Mar
14
Prepayment Penalty Tax Deduction
March 14, 2007 | Leave a Comment
I am always looking for deductions as I’m sure you are too. Deducting prepayment penalties is one that is almost always overlooked.
If you had to pay your mortgage lender a prepayment penalty, either to refinance or sell your property and pay off the old mortgage, that prepayment penalty is tax-deductible as mortgage interest. Some home loans have these prepayment penalties during just the first few years, but investment property mortgages often have them for many more years.
So, if you paid a penalty - DEDUCT IT!
Mar
5
Who’s Next in the Mortgage Meltdown?
March 5, 2007 | Leave a Comment
This is a good article I just read by Graham Summers. For your reference Alt-A mortgages are “alternative documentation” mortgages like stated income and no doc.
The subprime mortgage lenders have already been devastated.
Next up are “Alt-A” mortgages.Alt-A mortgages are generally much like their subprime counterparts, requiring little documentation of income or offering payments even lower than the interest on the loan. Alt-A borrowers typically have better credit than those applying for subprime loans, but their credit isn’t good enough for them to be considered for a prime loan.
Alt-As are one of the fastest-growing mortgage segments of the last four years. In 2003, Alt-A mortgages generated $85 billion in mortgage originations. Three years later, it was $400 billion. Altogether, Alt-A mortgages comprised 16% of all mortgage originations for 2006.And soon they’ll be going the way of subprimes.
In the last couple of years, many Alt-A lenders lowered their credit standards to keep loans coming in the door. This brought in a lot of borrowers who really should have been in the subprime category. UBS AG recently announced that defaults for these types of mortgages doubled in the last 14 months. Currently, late payments are at four times their historical averages. UBS also reported that Alt-A delinquencies (payments more than 60 days overdue) are around 2.4%, about one-fifth the 10.5% subprime default rate. That might not seem like a lot of delinquencies… until you consider that the Alt-A delinquency rate was only 1.1% in November 2005.
After all, even with decent credit, you can get into a lot of trouble if you’re in the wrong mortgage. Most insidious is the option adjustable-rate mortgage: a mortgage that allows you to choose from several options for your monthly mortgage payment.
One option is to pay less than the interest amount due on your principal. So essentially, you’re just throwing money away, since your actual principal is growing as the interest you fail to pay is added.
Once the principal hits a certain amount, interest payments jump to the current market rate or even higher. We’re talking about a multiple percentage-point jump in a single month. So it’s little surprise that 3.7% of Alt-A mortgages originated in 2006 are already delinquent.
Remember, we’re talking about mortgages that were originated just last year.In other words, the same cracks that appeared in the subprimes last summer are now showing up in the Alt-As. Earlier this week, IndyMac (NDE), the largest Alt-A mortgage lender in the U.S., announced that its 2007 income will probably be lower than 2006.
More bad news is coming for the Alt-As. Add IndyMac (NDE), Impac Mortgage Holdings (IMH) and American Home Mortgage Investment (AHM) to your watch list and get ready for some fireworks in the coming months.
Good trading,
Graham








