According to
reports, “boomerang buyers” are the latest new buyer group to emerge.
These are former homeowners who had gone through a short sale, foreclosure or
bankruptcy in the past few years and are now ready to buy a home.
So, how soon
can they buy a home?
Past homeowners
who had FHA loans may need to wait only three years provided they can prove
that a hardship, such as job loss or death of a wage earner, led to their foreclosure
or short sale.
Freddie Mac’s
wait time is usually four years following a short sale or deed-in-lieu, and
seven years after a foreclosure. Fannie Mae may require a seven-year wait for a
foreclosure, but only a two-year wait following a short sale as long as the
borrower can provide a 20 percent down payment.
Most lenders
required buyers to wait 5 – 7 years to qualify for another loan, but mortgage
giants have begun to change their rules to allow homeowners who underwent a
foreclosure or short sale to qualify sooner. For those who underwent a short
sale, it may be sooner.
Question is why
would homeowners with such past histories want to buy again?
General
conception is that renting a home is akin to throwing money away, and with a
more stable economy, pride of homeownership has raised its head again.
But the 3 most
important reasons cited are:
-
Rents are on the rise
- Interest rates are on the rise
- Home prices are
on the rise
Which is good
news indeed!
Source: Realtor Magazine, July 2013
No comments:
Post a Comment