loan

Fannie Mae Increases Its Mandatory Loan Fees For All Borrowers

August 7, 2008

Fannie Mae announced a new risk-based pricing model and additional mortgage delivery fees this week, adding to the cost of buying or refinancing a home. Risk-based pricing was first introduced by Fannie Mae this past April. It added new, mandatory loan fees for high-risk borrowers while rewarding a small group of low-risk borrowers with fee […]

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Why It May Be Prudent To Lock Your Mortgage Rate Before 2:15 P.M. ET Today

August 5, 2008

The Federal Open Market Committee meets today and is widely expected to hold the Federal Funds Rate at 2.000 percent. This does not mean that mortgage rates will stay flat, too, however. The Fed Funds Rate is a different type of interest rate from the ones charged to American homeowners for their mortgages. The Fed […]

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Changing Mortgage Guidelines Impact Buyers Of Second Homes And Investment Properties

August 1, 2008

Conforming mortgage guidelines are the Home Loan Rule Book, delineating between applicants that approved for a mortgage and those that do not. Effective today, the rule book just got a little bit tougher. According to Fannie Mae, homeowners converting their primary residence into a second home or investment property will be subject to additional underwriting […]

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The New Housing Bill’s Hidden Tax Trap

July 31, 2008

Monday, President Bush signed the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 into law and the press jumped on the obvious storylines: First-time home buyers get a $7,500 purchase “credit” Conforming loan limits move to $625,000 Delinquent homeowners get a lifeline from the FHA Local governments get federal money for buying and restoring foreclosed homes […]

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Freddie Mac’s SEC Filing : The 2 Sentences That Matter In A 1,394-Page Document

July 24, 2008

Sometimes, the hardest part about news is knowing where to find it. In its filing with the SEC last week, Freddie Mac stated that it will “pursue increases” to its middleman fee.  This would likely make mortgages more expensive for every conforming borrower in the country. The exact verbiage from the filing is extremely opaque and […]

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Mandatory FHA Loan Fees Increase For Some, Fall For Others

July 18, 2008

For the first time in its history, the FHA changed its funding fees and mortgage insurance structure this week.  FHA-insured home loans are now subject to a risk-based pricing adjustment, as shown by the table above. Because of risk-based pricing, FHA home loans are now more expensive for borrowers with less-than-ideal credit profiles, and less expensive borrowers […]

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How Is The Economy Doing? It Depends Who You Ask.

July 11, 2008

“Economic uncertainty” is turning into a 2008 buzzword and there’s good reasons why. On the one hand, there are precursors to inflation in the economy: Rising oil costs Rising food prices Higher Cost of Living On the other hand, there are precursors to recession in the economy, too: Mounting job losses Less access to credit […]

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Why July May Be The Best Time To Write A Purchase Contract In 2008

July 8, 2008

It’s a terrific time to buy a home, but not because homes happen to be affordable. It’s a terrific time to buy because the variety of mortgage products available to home buyers looks poised to shrink. Monday, Alt-A mortgage lender IndyMac Bank stopped accepting mortgage applications and it’s likely that other Alt-A lenders will likely […]

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Are Sub-Prime Mortgage Problems Finally On Their Way Out?

July 2, 2008

In the summer of 2005, sub-prime mortgage lending was at its peak.  Rates were relatively low and lending guidelines were relatively loose. At the time, the “standard” sub-prime mortgage product was the 3/27 ARM. The 3/27 had a few basic traits: A fixed, 3-year “starter rate” Every six months thereafter, the mortgage rate changed The […]

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Why Mortgage Rates Could Fall Because Of Midwestern Farmers

July 1, 2008

As flood waters ran through Iowa and other Midwestern states, the nation’s corn supply was thought to be in danger. Prices spiked in the wake of the floods, adding to the already-peaking grocery bills that many Americans are now bearing. But yesterday, in a surprise report, the Agriculture Department said that many farmers had over-planted corn […]

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What You Need To Know About Mortgage Rate Quotes

June 19, 2008

Home buyers are often surprised when a “rate quote” from the morning won’t be honored in the afternoon.  Sometimes, the assumption is that the loan officer is just being sneaky. This couldn’t be less true. Rate quotes change in the middle of the day because mortgage markets are in constant flux.  All day, every day — […]

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Cancel Your PMI Before It’s Too Late To Cancel It

June 12, 2008

When homeowners borrow more than 80 percent of a home’s value, mortgage lenders often require a corresponding insurance policy called Private Mortgage Insurance. PMI provides a cash payment to lenders in the event of a homeowner defaults. But because PMI policies are designed for high LTV loans only, they usually contain cancellation options for when home equity […]

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What Happens When Bernanke Says “Inflation” 55 Times In 5 Pages Of Text

June 5, 2008

Mortgage rates are a big deal when you’re buying a home. With even the slighest uptick in rates, 30 years of mortgage payments can get substantially more expensive and one of the most substantial threats to mortgage rates is an economic event called inflation. Inflation’s influence on mortgage rates is so large that markets can get jarred […]

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The Proper Way To Give And Receive Gifts For Downpayments

June 4, 2008

When a home buyer is gifted cash for a downpayment, there is a right way and a wrong way to receive the funds. The right way includes: Completing an acceptable gift letter Documenting the withdrawal of funds with receipts Documenting the deposit of funds with receipts The wrong way is to ignore the rules that mortgage lenders […]

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Did You Know : The Lifespan Of A Mortgage Approval

June 3, 2008

Mortgage approvals don’t last forever. A conforming mortgage approval from Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac has a shelf-life of 120 days. After 120 days, the approval expires and a mortgage applicant must re-submit his application for consideration. In addition, a mortgage approval can “expire” within the 120-day period for other reasons: Change of job status or […]

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Why It Will Be Easier To Get A Mortgage Approval Today Than Monday

May 29, 2008

Mortgage financier Fannie Mae is toughening its mortgage application decision-making process effective Monday, June 2, 2008. The new guidelines will force many Americans to face higher mortgage rates, higher loan fees, or to be shut out from “prime” mortgage rates altogether. The new “mortgage rules” include the following changes: Higher income levels required for basic approvals […]

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How We Know That Prime Rate Will Likely Rise Before It Falls

May 22, 2008

Three weeks after adjourning, Federal Reserve officials release detailed minutes of their most recent meeting. The April 30, 2008 minutes were released Wednesday and it affirmed traders’ beliefs that the Federal Reserve will not be in a hurry to lower the Fed Funds Rate again. This is bad news for two groups of people whose […]

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Simple Real Estate Definitions : Loan-to-Value

May 21, 2008

Loan-to-value is a math formula that represents the relationship between how much a home is “worth” and how much money is borrowed against it. Loan-to-value is often abbreviated as “LTV” and is one of the many factors that lenders consider when underwriting a mortgage application. The math formula is straightforward: In the LTV equation, Loan […]

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Did You Ask: “Has There Been A Mortgage Rate Reprice In The Last Hour?”

May 20, 2008

Yesterday, several mortgage lenders issued three separate “rate sheets” in response to the changing mortgage market. It was the fourth time in the last 6 trading days that mortgage lenders issued multiple rate sheets in a day, and continued the trend that started in mid-January. The yo-yo nature of mortgage rates underscores the importance of making […]

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What Mortgage Fraud Looks Like

May 15, 2008

According to the FBI 2007 Mortgage Fraud Report, more than 46,000 cases of suspected mortgage fraud were reported last year.  This led to bank losses exceeding $813 million. If you’re looking for reasons why mortgage underwriting is measurably more difficult in 2008 — add “mortgage fraud” to the list.  Lenders now perform extra scrutiny on each […]

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