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How to know if mortgage refinancing makes sense now

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For many homeowners, today’s mortgage rates offer a new opportunity to refinance and save on payments.

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In the post-pandemic era, inflation surged to a multi-decade high and the Federal Reserve responded by raising the benchmark interest rate. Although mortgage rates don’t directly track that benchmark rate, borrowing costs still soared for home buyers. 

With low mortgage rates off the table, refinancing became a non-starter for anyone who’d obtained a loan at the 3.00% to 5.00% rates customary between 2009 and 2022. Those who bought homes also got stuck with expensive loans, even after shopping for the best rates.

The good news is, the tides are turning. The Federal Reserve reduced rates at its September meeting, with further reductions expected in the months ahead. Mortgage rates are already down over a point and home loans with rates under 7.00% are now available again for many borrowers. 

Aspiring homeowners are beginning to come off the sidelines to buy properties before declining mortgage rates push up real estate prices and existing homeowners who bought properties when rates were higher are now grappling with the question of whether to refinance now or wait. 

If you’re in this situation, it helps to know what to consider now. 

Start by seeing what mortgage refinance rate you’d be eligible for here.

How to know if mortgage refinancing makes sense now

Not sure if a mortgage refinance is valuable for you now? Consider the answer to the following questions to help narrow down your decision:

Will refinancing improve your financial situation? 

Refinancing involves getting a new loan to repay your old mortgage, changing your loan terms in the process. It makes sense to do that only if the new loan you can secure will have more favorable terms. 

“The most important question to ask yourself when considering a refinance is, will this refinance improve my life now and in the future?” advises Aaron Gordon, a branch manager and senior mortgage loan officer at Guild Mortgage. 

To answer this question, you’ll need to consider whether refinancing will save you money, allow you to accomplish other important financial goals, or both. 

“There are many reasons why people refinance their mortgage,” advises Melissa Cohn, Regional Vice President at William Raveis Mortgage. “Lower rates, switching from an ARM to a fixed, the end of an adjustable rate initial lock period, debt consolidation, or cashing out, to name the most popular reasons.” 

If any of these apply to you, it’s worth looking at the loan offers out there to see if you can qualify for a new loan that accomplishes your objectives. “With interest rates now 1% lower than they were a year ago, now is a good time to consider refinancing for the reasons given,” Cohn says.

Start exploring your best mortgage refinance options online now.

How long will it take to break even? 

While refinancing can have significant benefits in the right situation, it’s not without costs. You’ll want to be sure your new loan is a better deal in the long run even after taking into account fees, which could total as much as 2% to 5% of your loan’s value. 

“Refinancing only makes sense if the new interest rate is better than your current rate,” according to Armstead Jones, Strategic Real Estate Advisor at PropertyCashin. “The only time the rate doesn’t matter is if you are pulling equity out of your property.” 

If you took out a mortgage in the post-pandemic era, today’s rates may be lower than what you’re paying on your current loan. You may also qualify for a better rate if your credit or other financial credentials have improved. The big question is, just how much lower will that rate be, and will you be in the home long enough to cover the upfront expenses?

“What you’re trying to do is get to a place on the figures where your monthly payment falls by enough to offset the closing costs in a reasonable amount of time,” according to Jon Bodan, president and founder of The Perpetual Financial Group, Inc. and a strategic financing advisor at HouseCashin. “This is called the break-even point and generally if it’s under about 36 months it’s a good deal, provided that you plan to be in the home that long.” 

Bodan says you can get a mortgage professional to run the numbers for you. There are also calculators online that can help you do this math.  

Should you wait for better rates? 

There’s one last important consideration. While you may be able to lower your mortgage rate now, chances are good rates are going to continue to decline for a while. Rushing into refinancing could mean you miss out on opportunities to save even more in the future.

“You may want to wait and see if rates come down further for more meaningful savings,” Gordon says. Of course, while the Federal Reserve has signaled more rate cuts are on the horizon and most experts believe mortgage rates are likely to continue declining, that doesn’t mean these predictions will pan out. 

“Some clients that could benefit from the current lower rate environment are holding off – basically thinking rates will continue to decline, so they’re waiting,” Bodan said. “This is possible, but there’s no guarantee.”

Bodan says they generally advise refinancing now if it makes sense based on the numbers, rather than waiting for future cuts that aren’t guaranteed. “Worst case, rates fall some more, and in a year or two you refinance again and you didn’t fully break even on the original deal. Not something you want to be cavalier about, but it’s also not the end of the world. No one can predict what will or will not happen with rates in the future.”

The bottom line

If you can improve your financial situation through refinancing and don’t want to gamble on rates continuing to decline, consider shopping around for a loan today and moving forward to capture the savings available now. As Boden explained, refinancing again in the future is possible, so why not cut costs today instead of waiting for a future rate drop that may never come? 

Get started here today.



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Georgia prosecutor asks appeals court to reinstate 6 tossed charges in Trump case

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Six dismissed charges accusing former President Donald Trump and five others of illegally soliciting Georgia officials to violate their oaths of office should be reinstated, Georgia prosecutors told an appeals court.

In a brief for the state’s Court of Appeals, lawyers for Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis said a judge “erred” when he dismissed the charges in March.

The charges, which were among a total of 41 filed against Trump and 18 others in 2023, accuse six of the defendants of trying to coerce state officials into helping overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. Trump himself faced 13 counts in the indictment and pleaded not guilty.

Judge Scott McAfee said in March that the charges of solicitation must be dismissed, writing that Willis’ office failed to provide the defendants with enough information about the charges to defend themselves.

“The lack of detail concerning an essential legal element is, in the undersigned’s opinion, fatal,” McAfee wrote.

Willis’ office shot back in their brief, which was filed Tuesday, saying the indictment “included an abundance of context and factual allegations about the solicitations at issue, including when the requests were made, to whom the requests were made and the manner in which the requests were made.”

Steve Sadow, Trump’s lead counsel in the case, said in a statement the brief “is simply incorrect on the law.” 

“The trial court’s dismissal order properly decided that the State failed to sufficiently plead the allegations in the dismissed counts under Georgia law,” Sadow said.

The dismissed counts accuse Trump, former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows and attorneys Rudy Giuliani, John Eastman, Ray Smith and Bob Cheeley of illegally trying to influence various state officials after the 2020 election.

McAfee also dismissed another three counts regarding filing false documents in September, including two against Trump. Prosecutors are expected to appeal that decision as well.

The case is one of three against Trump that have stalled this year. The Fulton County case has been on hold since June, when the Court of Appeals agreed to consider whether Willis should be removed from the case for a romantic relationship with special prosecutor Nathan Wade that has been criticized by defense attorneys and McAfee.

A federal case accusing Trump of illegally removing confidential national security material from the White House was dismissed in July. Special counsel Jack Smith is appealing that decision.

Proceedings in the other federal case brought by Smith’s office, revolving around Trump’s alleged efforts to overthrow the 2020 election results, were delayed for months as the Supreme Court considered issues related to presidential immunity.

In May, Trump was convicted of 34 felony counts of falsifying business records. The New York State case stemmed from an effort before the 2016 presidential election to suppress an adult film star’s story of an extramarital sexual encounter.

Trump has denied wrongdoing and pleaded not guilty in all four of his criminal cases.



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Big Lots to close another 56 locations in 27 states. Here’s where.

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Big Lots is closing more than 300 stores; including stores in Philadelphia area


Big Lots is closing more than 300 stores; including stores in Philadelphia area

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Big Lots is adding dozens of locations to its list of stores slated to close as part of the discount retailer’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy process.

The Columbus, Ohio-based company plans to shut down another 56 locations in 27 states, it said in a regulatory filing on Friday. 

The development comes a week after Big Lots listed 46 stores facing closure in 23 states, with each of those locations currently running closing sales, according to Big Lots’ online store locator. 

Big Lots last month filed for bankruptcy protection from its debts, saying it intended to sell what remained of its business to private equity firm Nexus Capital Management. Big Lots in August announced plans to close up to 315 stores.

There are 1,145 Big Lot locations in the United States, according to the company’s website.

Here are the recently added stores slated to close.

Alabama

  • 142 Green Springs Highway, Homewood 35209

Arkansas

  • 150 E Oak Street, Conway 72032

Arizona

  • 1799 Kiowa Avenue #106, Lake Havasu City 86404

California

  • 16824 Main Street, Hesperia 92345
  • 1201 E Manning Avenue, Reedley 93654
  • 2727 N Grand Avenue, Santa Ana 92705
  • 2685 Hilltop Drive, Redding 96002

Colorado

  • 893 S Kuner Road, Brighton 80601

Connecticut

  • 1235 Farmington Avenue, Bristol 06010 

Florida

  • 751 Good Homes Road, Orlando 32818
  • 14948 N Florida Avenue, Tampa 33613

Georgia

  • 4200 Wade Green Road NW Ste 144, Kennesaw 30144
  • 160 Market Square, Cartersville 30120

Illinois

  • 1383 E Pershing Road Suite A, Decatur 62526
  • 8750 N 2nd Street, Machesney Park, 61115

Indiana

  • 1538 North Morton Street, Franklin 46131
  • 918 W Lincoln Highway, New Haven 46774
  • 440 New Albany Plaza, New Albany 47150

Iowa

  • 3320 Agency Street, Burlington 52601

Kansas

  • 7408 Nieman Road, Shawnee 66203 

Louisiana

  • 3250 Gerstner Memorial Drive, Lake Charles 0601

Maryland

  • 1815 Pulaski Highway, Edgewood 21040
  • 1200 Smallwood Drive W, Waldorf 20603

Michigan

  • 29712 Southfield Road, Southfield 8076
  • 30000 Plymouth Road, Livonia 48150

Missouri

  • 603 SW US Highway 40, Blue Springs 64014
  • 691 Gravois Bluffs Boulevard, Fenton 63026

Nebraska

  • 850 E 23rd Street, Fremont 68025

New Mexico

  • 465 Coors Blvd NW, Albuquerque 87121
  • 9500 Montgomery Boulevard NE, Albuquerque 87111

North Carolina

  • 223 New Market Center, Boone 28607 

Ohio

  • 60 E Schrock Road, Westerville 43081
  • 1733 Pearl Road Suite 125, Brunswick 44212
  • 6235 Wilson Mills Road, Highland Heights 44143
  • 26425 Great Northern Plaza, North Olmsted 44070

Oklahoma

  • 2144 S Sheridan Road, Tulsa 74129
  • 1200 N Hills Center, Ada 74820

Pennsylvania

  • 15501 Bustleton Avenue, Philadelphia 19116
  • 2631 Macarthur Road, Whitehall 18052 

Tennessee

  • 791 West Elk Avenue, Elizabethton 37643
  • 2020 Gunbarrel Road Ste 186, Chattanooga 37421

Texas

  • 3512 Lamar Avenue, Paris 75460
  • 2729 New Boston Road, Texarkana 75501
  • 425 Sawdust Road Suite A, Spring 77380
  • 1374 W Main Street, Lewisville 75067
  • 850 N Bell Boulevard #104, Cedar Park 78613
  • 2249 S Loop 288, Denton 76205
  • 4002 Sunset Drive, San Angelo 76904 

Virginia

  • 4300 Portsmouth Boulevard, Chesapeake 23321
  • 6571 Market Drive, Gloucester 23061
  • 8151 Brook Road, Richmond 23227

Washington

  • 2401 N Pearl Street, Tacoma 98406
  • 120 N Fair Avenue, Yakima 98901
  • 11696 NE 76th Street, Vancouver 98662
  • 3019 W Kennewick Avenue, Kennewick 99336

Wisconsin

  • 1800 Milton Avenue Suite 100, Janesville 53545



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What to know about Trump’s IVF comments

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What to know about Trump’s IVF comments – CBS News


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Former President Donald Trump called himself the “father of IVF” as both campaigns vie for support from voters on reproductive rights. Vice President Kamala Harris weighed in on Trump’s comments. CBS News’ Cristian Benavides has more on Trump’s statements about in vitro fertilization.

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