Monday, July 02, 2007

Dead Fish Don't Have A Mortgage Plan

I knew this kid in High School who was about as anti-establishment as they come. Pretty interesting guy, but somewhat difficult to get to know or get a good read on. When the senior year yearbooks came out, the quote beneath his name read: "Only dead fish follow the stream". It captured what I perceived to be at the core of his personality. And the message was clear. What's a worse thing to be than a dead fish? And what could be more true an image?

... 14 years later, it remains one of the more memorable from that sea of inside jokes, cliche inspiration, failed attempts at humor, and so on. It popped into my head again recently when I read a headline about a mortgage survey administered by Re/MAX in the Detroit area. It made the case that some 2/3 homeowners with a 'nontraditional' mortgage were planning to refinance. This was yet another media criticism of the mortgage industry, and the 'nontraditional' loan type. The media has made the terms 'exotic' and 'nontraditional' synonymous with 'dangerous' and 'rip-off' in the context of the mortgage industry.

This got me thinking, as the 2/3 number seemed extreme to me. I can't imagine that 2/3 of the people with 'nontraditional' loans need to refinance into a market that is close to its 5 year high water mark. Generally, the media refers to anything that isn't a 15 or 30 year fixed loan as 'nontraditional', but it would help to have clarification.

Refinancing always involves a cost/benefit analysis and can be viewed as a snapshot of one's financial and credit profile as well as of the marketplace for money at any given point in time. "Based on where I am today, does the market offer me something better?" Something has to improve. It is unlikely that loans originated in the last few years are eligible for lower rates today - credit is at/near its tightest and most expensive levels in the last 5 years (though there are some cases). So this statistic has to refer to people who are looking for more protection in the form of longer fixed rate periods. They are likely rolling into a higher rate, higher payment or both.

Of people who need to refinance, there are a few possible motivations: they were misguided when they took out their current loan, they are misguided about what they need going forward, or more innocently, things have just simply changed.

Among those who intend to refinance based on changes in life, those who are not taking out cash are going to be refinancing specifically to change the terms of their loan. And if this specific sector is equal to 2/3 of those with 'nontraditional' mortgages, then this would indeed be worthy of a news headline with a story about how 'nontraditional mortgages' are bad for your financial health.

But I doubt this is the case. Cash-out refinancers would be re-financing regardless of the current loan (to a degree). The misguided folks are not adequately understanding how to evaluate the cost/benefit proposition, or they didn't when they took out that last loan.

The key takeaway here is that life does in fact change. Among this 2/3 figure, there are likely those who knew life would be changing around this time, and took out a mortgage that fit the timeline of expected change, and saved a bundle in the process. They are the guided ones. The 'dead fish' are the folks who are letting the current push them around.

Living fish also follow the stream for the most part, but they navigate. They know when to resist the current, move to the side, etc, as opposed to banging into rocks and driftwood - and washing up on shore.

Let's face it. Resistance can get you in trouble. Defiance can get you hurt. But if there is a stampede headed for a narrow escape, sometimes you'll be better off figuring out a different way out rather than trying to squeeze through that door with the rest of them - or better yet - knowing how to avoid being stuck in the first place. Don't be a dead fish. Get a plan in place.

John C. Glynn, CMPS
Real Estate Finance & Mortgage Planning
San Francisco

No comments:

Post a Comment