Does it Pay to Shop for a Mortgage?
October 19, 1998
"My wife will burn up $10 worth of gasoline and 2 hours of her time to
save $15 on a purchase, but I put a higher value on my time. And now I
need a $200,000 mortgage. Will I get a good return on my investment in
time by shopping for a mortgage?"
I have the same argument with my wife, but when I needed a mortgage some
years ago I shopped! The gains from shopping have actually increased in
recent years as the market has become increasingly "nichified" --
divided into thousands, perhaps millions of submarkets which are priced
separately.
To provide a current perspective on the potential gains from shopping, I
recently shopped 9 national lenders for a 30-year fixed-rate loan of
$200,000 on a single-family property for purchase in Oregon. I specified
an interest rate of 7% which they all offered, and compared their total
upfront fees. These came in a great variety of names ("points",
"origination fee", "processing fee", etc, etc), but they all come down
to the same thing -- money out of my pocket as a condition for granting
the loan.
The median (middle) fee was $5,034, or about 2 1/2% of the loan. But the
critical point is that the lowest quote was about $1200 below the second
lowest quote, $1700 below the median quote, and $3,100 below the highest
quote. Unless a non-shopper was lucky enough to choose the right lender
– and it would only be luck because there is nowhere to go to get this
information -- shopping would have resulted in savings of from $1200 to
$3100. Most borrowers would view that as a good return on the required
investment of time.
During periods of market uncertainty, the savings from shopping become
even wider because lenders respond to it differently. Striking evidence
of this occurred the week of October 12, 1998 following the unexpected
sharp rate spike during the preceding week. Among the 10 national
lenders on QuickenMortgage.com, the range of rates offered on 30-year
fixed-rate mortgages below $227,000 in California on October 13, was
6.75% to 8.625%! Similar spreads existed on other types of mortgages and
for other states. All the rate quotes are standardized for points (one),
lock period (30 days), and property (single-family purchase for
permanent occupancy). On a $200,000 loan held 5 years, the present value
cost at 6.75% is about $15,000 less than that at 8.625%!