Real Estate Information Header

Home Equity or Debt Trap?


Are you using the equity from your home to purchase everyday things? This is a dangerous trend growing more popular every month as millions of Americans tap into the value of their home to fund a lifestyle.

How many times have you heard the saying "Your home is the best investment you'll ever make"? How many times have you also heard that your home will be the most valuable asset you will ever own?

Both of these are as true, if not truer, today than at any time in the past. Unfortunately, spend happy Americans are looking at their home as just another type of ATM, and they are visiting it way to often. These homeowners are using money borrowed against their house to finance expensive vacations, new vehicles, even daily visits to the corner coffee shop.

Our parents wouldn't think of buying furniture with money borrowed against their home. So why is this form of borrowing becoming so popular? Three events have converged to create this dangerous trend.

1. Cheap interest. The past two or three years have seen interest rates unheard of since the 1950's. These low rates encourage people to think they have basically free money to spend however they want to.

2. Real estate value increases. The Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO) reports that their data shows market value of the average home increased nearly 13% in 2004. That is more than any time in the last 25 years. Some areas saw the value of homes double in less than 5 years. This increase in value is perceived by some people as being a bonus - they didn't have to work for the money, so it doesn't cost them anything. They are right about it not costing them anything, except they forgot that when they borrow money it has to be paid back. That is when the true cost of the debt appears!

The U.S. Department of Commerce reports in 2003 nearly half of the $8 trillion in outstanding mortgage debt was in new mortgage originations. This doesn't mean home equity loans are necessarily bad ideas. Using equity in your home to remodel and make additions can result in solid returns. Even debt consolidation can be a good choice, provided you have solved the problem that caused the debt in the first place.

3. Ease of borrowing. Twenty years ago, lenders wouldn't think of giving you a loan, even against your home, if it would cause your equity to become less than 20%. Some insisted in a percentage closer to 50% equity. Those days are long over.

Today you can go online and find a lender willing to give you a loan equal to 125% the value of your house! If you have a credit of repayment, hold a job, and are still breathing you can probably find a lender willing to let you borrow against your home equity.

The risk created by the convergence of these three factors is the loss of your safety net. As people buy homes at the top end of their range and base mortgages on two incomes something has to give.

This "something" has been their savings. Putting aside part of each paycheck has become the low priority in the pile of demands barraging a family's income.

Data released by the Employee Benefit Research Institute reports nearly 45% of all workers hold assets of less than $25,000 (excluding their home). Barely 67% of today's workers are currently saving money in a 401(k) or some investment program, according to a Thrivent Financial Survey. Does any of this sound familiar to you? The looming debt of mortgage, college, and credit card can seem overwhelming. How can you tip your financial life back into favoring a secure future for yourself and family? Here are five steps to escape the home equity debt trap.

1. Keep track of expenses. Keep a spending record of everything you spend for one month. The next month, do it again, and the next month too, until you see areas of spending you can cut back and use that money to fund your lifestyle goals, i.e. vacation, college, or a new lawn mower.

2. Create realistic debt reduction goals. List all of your debts with interest rates, outstanding balances and minimum payments. Create a plan to pay down the debt, preferably pay the same set amount each month no matter what the minimums are. Anything extra you pay should go to the smallest debt first. When a credit card is paid off, get rid of it. Perhaps a small reward like a special meal when a goal is reached will help keep you motivated.

3. Preserve your home equity. Having home equity untapped in your house can provide a level of reassurance. Making wise uses of this equity will help you to not exhaust it. When you do tap into your home equity, make sure it is not used to pay for daily living.

4. Pay as little debt interest as possible. Consolidation of debts into low, or no interest loans i.e. credit cards, is acceptable as long as you refrain from incurring new debt and you are paying down the debts you do have each month.

5. Start saving regularly. A fund of money for emergencies will help avoid debt when life throws you a problem. If you consider saving a "non-optional" bill each month, you will develop the find habit of saving. The result is a growing asset base.

The end result of taking these five steps? A minimal-debt life spent living in an affordable home of your own.

Roger Sorensen is America's Financial Guide. Learn more at his website http://www.Slave2Work.com - ask and receive answers to your personal finance questions, read his writings, or join the newsletter Money Basics. "How-To Be Debt Free!" is now for sale, read about it today at http://www.Slave2Work.com/debtfree.html


MORE RESOURCES:

Earthtimes (press release)

Michael Robertson Joins McGuire Real Estate
MarketWatch - 29 minutes ago
Robertson joins McGuire from Intero Real Estate in San Carlos, CA where he was a Realtor. Raised in Carmel, CA, and a resident of San Francisco for many ...
Realtor.com Traffic Surges in July, Surpassing Real Estate ... StreetInsider.com (subscription)
Realtor.com Traffic Surges in July, Surpassing Real Estate ... MarketWatch
all 15 news articles


SEC fines California hedge fund manager $100000 in real estate ...
Los Angeles Times, CA - 10 hours ago
Mark JP Boucher of Portola Valley helped raise the money by falsely claiming the investments were secured by real estate when one company never owned ...
Hedge fund manager settles fraud suit San Francisco Chronicle
HF Manager Fined for Shady RE Deals Markets Media (press release)
all 7 news articles


Investors Real Estate Trust Announces Increase in Regular ...
FOXBusiness - 17 hours ago
Investors Real Estate Trust's Board of Trustees also declared today a distribution of 51.56 cents per share on the Company's Series A Cumulative Redeemable ...
Holloway Lodging Real Estate Investment Trust Announces Changes to ... Canada NewsWire (press release)
all 12 news articles


Nanette Real Estate H1 pretax profit rises
Forbes, NY - 6 hours ago
LONDON (Thomson Financial) - Nanette Real Estate Group NV said its first-half pretax profit rose to 5.2 million euros from 3.7 million euros last year on ...


Cityscape USA to Feature Emerging Market Exhibitors from Top Real ...
Earthtimes (press release), UK - 3 hours ago
Nakheel, an exhibitor and Cityscape USA’s investment sponsor, is one of the world’s largest real estate developers. Their exhibition will highlight landmark ...


Investors United School of Real Estate Announces Rev. Medgar L ...
eReleases (press release), MD - 5 hours ago
28, 2008 — Investors United School of Real Estate, headquartered in Baltimore, MD, today announced its new addition of Rev. Medgar L. Reid as their Director ...


Real estate Q&A
Belleville News Democrat,  USA - 34 minutes ago
(Dr. Thomas Musil is the director of the Shenehon Center for Real Estate in the Opus College of Business at the University of St. Thomas in Minneapolis. ...


Miami Daily Business Review

Real Estate
Miami Daily Business Review, FL - 2 hours ago
That means a sharp uptick in evictions, a boost in work for real estate lawyers and greater strains on the legal system. The volume of all evictions filed ...


JD Power Offers View of Real Estate Market
Daily Research News Online, UK - 30 minutes ago
In the US, JD Power and Associates has conducted its first syndicated study of customer satisfaction in the real estate industry. ...


Edmonton eclipses Cowtown as top real estate hot spot: expert
Edmonton Sun,  Canada - 9 hours ago
1 spot on a list of the Top 10 Alberta towns for real estate investors. Don Campbell, president of the Real Estate Investment Network, released his Top 10 ...
City real estate No. 1 Edmonton Journal
Edmonton best bet for real estate investment 660 News
Edmonton tops Calgary for housing investment Canada.com
Canoe.ca
all 7 news articles

Real-Estate - Google News

General Real Estate Information HomeHome ContactContact
Real Estate Information © 2006