Green Mortgages Los Angeles CA

This page provides useful content and local businesses that can help with your search for Green Mortgages. You will find helpful, informative articles about Green Mortgages, including "Green Mortgages Offer New Growth". You will also find local businesses that provide the products or services that you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Los Angeles, CA that will answer all of your questions about Green Mortgages.

Mr. Araik Erik Margaryan (RFC®), MBA, RFP
(818) 303-1714
150 E. Olive Ave.,
Burbank, CA
Ms. Leilani A. Kimmel-Dagostino (RFC®), MBA
310 793 0015
2390 Crenshaw Blvd. #731
Torrance, CA
Bank of America - Pico-Vermont
213.637.1877
1232 S Vermont Ave
Los Angeles, CA
Bank of America - Figueroa & Adams
213.763.8900
2703 S Figueroa St
Los Angeles, CA
Wells Fargo - Adams & Broadway
213-745-7208
141 W Adams Blvd
Los Angeles, CA
Mrs. Cathy Bandurraga Downs (RFC®), CSA
626 795 7210
3858 E Colorado Blvd Ste 200
Pasadena, CA
Hanmi Escrow
(323)735-4000
3130 West Olympic Boulevard Suite 400
LOS ANGELES, CA
Bank of America - University Village
213.763.8907
985 W Jefferson Blvd
Los Angeles, CA
88 Insurance Service
(213)386-1000
2140 W Olympic Blvd $530 1421 Warner Ave Suite F
Tustin, CA
Citibank (West)- FSB
(323)737-8335
3615 S Vermont Ave
LOS ANGELES, CA
Data Provided by:
 

Green Mortgages Offer New Growth

If you could save up to $200 a month in energy bills for 30 years, would you be willing to borrow an extra $5,000 for a home loan upfront? Probably yes.

That’s the power of energy-efficient mortgages, or “green” mortgages. Now, legislators, lenders, brokers and consumers are pushing for their wider use. Advocates say green mortgages can help solve several of the nation’s broader problems, including the energy crisis, the mortgage implosion and the slowing economy. 

“These programs can offer significant solutions,” said Norm Ferrier, owner of Security Mortgage Corporation, which specializes in green loans, “because homeowners are desperately seeking ways to lower their energy costs.”

Installing energy efficient windows
Green mortgages save money and energy over time by improving energy-efficiency Green mortgages allow home buyers to add as much as an additional 15 percent of the sale price into the loan, for upgrades such as energy-efficient windows, water heaters, or solar panels. The savings in energy bills offset the higher monthly mortgage payments and create more savings in the long run.

Since the 1970s, major lenders backed by Fannie, Freddie, and the VA, have financed green mortgages, which are currently promoted under the Energy Star program. But these products languished during years of cheap oil and easy, sub-prime loans. Lenders and brokers avoided green loans because they took longer to close, but yielded no extra profits.

Now, as the energy crunch and mortgage crises converge, lawmakers and lenders regard green mortgages as a solution to both. Residential and commercial investors also see new opportunities in green loans. “We are an emerging market at a time when the traditional market has imploded,” said Jeffrey Cole, founder of myenergyloan.com. “The secondary market is embracing green mortgages.”

Legislators are rushing to support green mortgages. The Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008, signed by President Bush last month, includes a provision to streamline and promote green mortgages. The bill authorizes federal agencies to identify obstacles to existing products, recommend changes and educate the public.

Another federal bill would provide incentives to lenders offering lower interest rates on green residential and commercial mortgages. The Green Resources for Energy Efficient Neighborhoods Act, introduced by U.S. Rep Ed Perlmutter (CO-07), passed the House Financial Services Committee in June and now awaits a House hearing.

A sign of green appeal across industries, the bill was broadly supported by 30 national organizations, including lenders, real estate agents, developers, housing groups, environmentalists and scientists. “We are at a crossroads with our housing markets and our energy consumption,” said Leslie Oliver, communications and policy director for Rep. Perlmutter. “There was incentive and buy-in from organizations across th...

Click here to read the rest of this article from NuWire Investor