Many people may be in a situation where they have accumulated debts on high interest accounts such as credit cards and other credit sources. The interest rates that are being charged on these loans may be quite high and may also be rising with the Bank of Canada interest rate hikes.
Homeowners may have the ability to take advantage of some options that may alleviate the high carrying costs and create a better cash flow on a monthly basis. These options may be used to help pay these debts off sooner rather than later or help with monthly expenses that have risen in the current inflationary market.
What is the difference between an ARM (Adjustable rate mortgage) and a VRM (Variable rate mortgage)?
This is a great question and one that has become extremely relevant over the past few years. Both options are tied to the lender’s Prime lending rate. For example, you may receive an option for your mortgage rate to be “Prime minus 1%”, this simply means that your mortgage interest rate would be the lender’s Prime rate minus 1%. If the Prime lending rate was 6.7%, your effective interest rate would be 5.7% (6.7% - 1%).
With the increase of interest rates and inflation, many consumers are feeling the effect of increased prices and cost of living. There may be a solution that can help without the burden of an additional monthly payment. In fact, in many cases, not only is there no additional monthly payment but the existing monthly payments may be erased as well. The result is a much needed stress relief and the ability to live at the lifestyle that we have been accustomed to while at the same time age in our own home. The Reverse Mortgage may be the answer and the process is very simple.
This is a great question, and is on the minds of many mortgage holders. The answer is not so simple and may not have such a simple answer as “Yes” or “No”. Let’s analyze what may be involved in this decision. The best decision will be the one that you can live with and be comfortable with.
If you are a real estate investor who is into buying and selling properties (flipping homes for profit) and do this full time then you know it is a very arduous process when securing a short term mortgage through a traditional bank type lender.
This is simply because the traditional bank type lender is designed to operate their business with long term return on investment in mind. Also, the guidelines they function under requires fully underwritten applications involving credit, income, debt, and documentation review.
With so much going on in this new world order, many folks are changing employment, while they are looking to get in on the home ownership journey.
Often, these borrowers find that they need to wait until the probation period has ended in order for a mortgage transaction to close.
However, there are exceptions when borrowers can close on a mortgage transaction while on probation. Other situations may be those who work with renewable contract employments.
Here is what you need to know about qualifying while on probation.
Purchasing a piece of property to call it your own seems like a dream that keeps getting farther and farther away for many folks. With high demand and tight supply continuing to have a chokehold on today’s sky high prices, resulting in often multiple bids for one property many are coming up short on having access to adequate down payment, even if they qualify for the purchase amount.
This is where the little known but long time Insurer backed Flex Down Program comes to assist.
You finally purchase the dream property, and your mortgage broker gets the file approved!
Great, first step of the process out of the way. But wait! The mortgage broker or their bank is asking for too many documents, and you have already provided what you thought would suffice.
“Not so fast Robin” says Bank-man, because your 90 day statement shows 4 large deposits, we need to slow down and ensure those are legitimate transfers. Well, you get the idea.
When getting into a mortgage contract there are options and features that most of us do not think of, with rate being the only factor in our minds. Much of the reason why we do not is simply because multi-millions of dollars are spent each year brain washing the general population into thinking that the mortgage rate is all there is to worry about.
Mortgage rates are carrots being dangled from sticks above, where the stick is the rest of the verbiage in the contract, including the mortgage penalty should you have to break this contract before maturity.
When the pandemic introduced itself and made a permanent impact into our daily lives most of us thought that along with many other industries the housing market would come screeching to a halt, like an 18 wheeler with all its brakes seized, burning rubber and blowing smoke in its wake. In short we expected a disaster.
But that idea was short-lived to say the least. It seems that many of us decided to make the move to become home-owners, or upgrade/downgrade during these trying times.
Fast forward to the present market and it seems the market has not really cooled down over the last few months.
Bidding wars and waiving all conditions, and thereby any safety nets in an offer has become a common experience.