Seeking Cash, at a Lower Cost [Archive] - Real Estate Insider Forum
 
Web realestateinsider.net

View Full Version : Seeking Cash, at a Lower Cost


News
01-27-2007, 08:57 AM
Seeking Cash, at a Lower Cost
Fixed-Rate Refinancing Gains Popularity Over Home-Equity Loans

By Amy Hoak
MarketWatch
Saturday, January 27, 2007

CHICAGO -- People looking to extract equity from their homes have increasingly been turning to cash-out refinancing, industry observers say.

A big reason that people are tapping their equity through refinancing comes down to dollars and cents, according to Amy Crews Cutts, deputy chief economist with Freddie Mac. Because home-equity loans and lines of credit are most often tied to the prime rate, now at 8.25 percent, those options have gotten more expensive even as long-term mortgage rates have remained relatively low, with the 30-year loan averaging about 6.25 percent.

"It's all about the prime rate," said Michael Kodsi, chief executive of Choice Mortgage Bank in Boca Raton, Fla. A good number of his clients would rather take cash out through refinancing -- whereby their mortgage rate will be fixed -- than take out a loan tied to the prime rate, which has the potential to fluctuate and "could go higher down the road," he said.

Freddie Mac said 89 percent of the loans it owns that were refinanced in the third quarter of 2006 had loan amounts at least 5 percent higher than the original mortgage balances, the threshold for considering a loan to be a cash-out refinancing. It's the highest share of cash-out refinance loans reported since 1990.

Consumers cashed out a total of $82.8 billion during the quarter, down from $90.6 billion in the second quarter, according to Freddie Mac.

Banks are seeing results of the cash-out trend, too.

"Banks have been reporting that they have not been getting the business of home-equity lines as they had been before," Cutts said.

According to the American Bankers Association, the dollar amount of home-equity loans (including loans made through home-equity lines of credit) increased by an annualized 14.6 percent for the first three quarters of 2006, compared with all of 2005. That's down from a 17.4 percent increase in 2005 and a 31.2 percent increase in 2004.

The "easy money" in 2004 was an effect of a prime rate at about 4 percent, said Keith Leggett, senior economist for the bankers association. But as the Fed raised rates, thereby raising the prime rate, that easy money dried up.

"What's happening [is], you're starting to see the impact of higher interest rates," he said. "As interest rates rose, that . . . translated into basically a slowing in the rate of growth in home-equity lines and home-equity loans."

Some homeowners aren't refinancing only to get at their equity. Instead, they're taking "passive" cash-outs, refinancing for a better rate, perhaps in response to a higher reset rate for an adjustable-rate mortgage, Cutts said.

In fact, those facing ARM resets seem to be the driving force behind an upswing in refinancing that started late last year, said Mike Fratantoni, senior economist at the Mortgage Bankers Association.

While locking in a good rate, some of these homeowners are using the opportunity to pull equity out of their homes while they have a chance -- a move that perhaps helps them clean up credit-card debt at the same time, said Keith Gumbinger, vice president of HSH Associates, a financial publisher of mortgage and consumer loan information.

That said, a growing number of homeowners recently have been increasing their mortgage rates through refinancing, Cutts said. "The median borrower increased their mortgage rate by 12 percent," she said, referring to statistics from the third quarter of 2006. The borrowers considered for that statistic originally had fixed-rate loans but refinanced either to an ARM or another fixed-rate mortgage.

So is refinancing to take cash out everyone's best bet? Hardly. It depends on the individual, said Jim Svinth, chief economist for LendingTree.com.

"I always counsel folks to look at all of their alternatives," he said. "If you refinanced two years ago and you have a 4.5 percent or 4.75 percent [rate] on the first mortgage, you're not going to want to refinance in today's environment," he said.

Of course, if the spread between the mortgage rate you have and the one you can get isn't as big -- or if you can refinance to a better rate -- it may be a decent option.

Above all, people need to ask themselves, "At the end of the day, what is the cheapest way to borrow this money," said Bob Walters, chief economist with Quicken Loans. "You need to minimize the interest payments that you make."

After all, a home-equity line of credit still will offer a better interest rate than most credit cards, and interest on these loans is generally tax-deductible. Another point to remember: Banks will sometimes offer a fixed rate for chunks of debt taken out on a home-equity line.

There are also costs and fees to consider, so those who are refinancing should make sure that the move is going to pay off, given the expense. Their timeline for repayment is another consideration; if the debt can be paid back in less than a year, a second mortgage or home-equity line of credit may be a better choice, experts said.

Finally, borrowers should know exactly what they'll use the funds for.

"If you look historically at what people do with the cash-out funds, they fall into one of three buckets," Fratantoni said. One is debt consolidation, another is to make an investment and a third is to spend, he said.

Home improvement is often cited as a prudent reason for extracting equity, given that the value of the home -- and your future equity -- should rise as a result.

Overall, borrowers also need to be honest with themselves before tapping their home-equity, especially if the reason for the cash-out isn't a one-time cost, said Jennifer Wheary, a senior fellow at Demos, a nonpartisan public policy research and advocacy organization. She recently completed a report on the issue of home-equity extraction.

"In the short term, they will feel a sense of relief," she said, referring to those who use the cash to catch up with such things as credit-card payments or medical expenses.

But the relief will be fleeting if they find themselves in the same situation -- and this time without the cushion of home equity to fall back on, she said.