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Home Equity Loans Wichita KS

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Home Equity Loans. You will find informative articles about Home Equity Loans, including "Managing Your Home Equity Loan". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Wichita, KS that can help answer your questions about Home Equity Loans.

Mrs. Angela L. Tejeda (RFC®), MBA
316 721 5191
8307 W. 34th St. N
Wichita, KS
Fidelity Bank - Loan
(316)291-5626
100 East English Street
WICHITA, KS
Bank of America Mortgage
(316)261-4238
100 North Broadway Street
WICHITA, KS
Intrust Bank Real Estate Loansresidential Real Estate Loans Residen
(316)383-1160
105 North Main Street
Wichita, KS
Banc Of America Investment Services Inc
(316)261-4445
100 N Broadway St
Wichita, KS
Metlife Bank, National Association
(316) 264-9969
800 E 1St St N Ste 310
Wichita, KS
Professional Lending Group
(316)267-4100
140 North Mosley Street
WICHITA, KS
Insurance Management
(316)267-9221
1631 Sw Topeka Blvd
Topeka, KS
Cfic Home Mortgage Services
(316)262-7766
125 North Market Street Suite 1500
WICHITA, KS
Fidelity Bank
(316) 265-2261
100 E English St Fl 5
Wichita, KS
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Managing Your Home Equity Loan

by Broderick Perkins

There's probably no better time than the present to pull your credit report and scrutinize your creditworthiness, especially if you are considering a home equity loan.

If you already have an equity loan, read the small print. What's more, you may want to seek a professional to help guide you through what could be a shift away from the easy money that's helped fuel the housing boom in recent years.

More border-line borrowers could find applications for second mortgages declined and those who hold equity loans could find their lines of credit frozen or even canceled if their payment habits become questionable.

"If you are depending on a home equity loan and that is suddenly taken away it could cause you to lose your home," said Cindy Marcus, RE/MAX Santa Barbara, Montecito, Goleta, CA.

It's not yet clear how lenders will react, but federal monetary system regulators have issued guidelines that effectively tell lenders to tighten lending practices which, over the years, may have become too lax.

The Feds are particularly concerned about lenders' portfolios that are heavy with riskier home equity lines of credit loans (HELOC), including interest-only loans, loans with higher loan-to-value (LTV) and debt-to-income ratios, loans approved for borrowers with lower credit scores, loans secured with questionable appraisal methods, and so called "no-doc" loans written without documenting a borrower's assets, employment and income.

Those kinds of loans have become more and more popular to help borrowers afford to buy homes in the over-heated housing market of escalating prices.

Why the concern?

Here's the scoop and what you should do to deal with it.

Coinciding with heightened concerns about escalating home prices, industry fraud, the potential for higher interest rates and other issues that could factor into a housing market bubble bust, the Federal Reserve, along with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Office of Thrift Supervision and the National Credit Union Administration, recently issued " Credit Risk Management Guidance For Home Equity Lending."

The guidelines tell lenders to:

  • Periodically refresh credit risk scores on all customers.

  • Use behavioral scoring and borrower characteristics analysis to identify potential problem accounts.

  • Periodically assess payment patterns, especially borrowers who make only minimum payments over a period of time or those who use the line of credit to make payments on the line of credit.

  • Obtain updated information on a home's value when significant market factors indicate a potential decline in home values, or when the borrower's payment performance deteriorates and there's a greater reliance upon the home as collateral.

    "The Feds are saying ... these home equity products are going to experience high default rates that will trigger many more workouts and foreclosures. Workouts will devalue the investor's portfolio...

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