Website               About Us               Programs & Processes               Archive               Links
RATES FROM GEORGE MARGRAVE
May 22, 2015
 

header
This Week's Rates

THDA 30 Year Fixed

Great Choice First Mortgage:  4.10% / 1 + .250 / 5.43% APR 

 Great Choice Second Mortgage:  0%, 15 year term--NO PAYMENTS; FORGIVEN AFTER 15 YRS

(offers 4% of sales price in Down Payment Assistance)   

  

THDA Homeownership for the Brave (for our VETS)

FHA OPTION:  Great Choice First Mortgage:  3.60% / 1 + .250 / 5.33% APR 

VA OPTION: Great Choice First Mortgage:  3.60%  / 1 + .250 / 3.93% APR

Great Choice Second Mortgage:  0%, 15 year term--NO PAYMENTS; FORGIVEN AFTER 15 YRS

(offers 4% of sales price in Down Payment Assistance)

 

**FYI: THDA waives the first time homebuyer requirement for Veterans.

Qualified Vets get a 1/2% interest rate reduction! 

(some restrictions apply) 


 

Conventional 30 Year Fixed 

3.875% / 0 + 0 / 3.96% APR

3.75% / 0 + .75 / 3.89% APR

 

ASK ABOUT OUR LENDER CREDIT ON MOST LOANS

 

Conventional 15 Year Fixed

3.0% / 0 + .25 / 3.19% APR

 

Conventional 5/1 ARM

3.125% / 0 + .25 / 3.10% APR with CAPS 2/2/5

 

JUMBO

For loans over $417,000.00 please call for a quote.  

  

FHA/VA 30 Year Fixed

3.625% / 0 + 0 / 4.73% APR

*ASK ABOUT LENDER CREDIT!*

 

FHA 15 Year Fixed

3.0% / 0 + 0 / 4.10% APR

  

Rural Housing 30 Year Fixed

NOW AVAILABLE FOR ALL OF WILSON COUNTY

3.625% / 0 + 0 / 4.37% APR

  

Reverse Mortgages 

Available to clients over 62 years of age, no credit qualifying

 

All rates quoted are for purchases, large loans, can vary under individual circumstances, and are subject to change without notice.  Also note, Rates & PMI rates when applicable will vary with credit score.  For Conventional loans, assume 20% down payment. 

George's Real Estate & Mortgage Corner
George Characture

IT DOESN'T PAY TO WAIT TO BUY A HOME

Written by Blanche Evans 

   

There will always be those who try to "time the market," but there's one factor you can't know -- when buying a home will become more expensive.

 

Certainly you can tell from recent trends whether or not prices and mortgage interest rates are in your favor. Monthly prices have risen year-over-year for three years. Mortgage interest rates are slowly rising, but remain at extremely attractive levels.

 

You could wait for prices to fall, but there are two problems with that idea. First, it would take an economic recession to lower prices, which could take months or years. With the exception of the Great Recession, you won't know if you're in or out of a recession until the talking heads online inform you.

 

Second, mortgage interest rates have been kept artificially low for five years. That's a very long time. With steady gains in employment, it's not likely they will go any lower. In fact, higher interest rates could wipe out any gains you could save by waiting to buy.

 

Here's a real life example:

If you buy a home and get a $200,000 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage at 4.5 percent, your monthly payment will be $1,013.37 and you'll pay $164,813.42 in interest over the life of the loan.

 

The same home at 5.0 percent interest costs $1,073.64, a difference of $60.27 more per month and $186,511.57 in interest over the life of the loan. The difference in interest payments alone is $21,698.15.

 

If your home dropped 5% in value and you were able to buy it at $190,000 and 4.5% interest, your payment would be $962.70, a difference of $50.67 per month, with $156,572.75 in interest over the life of the loan. You'd save $50.67 more per month than if you'd paid $200,000.

 

At 5.0 percent, your $190,000 home costs $1019.96, or $53.68 more per month than if you'd gotten the loan at 4.5 percent. Your interest payments would total $177,185.99 over the life of the loan. The difference in payments is $20,613.24.

 

Currently, mortgages for borrowers with good credit are around 4.00 percent. If you had purchased your $190,000 home a year and a half ago when prices were lower and interest rates were at 4.00% interest, it would cost you $907.09 per month and a total of $13,6552.06 in interest.

 

The question is -- did you?

 

There's never a perfect time to buy a home and you shouldn't buy a home just for financial reasons. Buy your home to raise your family, be close to friends and relatives and to be free from a landlord where you get nothing back but cancelled checks at the end of the lease.

 

Don't put your dreams off to gamble with the market. Think of getting the home you want at a reasonable price and payment as the best way to beat the market. 

 

CREDIT 101

 

 

More borrowing equals less power.  Stay out of debt and in control of your money.  It can definitely work for you.

 

CLICK HERE if you can't see the image/video

THANKS FOR WATCHING!
 

Reinventing Ourselves

Several years ago, I was playing golf in Phoenix, Arizona. As I stood, ready to tee off at the first hole, a little prairie dog stuck his head up from a nearby hole, looked at me, and began to chatter madly. I was amused by this little creature and how seemingly unafraid he was of me. 

 

As I stood taking a couple of warm up swings with my golf club, he continued his chattering. At that point I began to wonder what he was communicating to me. Was he criticizing my stance or swing? Was he telling me to leave his domain? Or was he doing what came naturally to him; making noises.

 

I realized that the little prairie dog is a lot like my chattering mind. There are times when my mind seems to go off in many directions, thinking about many things and worrying about others. Sometimes it is like that little animal that seemed insistent upon chattering mindlessly. 

 

Although I've not played golf recently, I remember that I would first mentally talk myself through the proper stance and swing. As I withdrew my attention from everything around me and focused only on my mental routine, I found that my golf shots were longer, straighter, and higher than they had ever been. The improvement came from focusing and limiting my self-talk to instructions about what I wanted, and not what I didn't want. I was effectively in "the zone."

 

Being in "the zone" is a term that is used in sports to identify the experience described above. As I thought about this, it occurred to me that I am in the zone during other activities, such as writing. It is here that I must tune out all distractions quieting my chattering prairie dog, which is not as cute or entertaining as the real one. I realize that I can consciously choose to be in the zone during the times that I feel so mentally scattered and disorganized. 

 

When I played golf, I make the decision to focus because I want good results from my efforts. I can choose to tune out the noisy chatter of inner and outer voices, and go to a place where I can program for a successful outcome.

 

There is an adage that I recall often, "where the focus goes, the energy flows." It seems to me that a lot of that powerful mental energy is lost when my focus is scattered. Each and every moment it is my choice which master I will serve; that of focus and control, or the one that is scattered to the winds. I think that I will focus on the first master. I get more distance and accuracy with it.

 

www.workplaceissues.com    

 


Friday Smile

           

Contact Information














615-777-HOME(4663) Office
615-777-FAXX(3299) Fax
   
750 Old Hickory Blvd.
Brentwood Commons Two, Suite 130
Brentwood, TN 37027
Like us on Facebook  Follow us on Twitter  View our profile on LinkedIn
Check us out on Social Media!