| February 10, 2006, Revised May 12,
2006, July 20, 2007 The home mortgage market is a
minefield for consumers shopping for a mortgage. For those with a short
attention span, here is a summary of the hazards, followed by a summary of my
preferred ways to avoid them.
Shopping Hazards You Want to Avoid
Market
Volatility and Obsolete Prices:
Because mortgage prices are
reset every day, and sometimes within the day, price comparisons from different
loan providers may be invalid if not made at the same point in time. Read
Can I Avoid Mortgage Prices That Have Lapsed?
Market
Niche Misclassification:
Because mortgage prices depend on a wide variety of borrower, property, and
transaction characteristics, misclassification and consequent miss-pricing,
accidental or deliberate, are common. Read
What Mortgage Market Niche Are You In?
Mortgage
Price Low-Balling:
Because loan providers in a
volatile market cannot be held to price quotations, some of them deliberately
quote mortgage prices below those they can deliver in order to hook the client.
Read
Can I Rely on Mortgage Price Quotes?
Settlement
Cost Low-Balling:
Because loan providers do not
always know the exact prices of services provided by third parties, and they
can’t be held to the figures they provide on the Good Faith Estimate of
Settlement (GFE), some of them deliberately underestimate in order to hook
clients who shop total settlement costs. Read
How to Shop Settlement Costs.
Lender Fee
Escalation:
Because fixed-dollar fees charged by lenders are also “estimates” on the GFE and
are not locked along with the interest rate and points, some lenders find new
fees as loans approach the closing. Read
Legal Thievery at the Closing Table.
Incomplete
Price Information on ARMs:
Because adjustable rate
mortgages (ARMs) have important features that affect the interest rate after the
initial rate period ends, which features are not mandated disclosures, some loan
providers leave borrowers in the dark regarding what can happen in the future to
the rate and payment on their ARM. Read
ARM Disclosures: Government Drops the Ball.
Fake Rate
Locks: Because
the points charged on a loan decline as the lock period shortens, some mortgage
brokers pocket the price increment by telling borrowers they are locked for the
longer period while not actually locking with the lender until shortly before
closing. This exposes the borrower to a rate spike which the broker would not be
able to cover. Read
Did You Pay For Insurance You Didn’t Get?
Contract
Chicanery: Because borrowers don’t receive the note that spells out their
obligations until closing, at which time they can be overwhelmed with documents
that require their signature, some loan providers, in contradiction to their
oral representations, will slip provisions into the note that increase its value
to the loan provider at the expense of the borrower. The most common is a
prepayment penalty clause. Read
Lies Mortgage Shopper Hear.
Financial Inducement to
Overcharge: Underlying other
shopping hazards is the fact that most loan providers make more money on a
transaction if they can induce the borrower to pay more. Read
What Is a Mortgage Overage?
The Mortgage Professor’s 4-Step Approach to
Avoiding These Hazards
1.
Be
the Selector, Don’t Be Selected, Don’t Respond to Solicitations (Except to Say
“No”).
Not
every loan provider who solicits is a predator, but all predators solicit.
Hence, your chances of avoiding a predator are better if you thrown a dart at
the yellow pages than if you accept a solicitation.
2.
Decide Whether To
Price Shop, Or Retain An Expert To Shop For You.
Price
shop if:
You like to be in full
control of the process.
You are prepared to invest time in educating yourself.
You are comfortable with a computer (no need to be a geek).
You have good credit.
You can document your income and assets.
If you shop on-line, I have
done the heavy lifting for you by certifying those lenders who provide all the
information that borrowers need to shop effectively. See
Upfront Mortgage Lenders.
3.
If
You Elect to Retain an Expert, Select Among Those Who Guarantee Their Markups
These include Upfront
Mortgage Brokers, they are listed at
Upfront Mortgage Brokers.
UMBs will negotiate a fee for
their services in advance, and then pass through to you the best wholesale price
they can find. Their motif is transparency. Other brokers act as
independent contractors, and view their mark up of the wholesale price as
nobody’s business but theirs.
A second option is to
access Amerisave through my site. Amerisave is an Upfront Mortgage Lender that
discloses and guarantees its markup, which is also guaranteed by me if you
access them through this site. Click on
Fixed-Markup
Lender.
4.
Decide the Major Features of Your Loan
This is
necessary if shopping on-line, less needed if using a UMB because you can
discuss it with the broker. For tutorials on the major features, go to
Tutorials
on Selecting Mortgage Features.
Copyright Jack Guttentag
2007
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