| October 20, 2008
Mortgage Marvel (MM) is the
fourth multi-lender web site I have reviewed in 2008. The others are
Loan.com: A Better Type of Mortgage Referal Site;
Mortgage
Grader: A Better Type of Web Site? and
An Appraisal of Zillow
Mortgage.
Mortgage
Shopping Sites Versus Referral Sites
My first impression was
that MM was a multi-lender shopping site. A multi-lender shopping
site is one on which the user can get all the information required
to select the best deal from multiple loan providers, and apply for
the loan, on that site alone. The site is self-contained in that it
at least purports to provide sufficient information to allow the
borrower to make a rational choice without going anywhere else.
My second impression was
that MM was more of a referral site than a multi-lender shopping
site. A referral site is a portal to the sites of the individual
loan providers that it lists. Referral sites are designed to provide
just enough information to induce the user to visit individual
lender web sites, where the selection decisions will be made.
Referral sites can list hundreds or even thousands of loan
providers.
Mortgage
Marvel Is Weak As a Shopping Site
MM has one feature that I
look for in a multi-lender shopping site. It protects the user
against "low-balling", which is the widespread practice of quoting
an unrealistically low price to land the client, then finding a
reason to raise the price later. Borrowers using MM can always check
their posted price on the lock day.
But MM lacks many other
essential features of a good multi-lender shopping site. One is
clarity regarding the assumed characteristics of the transactions
that are priced. The prices shown by MM only apply to borrowers with
good credit who can fully document their income and assets, but this
is not stated anywhere.
A good shopping site should
also help the user determine which lender offers the best deal. The
deal includes lender fees but those shown on MM are intermixed with
third party fees and separate totals are not provided. In addition,
some of the lender price quotes are for 30-day lock periods while
others use 60-day periods.
Comparing prices on
adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs) is particularly difficult. MM does
not report the index used by the ARM in adjusting the rate, the
margin that is added to the index to determine the new rate, or caps
on rate changes. MM refers the user to the lender’s site for
"Additional Information About ARMs" but that is a fruitless quest.
Nine of the ten I checked had nothing, and the tenth had nothing
useful.
The mortgage payment shown
on MM includes mortgage insurance where it is required, but the
amount is not broken out. The only way I could determine whether or
not mortgage insurance was required was to calculate the payment of
principal and interest and subtract it from the total. Many users
don’t know how to do this.
Another feature that I look
for on a multi-lender shopping site is protection against
overcharges on lender and third-party fees. Many internet-based
lenders, including all
Upfront Mortgage Lenders, guarantee their own fees. On MM, in
contrast, lender fees are shown as estimates. There is no way for a
user to know whether or not the lender will stand by the fees shown,
or raise them at closing when it too late for the borrower to back
out.
Third party fees on MM are
also vulnerable to abuse. Among 10 lenders estimating the title
insurance charge on my $400,000 ARM in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, 7
quoted $2750, one quoted $2329, one quoted $2123, and one quoted
$700! The last is clearly a mistake, but whether it was a deliberate
mistake I don’t know. The other two lenders with lower prices may
have negotiated deals for their customers, which should earn them
gold stars. On the other hand, these firms may be "low-balling" the
price to make their offers on MM look better, and revert to a higher
price at closing. The borrower doesn’t know which explanation
applies, and clearly MM doesn’t either.
Mortgage
Marvel Fares Better As a Referral Site
As a referral site, MM
looks better. It only has about 15 lenders, but that’s enough. All
the lenders use the same format to display mortgage information on
their sites, which makes it easy for users to go from one to
another. Compared to other referral sites, that’s a plus. The
lenders are mainly credit unions, plus a few small banks. For
someone who has decided to borrow from a credit union, which in the
current state of the market is not a bad idea, MM could be a good
place to start.
Copyright Jack Guttentag
2008
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