What Should I Do With Mortgage Spam?
May 3, 2004
"I have one email message offering a 2.95% mortgage, and another saying
that poor credit is not a problem. Should I take these seriously?"
Follow my lead and take them to the delete bin.
When I log onto my computer in the morning, I might find 100 letters in
my in-box, of which about 75 will be spam. The largest category are
those that want to enhance my sexual capacity in one way or another, but
those looking to interest me in a mortgage run a close second.
A spamster I once spoke to told me why mortgage spam makes outrageous
claims. "The more outrageous the claim," he said very matter-of-factly,
"the higher the response rate." This is why we read about "2.95%
mortgages", "poor credit not a problem", "we cut your payment by 45%",
"buy the home you couldn’t dream you could afford", "you are approved",
and on and on.
These claims, like those for enhancing my sexuality, are all fantasy.
Most of the people who make the claims aren’t loan providers and have no
say regarding mortgage prices or the borrower approval process. Mortgage
lenders and brokers initiate very little mortgage spam.
Most mortgage spam comes from lead generation sites that are in the
business of compiling information on potential mortgage borrowers, then
selling it to lenders or brokers. The sole purpose of the enticing
messages is to induce you to fill out a questionnaire. A completed
questionnaire is a lead, for which loan providers will pay $40 or more,
depending on how much information it contains.
When I examined lead generation sites two years ago, I called them
"auction sites" because they promised borrowers that up to 4 loan
providers would contact them and bid for their loan. I found 9 of them
at the time, of which Lending Tree was the largest. But I don’t
recognize any of the 9 in the spam I am getting, which seems to
originate with new players.
This is a very easy business to enter. All you need is a web site with a
questionnaire for potential borrowers to fill out; a deal with a spam
distributor to spread your outrageous claims as widely across the
internet as possible; and deals with loan providers, or with a lead
wholesaler, to sell the leads.
If you fill out the questionnaire of a mortgage spamster, you will be
solicited by one or more loan providers. You will know nothing about
them but they will know a lot about you. Having paid good money for that
information, they are highly motivated to land you as a client. To
accomplish that, some of them may make promises that are as phony as
those of the spamster who enticed you into the process.
Postscript: A few days after drafting this piece, I logged onto my email
server and was startled to find… NO SPAM! An inquiry disclosed that the
firm operating my email account had installed a state-of-the-art
filtering program that had successfully blocked it all. It looked great,
so why was I feeling uneasy?
For one thing, I wondered about the possibility that the filter might
have caught some legitimate stuff in addition to the spam. Fortunately,
I was able to check this because my email is accessible from two
sources, one of which is not filtered. And sure enough, I found a letter
from a reader that the filter erroneously classified as spam.
In general, the more effective a filter is in screening out spam, the
greater the likelihood that it will also grab some non-spam. The filter
on my server worked a little too well.
My spamless email register made me uneasy for another reason. I realized
that if the filter had been installed a few weeks earlier, I never would
have written this column, which arose out of my own experience with
mortgage spam. The filter was cutting me off from information I wanted,
even if I was advising every one else to ignore it.
So I drafted a note to the technician who installed the filter: "Cory, I
really love having a clean email register, I particularly delight in no
longer having to look at ads questioning my sexual prowess, but could
you please give me back my mortgage spam?"