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Low rates spur homeowners to free up cash by refinancing

They’re knocking on the lender’s door. As mortgage rates have tumbled to all-time lows, demand for refinancing has fired up homeowners nationwide.

Published: Sept. 26, 2012 at 12:05 a.m. PDT
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They’re knocking on the lender’s door. As mortgage rates have tumbled to all-time lows, demand for refinancing has fired up homeowners nationwide.

And it’s not just those drowning in underwater mortgages. With rates for 30-year mortgages hovering below 4 percent since last October, all kinds of homeowners are trying to get their monthly mortgages reduced, say lenders and mortgage experts.

“It’s huge. It’s buried our staff and every other lender in town,” said O.J. Vallejo, mortgage consultant with First Priority Financial in Sacramento, Calif., who said his three-person staff has been working six days a week for the past four months.

Nationally, refinance volume “has been running at a three-year high in recent weeks, as mortgage rates remained extremely low,” Mike Fratantoni, vice president of research for the Washington, D.C.-based National Mortgage Bankers Association, said in an email. “With refinances, the No. 1 driver is interest rates.”

Along with months of record-breaking low interest rates, other factors are driving the refinancing boom: a competitive lending market and changes in some federal refinancing programs for struggling homeowners.

It’s prompted many established homeowners with old-school, high-interest mortgages to decide it’s time to refi.

WHY REFI? Generally the primary reasons for refinancing a mortgage are to:

 • Lower monthly mortgage payments.

 • Eliminate the unpredictability of an adjustable-rate mortgage by switching to a fixed rate.

 • Free up home equity cash for home improvements, college costs or other expenses.

 • Shorten the loan term, say from a 30- to a 15-year mortgage, which can save thousands in interest payments.

Saving money is usually the biggest incentive.

Calling the low rates “historic,” John Winters, a wealth adviser with Morgan Stanley Smith Barney in Sacramento, said he recently advised all his clients to consider a refi. Especially for those “finding it difficult to live with” the anemic returns on low-interest CDs and bonds, freeing up monthly income by refinancing can make sense, he said.

SHOULD YOU REFI? It’s a personal calculation that varies. Generally, homeowners should look at how long they plan to be in their current home and whether the up-front costs outweigh the monthly savings.

“If you’re not going to be in your home another one or two years, you’re not going to recoup the closing costs,” said Greg McBride, senior financial analyst with Bankrate.com.

“Everybody’s situation is different,” said mortgage consultant Vallejo. “There’s no right or wrong answer. The only answer is what works for your family.”

Some couples who refinance are looking ahead to retirement.

“Paying off the mortgage is now back in vogue,” Vallejo said, especially for those in their late 40s or 50s who want to be mortgage-free at retirement age.

That doesn’t necessarily mean they’ll lower their monthly payment by refinancing. For example, a couple with a $250,000, 30-year loan at 5.25 percent three years ago would have been paying about $1,380 a month. If they refinanced their current balance to a 20-year, 3.5 percent loan today, their payments would increase slightly, to $1,405.

“Their payment goes up $25, but they just took seven years off their mortgage,” said Vallejo. “That’s almost $116,000 in interest. That’s huge.”

On the other hand, younger homeowners with kids might choose a 30-year mortgage when they refinance because they need the lower monthly cash flow to save for college or pay off debt. Or those with adjustable mortgages due to reset to higher rates may want to lock in the low rates.

WHAT YOU’LL PAY: The mortgage rate you’ll be offered depends on numerous factors, including: your credit score, loan amount, loan-to-value ratio (how much you owe compared with the home’s appraised value), length of your loan term and type of home (rates on condos, rentals and vacation homes are typically higher.)

Lots of mortgage ads promise “no-cost” loans. According to some lenders, that’s a misnomer.

“It really means ‘no cash out of pocket,’” said Vallejo. “There’s no free lunch; somebody is paying for it.”

Typically, in a no-cost loan, all closing costs and pre-paid items (such as appraisal fees and credit checks) are paid by the lender and built into the interest rate.

SHOP AROUND: It pays to compare quotes from several lenders because they offer different rates and fees. Start with your current lender or sit down with a local loan originator. You can also do refinance comparisons online, using mortgage calculators at sites such as Bankrate.com or those of individual banks and lenders.

Struggling homeowners can ask lenders about changes in the federal Home Affordable Refinance Program and FHA refinance programs that have made refinancing options more plentiful.

Claudia Buck writes for The Sacramento Bee.

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