Protecting Yourself From a Housing BubbleBy
Greg McBride Bankrate.com The
run-up in home prices in many markets around the country
makes it
a matter of when and where, not if, the housing bubble
bursts. Consider
this comment from economist Joel Naroff after new-home
sales hit
yet another record high in June, "Welcome to our
worst nightmare.
It is the housing market." In
that vein, we cannot ignore the potential for a housing
bust any longer. Like
procrastinators living in a hurricane-prone area that
eventually scramble to stock
up on supplies as a storm nears, it is time to look
at some strategies homeowners
and home buyers can adopt to weather the housing market storm. If
you live in Ohio, you're probably wondering what all
the fuss is about. But if
you live in California, New York, Massachusetts, South
Florida or Washington,
D.C. -- and plenty of people do -- it is all anyone
ever talks about. If you call
one of these or many other frothy markets home, unless
you've lived in the home
long enough to pile up substantial equity, you have reason to worry. So
let's establish some frontline defenses against
a housing bust busting your financial picture. First,
don't borrow against home equity. This means
no taking out of home equity lines of credit to pay
off credit card
bills, no cash-out mortgage refinancing to fix up the
house, and,
by all means, no tapping home equity to pay for summer
vacation.
This is a drastic measure, I know, but these are desperate
times,
my friends. Home equity has a much lower after-tax
cost than credit
card debt or other forms of debt, but the cushion provided
by home
equity will be invaluable when home prices decline.
The bottom line
on debt consolidations is that it just shifts the debt,
it doesn't
reduce the debt. If you managed to get yourself in
a little too
deep on the credit card debt, it's time to figure out
how to get
out of it. And not by relying on home equity borrowing. The
second rule is to build equity through principal
repayment. Interest-only and option ARM borrowers,
I'm talking to
you. Every month, a larger portion of your monthly
payment should
be going toward reducing the principal on your loan,
and if it isn't,
then you're doing something wrong. This leads into my next point. Making
steady progress on paying down the balance
is largely dependent upon having a loan with a fixed
rate. Therefore,
we have rule No. 3: It is time to move away from adjustable
rates.
There is nothing worse than the payments increasing
when the value
of the home is declining. This means refinancing out
of the short-term
adjustable-rate loan that pressures your budget and
retards the
process of building equity through principal repayment
as interest
rates climb and getting into a fixed-rate mortgage
or hybrid ARM
where the fixed-rate period is no less than seven years.
Why so
long? I'll come back to this point later on. First-time
home buyers are especially vulnerable to
a downturn in home prices because of minimal down payments
and the
lack of established equity that buyers rolling over
from a previous
home would have. Small down payments and large loan
balances increase
the likelihood of relying on interest-only loans and
the like for
affordability. So the message to first-time buyers,
and rule No.
4, is this: Make a larger down payment. If you don't
have the scratch
for a down payment and you can't afford to borrow with
a fixed-rate
mortgage -- don't buy. It's that simple. The
fifth rule is to live in your home for the longer
haul. Whenever you're upside down on a car because
you owe more
than it is worth, the cure-all is to literally drive
your way out
of it by keeping the car until the loan balance falls
below the
market value. Be prepared to do the same with a new-home
purchase.
If your feeling is that you're going to move in three
years, it
is time to make plans for other contingencies. Can
you afford a
mortgage that offers a fixed rate for a longer period,
such as a
10/1 ARM or a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage? If not,
continue renting.
The transaction costs of buying and selling are steep,
and any downturn
in price over such a short holding period will clobber
the unsuspecting
buyer. The
home is first and foremost where you live.
Get past the "my home is an investment" mentality
to protect against
the bursting bubble. The home is indeed an investment,
but a long-term investment.
Treating it as such will vanquish many of the worries about a bursting bubble. Back
to Your Money: If the Housing Bubble Breaks. |