How Much Protection Does a Mortgage Broker Provide?
22 May 2006
“If I deal with a mortgage broker, can I depend on the broker to protect
me against overcharges by all the other players in the transaction?”
Yes, no, maybe. Sorry about the ambiguity, but the answer depends on the
source of the charge, on the type of transaction, and on the operating
practices of the individual broker.
Mortgage Brokers Protect Borrowers Against Excessive Lender Fees
Dealing with a broker does protect you against excessive fixed-dollar
fees by retail lenders. Some retail lenders have a bad habit of
increasing their fees and finding new ones after borrowers have
committed themselves, but this doesn’t happen when a broker is involved.
The fixed-dollar fees charged by the wholesale lenders that brokers deal
with are known to the broker, who will inform the borrower as soon as
the lender has been identified. These fees will not change unless the
deal or the lender changes. There is no way that brokers can benefit
from allowing lenders to charge their clients excessive fees.
Some brokers even guarantee the lender’s fee, meaning that they will pay
the difference if the fees turn out to be higher than the broker stated.
All Upfront Mortgage Brokers now provide such a guarantee, which becomes
effective when the lender is identified.
Transaction taxes that exist in some areas are what they are. None of
the parties to a mortgage transaction can affect them, or profit from
them.
Mortgage Brokers May or May Not Protect Borrowers Against Excessive
Third Party Fees
Charges by parties other than the broker, lender or Government is where
it gets sticky. These include mortgage insurers, title agencies and
insurers, flood insurers, appraisers, credit reporting agencies, and
escrow companies. Whoever is positioned to select these service
providers has “referral power”, which is potentially valuable. Referral
fees are illegal under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act
(RESPA), but the enforcing agency (HUD) has the resources to pursue only
the more flagrant and publicity-worthy cases.
The referral power of brokers is usually limited on house purchases. If
the house is newly constructed, the builder has the referral power, and
on existing house sales Realtors usually have it. Exceptions arise where
the buyer refuses to accept the referrals of the builder or Realtor, in
which case referral power will shift to wherever the buyer places it,
which could be a broker. If a borrower goes to a broker for a refinance,
however, the broker usually has referral power.
How brokers use referral power when they have it varies widely between
brokers. Some use it to benefit themselves. Their referrals will be to
service providers with whom they have an understanding that the broker
“will be taken care of” in some way that escapes the RESPA police.
Large brokers can legalize the collection of referral fees by developing
a separate business entity, in collaboration with a third party service
provider, which provides the services to the broker’s clients. Many
title insurance agencies come into existence in this way, though there
are many more of them in Realtor offices than among mortgage brokers.
A second group of brokers accept that they have an obligation to find
high-quality service providers, but accept no responsibility for their
prices and receive no pay-off for referrals. Their view is that a
borrower is always free to shop for better prices than those quoted by
the providers the broker brings to the table.
The third group of brokers feel that they have a responsibility for both
the price and quality of third party services, and they negotiate lower
prices for their clients. In effect, they use their referral power to
benefit their client rather than themselves. Brokers in this group are
most likely to guarantee third party fees.
No Upfront Mortgage Broker (UMB) can fall into the first category. Part
of the UMB commitment is that “Any payments the broker receives from
third parties involved in the transaction will be credited to the
customer…” UMBs fall into the second or third group. Because borrowers
have a right to know which, this information (along with other relevant
facts) will soon be available on an information page about each UMB.