Thursday, July 5, 2012

Boise Portfolio (Pre-2012) of Cheryl A. Miller-Eld

Boise Projects & Practice


WSW WEB DEVELOPMENT – PORTFOLIO of production--- Artistic Layout & Content Writing by    C.  A.  MILLERELD


http://RealMoneyMediaMarketing.com                         WEB SITE
http://RealMoneyMediaMarketingTips.com                  MATCHING BLOG PAGE
https://twitter.com/#!/RealMoneyMedia                       TWEET’s RELATED TO RMM_MARKETING  WEB SITE & BLOG PAGE…….MATCHING TWITTER ACCOUNT
!!! READ ME PLEASE…on Twitter   Look for me,  Cheryl MillerEld   (@amjustsayn)  on Twitter
RIGHT HERE AT THIS LINK:    https://twitter.com/amjustsayn

                            ***PLUS  FOUR  ADDITIONAL  TWEETING  accouts designed for communication to my peers and
     prospects peeking in on the tweets of the day on Twitter usually tweeting posted from author:   CHERYL MILLERELD  can be found for viewing***
https://twitter.com/#!/amjustsayn
https://twitter.com/#!/RealMoneyMedia
https://twitter.com/#!/SitesNBlogs
Overhaul Project on Blinks WWW.wswwebdevelopment.com  web site  (.com is $ Blinkweb) NOW being redesigned in Weebly DesPlatform IDE under U= P= and E= same as RMM_Marketing Project’s Login.
Site with built in TIPS Blog Page,,,named the same plus Tips added to the End Of the PAGE Name of the BLOG!!!  New site I am developing is RealMoneyMediaMarketing U,,,amjustsayn P,,,amjustsayn@gmail.com = E         note!   This marketing company is the subordinate (child) company spilt off from WSWwebdevelopment.com the
PARENT COMPANY


Portfolio 2009 - 2011


WSW WEB DEVELOPMENT – PORTFOLIO of production--- Artistic Layout & Content Writing by    C.  A.  MILLERELD


http://wswwebadvertising.blogspot.com/2011/05/insertion-of-affiliate-html-links-into.html
http://nortonsecurity.blinkweb.com/user_sites/sub_we/websiteswestii/1/2011/05/how-a-webmaster-thinks-when-taking-a-new-project-on-article-written-by-cheryl-millereld-95f45/
http://freelancewebdesignwebcontent.blogspot.com/2011/05/cheryl-millereld-has-projects-active.html
http://insiderealestatetips.blogspot.com/2011/05/may-222011by-millereld-webmasterweb.html
http://realestatemoneytips.blogspot.com/2011/06/insider-real-estate-tips-adjustable.html
http://boise-tile-marble-stone.weebly.com/
http://wswwebdevelopment.com/wsw-blog.html
http://freelancewebdesignwebcontent.blogspot.com/
http://websiteswestii.blinkweb.com/
http://realestatewrittenrealistically.blogspot.com/2011/05/adjustable-rate-mortgages-also-known-as.html
http://websiteswestii.blinkweb.com/1/2011/05/new-post-95f57/
http://websiteswest.blogspot.com/
http://wswwebadvertising.blogspot.com/
http://insiderrealestatetips.blogspot.com/
http://freelancewebdesignwebcontent.blogspot.com/2011/08/real-estate-game-given-new-reality.html
http://www.realestatemoneytips.com/new-articles.html
http://nortonsecurity.blinkweb.com/user_sites/sub_ws/wsw-web-development/
http://youbigbadbully.blinkweb.com
http://boise-matchmaker-dating.blinkweb.com
http://wswwebadvertisingdesign.blogspot.com/2011/08/do-i-need-web-page-or-web-site-maybe.html
http://www.blogger.com/profile/10245477602638270852     (blog Profile)
http://cheryleldtaxaccountant.blogspot.com/
http://websiteswestii.blinkweb.com/1/2011/03/welcome-to-a-writer-s-world--5633c/#comments
http://webadvertisingdesign.weebly.com/
http://RealMoneyMediaMarketing.com                         WEB SITE
http://RealMoneyMediaMarketingTips.com                  MATCHING BLOG PAGE
https://twitter.com/#!/RealMoneyMedia                       TWEET’s RELATED TO RMM_MARKETING  WEB SITE & BLOG PAGE…….MATCHING TWITTER ACCOUNT
!!! READ ME PLEASE…on Twitter   Look for me,  Cheryl MillerEld   (@amjustsayn)  on Twitter
RIGHT HERE AT THIS LINK:    https://twitter.com/amjustsayn

                            ***PLUS  FOUR  ADDITIONAL  TWEETING  accouts designed for communication to my peers and
     prospects peeking in on the tweets of the day on Twitter usually tweeting posted from author:   CHERYL MILLERELD  can be found for viewing***
https://twitter.com/#!/amjustsayn
https://twitter.com/#!/wswwebdevelopme
https://twitter.com/#!/RealMoneyMedia
https://twitter.com/#!/SitesNBlogs
https://twitter.com/# !/websiteswest
Overhaul Project on Blinks WWW.wswwebdevelopment.com  web site  (.com is $ Blinkweb) NOW being redesigned in Weebly DesPlatform IDE under U= P= and E= same as RMM_Marketing Project’s Login.
Site with built in TIPS Blog Page,,,named the same plus Tips added to the End Of the PAGE Name of the BLOG!!!  New site I am developing is RealMoneyMediaMarketing U,,,amjustsayn P,,,amjustsayn@gmail.com = E         note!   This marketing company is the subordinate (child) company spilt off from WSWwebdevelopment.com the
PARENT COMPANY


Sunday, May 22, 2011

What is a JUMBO mortgage loan? Can I qualify for one? When would I need a JUMBO home loan?

When would I need a JUMBO home loan?
What is a JUMBO mortgage loan?
Can I qualify for one?

Cheryl MillerEld, would you please explain this.

               A B S O L U T E L Y ! ! !

An $850,000 mini-mansion in Idaho exceeds the
geographic maximum loanable funding that a con-
ventional loan can be written for/approved for.

However, to save the day, we developed a
home loan breed of its own for these sizable
loan requests.    I believe that this shifts the
loan program over to non-conforming programs.

I will leave it for you to research as to whether
JUMBO home loans can be financed by the
government backed loan programs or not.  I
believe not.- but now-a-days...who knows?

No more hiding ARM LOANS secrets and mystery unraveled for you

The loan everybody said !!NOT!! to get, said the home loan prospect and first-time-home

buyer I was sitting with in my office at Landmark Mortgage in Boise, Idaho.   The appointment

with me (his mortgage broker) was the initial paperwork and consultation interview for pre-

qualifying to buy a home.

      A home loan is the objective of the relationship with me is as the buyer sees it.  As I see it, its all about  finding the right money sources and

loan under writting policies that  the prospect qualifies for.  Along with finding home loan terms that will be the perfect fit for the prospects needs - as 'new' owner of a home and mortgage loan,, is my job as the mortgage broker and financier to get him on his merry way with keys to the front door.

      Why do some new home buyers end up in an adjustable rate mortgage (ARM) loan?

Plainly advertised at very low start rates, these loans help the debt heavy borrower, or bulky

payments that can't be helped.  Some candidates eyes are bigger that their wallets.

      To debt-ratio the folks with some debt and or large house payment estimates,

the mortgage broker has little room to play when money sources' guidelines dictate the ratio

acceptable to their loan programs.  Theretofor, this leaves another avenue of approach,  the

intitial interest rate an ARM loan begins it amortization journey with teaser rates, rates lowered intentionally to

attract mortgage brokers in the field who cannot quite ratio a homebuyer into conventional home loans.  Noticing a "teaser-rate" adjustable rate loan program is the golden opportunity to shrink the house

payment a while, ease them into owning.  As well, the ratio figures line up now - with that incredibly

low interest rate which will start off the series of house payments for the first initial year of the financing.

     The "teaser-rate" has an unfortunate ending at the contract specified date usually one-year

after closing, sometimes only 6-months and rolls to an adjustable rate mortgage on the home.

      Now, the home loan is in an ARM.    No biggy if the details are discovered early enough to do a

little homework on the ARM home loans.   Usually excited nervous home buyers don't sweat any

of the financing details.   The color choice of the wallpaper and curtains maybe, but not the

financing.

      The little details of importance are:  the margin, the index, the ceiling or CAP to the note rate,

the timing of adjustment (every 6-months, every year?).     What these are, will soon be known to

you.

    Margins are important because they attach to the index to form an interest rate used on a home loan.  Together, the margin figure and the index figure, they form "the rate" that

your home loan could be based on.   The difference between the two numbers that form the interest rate for and adjustable rate mortgage is that:  One changes the other does not ever change on this loan once it is

closed and funded.    Guess which does not ever change?  The margin does not ever change.  The
index  floats and has been historically tracked and its history is openly documented.   An index

currently down is bound to float up.  The tallest spike in the index histogram is achievable again if its been there once before.

      So a Libor index on a 6.00 margin at a cap of 16.50

with a teaser rate of 5.25 for the first year of the loan, looks attractive for the entry and

powerfully dismal thereafter.   If the Libor index is floating at about 5.125 then the rate at time of

adjustment will roll to 11.125, then in 6-months or one-year (depending on the loan program),

Libor index is hovering around 3.75, what will the rate be this time when it rolls (adjusts) - 9.75 -

correct.    What could the loan rate jump up to as it rises and rises and rises?   16.50 is where it

should cap.   Does that make you a little nervous about this loan.   Does me.

       Indexes used come in a variety of national and international economies.  The European

trends usually are more non-casual and fast changing.    The London Interbank Offering Rate is

termed Libor.   It ossillates from 4 to 6 percent most of the time.   The COFI index is a nice slow

moving trend adjuster.  The Cost of Funds Index is really small and conservative as its history

trends will show you.  The COFI hovers between 2.5 and 4.5 and never leaps much at one time

when it does move.   They float they are macoeconomically sensitive to the US economy and the

International economies.  They will constitute the variable half of the ARM interest rate.  Whereas

the "margin" constitutes the fixed half of the ARM interest rate on a home loan.

    Indexes used come in a variety of national and international economies.  The European trends

usually are more non-casual and fast changing.    The London Interbank Offering Rate is termed

Libor.   It ossillates from 4 to 6 percent most of the time.   The COFI index is a nice slow moving

trend adjuster.  The Cost of Funds Index is really small and conservative as its history trends will

show you.  The COFI hovers between 2.5 and 4.5 and never leaps much at one time when it does

move.   They float they are macoeconomically sensitive to the US economy and the International

economies.  They will constitute the variable half of the ARM interest rate.  Whereas the "margin"

constitutes the fixed half of the ARM interest rate on a home loan.

     For REVIEW:   A new mortgage loan presented as an ARM with a marging  = 3.00 and floating

on the COFI Index, with a rate cap of 9.00, and a 'teaser rate"  of  5.75% for the first 12-months of

the loan, with no points needed to buy down the initial startrate; sounds like a pretty fair deal.

Doesn't it?
_______________________
May 22,2011,by:  Cheryl MillerEld, webmaster/web content writer/blogmaster

----------Adjustable Rate Mortgages also known as ARM Loans for homes---------

     The loan everybody said !!NOT!! to get, said the home loan prospect and first-time-home

buyer.

      I was sitting down with in my office at Landmark Mortgage in Boise, Idaho.   The appointment

with me (his mortgage broker) was the initial paperwork and consultation interview for pre-

qualifying to buy a home.

      A home loan is the objective of the relationship with home buyer and me: finding the right

money sources and loan under writting policies that  the prospect qualifies for,  and terms that

will fit the prospect's needs - as 'new' owner of a home and mortgage loan was the job I was to

do (as his mortgage broker).

      Why do some new home buyers end up in an adjustable rate mortgage (ARM) loan?

Plainly advertised at very low start rates, these loans help the debt heavy borrower, or bulky

payment candidates whose eyes are bigger that their wallets.

      To debt-ratio the folks with some debt and or larger than normal house payment estimate,

the mortgage broker has little room to play when money sources' guidelines dictate the ratio

acceptable to their loan programs.  Therewith, this leaves another avenue of approach,  the

intitial interest rate a loan begins it amortization journey with may be lowered intentionally to

attract mortgage brokers in the field to notice a "teaser-rate" opportunity to shrink the house

payment a while, ease them into owning.  As well, the ratio figures line up now that the incredibly

low interest rate starts of the series of house payments.

     The "teaser-rate" has an unfortunate ending at the contract specified date usually one-year

after closing, sometimes only 6-months and rolls to an adjustable rate mortgage on the home.

      Now, the home loan is in an ARM.    No biggy if the details are discovered early enough to do a

little homework on the ARM home loans.   Usually excited nervous home buyers don't sweat any

of the financing details.   The color choice of the wallpaper and curtains maybe, but not the

financing.

      The little details of importance are:  the marging, the index, the ceiling the hikes to the rate,

the timing of adjustment (every 6-months, every year?).     What these are will soon be known to

you.

      The margin is a fixed integer number with decimal and some percentage of a whole number.

I offer the example of:   5.55  or  2.50 or 6.75.   This little goodie is obviously advertised to your

mortgage broker and he/she should know what a margin on an ARM is, but may skip over telling

you about what a margin on an ARM can or can't do for you the home buying prospect.

       Margins are important because they attach to the index-rate.  Together the form "the rate"

that your home loan is based on.   One changes the other does not ever change on this loan once

it is closed and funded.    Guess which does not ever change?  The margin does not ever change.

The index floats and has been historically tracked and its history is openly documented.   An index

currently down is bound to float up.  The tallest spike in the index histogram is achievable again

and when,,,,well most of us wouldn't know.    So a Libor index on a 6.00 margin at a cap of 16.50

with a teaser rate of 5.25 for the first year of the loan, looks attractive for the entry and

powerfully dismal thereafter.   If the Libor index is floating at about 5.125 then the rate at time of

adjustment will roll to 11.125, then in 6-months or one-year (depending on the loan program),

Libor index is hovering around 3.75, what will the rate be this time when it rolls (adjusts) - 9.75 -

correct.    What could the loan rate jump up to as it rises and rises and rises?   16.50 is where it

should cap.   Does that make you a little nervous about this loan.   Does me.

       Indexes used come in a variety of national and international economies.  The European

trends usually are more non-casual and fast changing.    The London Interbank Offering Rate is

termed Libor.   It ossillates from 4 to 6 percent most of the time.   The COFI index is a nice slow

moving trend adjuster.  The Cost of Funds Index is really small and conservative as its history

trends will show you.  The COFI hovers between 2.5 and 4.5 and never leaps much at one time

when it does move.   They float they are macoeconomically sensitive to the US economy and the

International economies.  They will constitute the variable half of the ARM interest rate.  Whereas

the "margin" constitutes the fixed half of the ARM interest rate on a home loan.

     For REVIEW:   A new mortgage loan presented as an ARM with a marging  = 3.00 and floating

on the COFI Index, with a rate cap of 9.00, and a 'teaser rate"  of  5.75% for the first 12-months of

the loan, with no points needed to buy down the initial startrate; sounds like a pretty fair deal.

Doesn't it?

Happy Home Buying,
yours truly,
Cheryl A MillerEld
Web Content Editor/Blogmaster

http://insiderealestatetips.blogspot.com/
http://realestatewrittenrealistically.blogspot.com/
http://realestatemoneytips.com/










http://realestatewrittenrealistically.blogspot.com/