Would you be able to spot a Real Estate Rental Scam?
This week the CBC came out with an article about it that is an interesting read. Real estate scams: How to avoid falling for one: One man is warning others to take precautions when house hunting online after he nearly became the victim of a real estate scam. Tom Mason's search for an Orangeville, Ont., home for his family was not going well. All the apartments that interested Mason were quickly snatched up by other prospective tenants. Mason decided to take some initiative and placed a wanted ad on the classified site Kijiji. A man who called himself Richard quickly emailed Mason about a rental property. Richard asked for $1,000 a month in rent for a home he said he had initially listed for sale after relocating to Iowa. He now wanted to rent it because, he said, the home had failed to attract a buyer after several months on the market. "Seemed like just the perfect opportunity," said Mason, adding he viewed a video tour of the property. "He relocated. The house wasn’t selling." But the red flags started popping up shortly after their initial correspondence. Richard asked Mason for a wire transfer the next day and promised his wife would soon fly to Toronto to hand over the keys. "There was no way this is for real," said Mason. He contacted the real estate agent on the house listing and discovered Richard was not the property owner. How to avoid a scam When buying anything on an online classified site, a buyer should meet with a seller in person, said Shawn McIntyre, a community relations manager at Kijiji. "Obviously, you should be really concerned" if anyone asks for money without providing the item, the keys or a lease, he said. Kijiji offers some tips for avoiding real estate scams online: - Ensure that you can view the property - Beware prices that seem too good to be true - Be wary of professional and low-resolution photos - Note that flowery descriptions, extensive features lists and repairs needed may signal an ad was copied from a real estate site - Use caution around ads that ask for personal information, like age or a SIN number In the company's general tips on how to stay safe while using the site, Kijiji recommends never sending wire transfers. Link to full article here #RealEstate #RealEstateToronto #RentalScams #Mortgages Romana King, MoneySense Senior Editor, has a great article I'd like to share:
Variable Vs. Fixed When choosing the best mortgage you’ll need to decide between a variable or fixed rate mortgage—terms that are not synonymous with open and closed. Open/closed mortgages refer to the flexibility you have in paying off the mortgage debt, while fixed/variable mortgages refers to how the interest rate is calculated and applied. (That means you can have: a fixed closed mortgage, a variable closed mortgage, a fixed open mortgage, and a variable open mortgage.) The key to variable and fixed rates is to understand how interest rates are calculated and how these impact each type of mortgage:
Best Option But is this the best option? Not according to a number of financial experts, including Robert Abboud, an Ottawa – based CFP and the author of No Regrets: A common sense guide to achieving and affording your life goals, our very own Canadian Capitalist blogger, Ram Balakrishnan, and Dr. Moshe Milevsky, the York university professor whose initial 2001 study became the impetus behind the current belief that you’ll always save with a variable rate mortgage. According to Milevsky’s 2001 study (and the updated study released in 2008), homeowners who opt for a variable rate mortgage save approximately $22,000 in interest payments over a 15 – year period. But context is everything. The study, and its update, examined mortgages between 1950 and 2007. And since the study was published the spread (otherwise known as the difference between variable and fixed rates) has thinned out. Also rates, which were consistently falling over the last 25 years, have since bottomed out. Now they have nowhere else to go but up. Add to this the historical response by governments to tough economic times: stimulate spending, which generates inflation. To combat this inflation, governments raise interest rates — sometimes suddenly and ruthlessly — and this has an immediate impact on variable rates (and the overall economic condition eventually impacts fixed rates). For that reason, Milevsky, and others, have voiced their support for locking – in to a fixed rate. The rationale: any savings you see from currently low variable rates will be eaten up when you’re forced to renegotiate your mortgage in five years. That’s because as rates slowly creep up over the next five years, your monthly payments remain the same — and this results in a larger percentage of your payment going to interest payments, rather than repaying the principal. So, to decide whether a variable or fixed mortgage is better for you, answer these questions: 1) Do you currently have a big mortgage? 2) Do you expect to have a big mortgage in five years? 3) Would it be virtually impossible to make additional monthly or lump – sum payments against the mortgage? 4) Would it be a burden to find an extra $100 or $200 per month for mortgage payments? 5) Does the thought of uncertain rates and fluctuating payment amounts keep you up night? If you answered yes to any of these questions, seriously consider a fixed – rate mortgage. Despite the temptation of saving money with a variable rate mortgage, a fixed rate will provide a level of stability and predictability that your situation requires. And this is particularly true for people who have big mortgages AND cannot commit to additional monthly or annual lump – sum payments. That’s because the lower – sum payments you get with a variable rate mortgage means you make less of a dent in your principal as interest rates rise. Take, for instance, a $350,000 mortgage. If you selected a variable rate mortgage, at 2.4%, and that rate stayed stable for five years you’d end up with a mortgage balance of $295,706. Compare this to a mortgage balance of $303,780 with the 3.8% fixed rate. But if interest rates start to climb—and you know they will—then those savings will be eaten away. For example, if rates rise by a quarter of a percent every six months, you’d end up with a mortgage balance of $302,209. Link to article here. #Mortgages #torontorefinance #MortgageBrokerToronto #Mortgagecalculator #TorontoMortgages #Fixedvsvariablerate |
About the Author:Jaime Mercado is a Mortgage Professional with Real Mortgage Associates, a Toronto Mortgage Broker who has been delivering the best mortgage rate for tens of thousands of satisfied clients for nearly a decade. Archives
March 2016
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