, while disclosing what is necessary to use it with the digital signal.

The coupons for digital converters are offered, along with more information, from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration.

You can also call the 24-hour federal hotline at 1-888-DTV-2009 (1-888-388-2009) to sign up for the $40 coupons and to get more information.

Another federal web site, the Federal Trade Commission's "Countdown To DTV Transition" also offers digital conversion information.

• See DeadlineNews.Com's Appliances and Technology Section.
• See DeadlineNews.Com's Home Technology Section.
• See DeadlineNews.Com's Virtual Real Estate Section.

Advertise on DeadlineNews.Com

© 2008 DeadlineNews.Com

Broderick Perkins, an award-winning consumer journalist of 30 years, is publisher and executive editor of San Jose, CA-based DeadlineNews.Com, a real estate news and consulting service, and the new Deadline Newsroom, DeadlineNews.Com's new backshop. In both cases, it's where all the news really hits home.



DeadlineNews.Com's Editorial Content Is Intellectual Property • Unauthorized Use Is A Federal Crime


Read more!