Welcome! If you are Renting a Home in New York State, this weblog could change your life!

NewYorkFinancedHomes.com is dedicated to helping Renters in New York State:

  • Stop Renting
  • Build an “Equity Fund”
  • Qualify for an FHA Loan in the near future

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Next: Overview

From Fannie Mae – How Much Home can you afford?

How Much House Can You Afford? The following information is needed to calculate how much house you can afford to purchase. Worksheets have been provided to assist in your calculations. After providing the information, click on “Calculate” for your results. You can reset the values you entered by clicking on the “Reset Values” option.

Disclaimer: Fannie Mae does not prequalify borrowers, but we do provide tools such as this calculator that may help you on the path to homeownership. Remember, a lender decides on your mortgage application and loan amount, and lender calculations may vary from Fannie Mae calculations. Fannie Mae calculations are solely intended to provide ballpark estimates, not final or binding loan amounts.

See calculator here:

A Model for Quantifying the Benefits of Homeownership Education and Counseling

With delinquencies and foreclosures on the rise, the nation’s homeownership education and counseling
programs have attracted increased attention. In addition to providing counseling and refinancing
assistance to help families in trouble avoid foreclosure, homeownership education and counseling
programs can help families avoid risky loans in the first place and better understand both the risks and
responsibilities of homeownership. An oft-cited study by Freddie Mac provides support for the
proposition that certain types of homeownership education and counseling programs may reduce
defaults.
In addition to reducing defaults and foreclosures, homeownership education and counseling is often
claimed to help families achieve homeownership in the first place by helping them to navigate the
homebuying process, improve their credit, and access favorable financing products. In this study, we
sought to test an approach to quantifying this benefit.

Working with Eric Hangen at I Squared Community Development Consulting, Inc., we looked at three
homeownership education and counseling agencies that had data on the credit scores of families they
counseled at both the time of entry into the program and a subsequent time, following counseling. We
then modeled the effects of any increases in credit scores, as well as any decreases in debt level and
increases in savings, on the size of the mortgage the family could safely afford.

e found that at two of the three agencies, families experienced significant increases in credit scores
that led to substantial increases in their purchasing power. Together with increases in purchasing
power due to increased savings and decreased debt, the total increase in purchasing power of the
families was many times the cost of the counseling. Families whose credit scores improved were also
likely to experience lower borrowing costs for car loans, lower car insurance rates, and other benefits,
but we did not attempt to quantify them.

hese results should be interpreted cautiously. The agencies studied did not have data for all clients
counseled and the samples are not necessarily representative of all clients. Moreover, there was no
change in the median credit score of families at the third agency.

While these results are clearly preliminary, they do suggest the value of much larger scale and routine
data collection to quantify the impacts of homeownership education and counseling on families’
purchasing power. By tracking changes in credit scores, debt levels, savings, and other key variables,
agencies could quantify one of the important benefits of homeownership education and counseling.
Such data tracking could also help agencies to identify whether certain types of clients benefited more
than other types, and whether certain approaches to counseling and education had more of an impact
than others.

View the report, and supporting case studies, at
www.nhc.org/housing/homeownershipeducation .

Acknowledgements
The Center acknowledges with appreciation the funding provided for this study by the Annie E. Casey
Foundation. Any views expressed in this study, however, are those of the Center and not of the
Foundation.

In New York, is HOME OWNERSHIP becoming UNAFFORDABLE? Home ownership out of reach for many, despite rising affordability

Author: Skia
Category: News

The income required to buy a median-priced home has dropped in many markets, though high housing costs have put home ownership out of reach for many workers in high-growth occupations, according to a study released this week by a housing research center.

Workers in the five highest-growth occupations — including registered nurses, retail salespersons, customer service representatives, food preparation workers and office clerks — cannot afford to buy a typical home in most of the 201 metro areas studied, according to the Center for Housing Research. The center, which receives financial support from Bank of America, the Fannie Mae Foundation, Freddie Mac, Merrill Lynch Community Development Co. LLC, and other organizations, is an affiliate of the National Housing Conference.

The “Paycheck to Paycheck: Wages and the Cost of Housing in America” study examines housing costs and wages for workers in 60 occupations.

“Even registered nurses … are unable to purchase a median-priced home in 108 of the markets,” which represents a slight improvement compared to 114 unaffordable metro area housing markets in 2006. Registered nurses were the highest paid among the five high-growth occupations.

Customer service representatives, who were next on the list, cannot afford to buy a home in 185 of the studied markets. Retail salespersons and food preparation workers, meanwhile, are priced out of every housing market studied, while office clerks are priced out of buying a home in 196 of 201 markets studied.

A total of six housing markets became newly affordable to registered nurses in 2007 compared to 2006, while four of the studied markets became newly affordable for customer service representatives and three markets became newly affordable to office clerks.

As affordability improved in the housing market, rental markets were more likely to grow unaffordable from 2006 to 2007, according to the report. Forty-eight markets became newly unaffordable to retail salespersons in 2007 compared to 2006, with eight markets newly unaffordable to customer service representatives and 11 markets newly unaffordable for office clerks.

Prospective home buyers in Birmingham, Ala., needed an 18.95 percent raise in income to qualify to purchase a median-priced home in that market area in 2007 compared to 2006. Next on the list was Buffalo, N.Y., which required an additional 10.53 percent in income; Provo-Orem, Utah, where buyers needed 9.33 percent more income; Ogden, Utah, at 6.58 percent; and Dayton, Ohio, at 5.49 percent.

At the other end of the scale, prospective buyers could qualify to buy a median-priced home in Merced, Calif., with 26.15 percent less income in 2007 than they needed in 2006. In Stockton, Calif., that amount was 23.54 percent less; Modesto, Calif., 23.1 percent less; Yuba City, 16.87 percent less; and Salinas, Calif., 16.66 percent less. Nine of the 10 markets that saw the largest dip in the amount of income required to qualify for a home purchase are in California — the other market was Washington, D.C.

Renters in West Palm Beach, Fla., needed a 16.03 percent raise in income in third-quarter 2007 to pay for a two-bedroom rental property at fair value compared to the prior year, according to the study. Next on the list was Fort Lauderdale, Fla., at 15.7 percent; San Diego, Calif., at 13.15 percent; Miami, at 11.75 percent; and Dallas, at 8.87 percent.

Rental costs declined 0.95 percent in Baltimore in third-quarter 2007 compared to the prior year, according to the study, while increasing 0.35 percent in Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minn.; 0.86 percent in San Jose, Calif.; 0.97 percent in Oakland, Calif.; and 0.98 percent in San Francisco.

San Francisco ranked as the most expensive market to own a home among the group of 201 studied metro areas, with a median home price of $770,000. Next on the list was San Jose, Calif., at $649,000; Santa Cruz, Calif., at $630,000; and Napa and Santa Ana, Calif., at $585,000.

Lima, Ohio, and Davenport, Iowa, tied for the most affordable markets, with a median home price of $87,000, followed by Springfield, Ohio, and Bay City, Mich., at $88,000; and Youngstown, Ohio, and Battle Creek, Mich., at $89,000.

Source:

Inman News

Credit Bureaus and the FTC

The FTC is the place for consumer protection from scams and other issues.

For credit report problems, check out  http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/menus/consumer/credit.shtm

For identity theft protection, see http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/menus/consumer/data/idt.shtm

Credit Report Advice from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC)

Building a Better Credit Report

Federal Trade Commission
Bureau of Consumer Protection
Office of Consumer and Business Education
May 2005

If you’ve ever applied for a credit card, a personal loan, or insurance, there’s a file about you. This file is known as your credit report. It is chock full of information on where you live, how you pay your bills, and whether you’ve been sued, arrested, or filed for bankruptcy. Consumer reporting companies sell the information in your report to creditors, insurers, employers, and other businesses with a legitimate need for it. They use the information to evaluate your applications for credit, insurance, employment, or a lease.

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Credit Education – Learning about FICO Scores

From http://BankRate.com

http://www.bankrate.com/msnre/fico/calc.asp?lpid=BKRATE29  Credit Report Education

http://www.bankrate.com/msnre/fico/calc.asp?lpid=BKRATE29  About Credit Scores

http://www.bankrate.com/msnre/fico/calc.asp?lpid=BKRATE29  About Credit Reports

Credit Reports – Learn how to fix them and what your rights are under the Fair Credit Reporting Act

Here is the major legislation about Credit Reports, Credit Reporting Agencies, and the Complaint Process with the FTC:

““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““`

Billing Code: 6750-01

FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION

16 CFR Part 601

NOTICES OF RIGHTS AND DUTIES UNDER
THE FAIR CREDIT REPORTING ACT

AGENCY: Federal Trade Commission.

ACTION: Publication of guidance for prescribed notice forms.

SUMMARY: The Federal Trade Commission is publishing three notices that it is required to prescribe under recent amendments to the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). These are: A summary of consumer rights under the FCRA; a notice setting forth the responsibilities under the FCRA of those who regularly furnish consumer report information to consumer reporting agencies; and a notice setting forth the duties of any person who uses information covered by the FCRA. These notices must be distributed by consumer reporting agencies once the amendments to the FCRA become effective on September 30, 1997. A consumer reporting agency will be in compliance with the FCRA if it provides notices substantially similar to those prescribed by the Commission.

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