Coaching and teaching - many through the mortgage process and others on the field

Category: Interest Rates (Page 29 of 30)

Mortgage Loan Term versus Mortgage Loan Rate

Nelson Post

My good friend and colleague, Mike Nelson, has put together a fantastic primer regarding the importance of the term of the mortgage loan versus the interest rate of that same loan.  I’d highly recommend clicking HERE for more.

Mike’s point is a very good one  – don’t get emotionally invested in the lowest possible interest rate.  It’s a big factor, for sure, but it isn’t the be-all-end-all of the conversation.  It’s very important that you identify your goals before you make any binding decisions.

“Customers always want to talk about interest rates.  It is the first question I get – how low are your rates?  My answer is this: the interest rate is important for sure, but the term of the loan should get equal consideration.”

Is it the single lowest possible monthly payment, or the lowest interest to be paid out over the course of the loan?  These are just a few questions to consider – so make sure you get with a reputable mortgage professional in order to find the best loan for you.TimeisMoney

“I can’t tell you how many times I have worked with borrowers who are so fixated on the lowest possible interest rate that they will finance $5,000 in points to have a rate discounted by 1/8 or 1/4 – without a considering the term of the loan.”

As Mike talks about, if you are sure you will stay in the house over the course of the next 25 to 30 years – spending thousands of dollars on discount points can be a financially sound decision.

However, if there is a possibility that you will sell or refinance a 30 year mortgage in the first 7 to 10 years of the loan – have your loan officer do the math and calculate the “actual” cost of the $5,000 discount.  Most of the time you will be surprised at just how much more money that “low” interest rate actually costs.

It would be my privilege to help you and anyone you know find the right mortgage product that best suits their needs!

Source: Mike Nelson’s “Observations From A Loan Officer” – Efficient Selling Blog

5 Mistakes That Delay Mortgage Approvals (and How to Avoid Them)

washingtonpostwordleOne of the hardest parts of getting a mortgage is interpreting advice from all the parties involved: mortgage lender, real estate agent, insurer, attorney or escrow officer, tax adviser, financial adviser, plus your family and friends.

Source: 5 Mistakes That Delay Mortgage Approvals (and How to Avoid Them) | Zillow Porchlight

To avoid any surprises, ask your lender to quote rate locks based on your closing timeline. And don’t forget that if you’re cutting it close on qualifying and rates rise, the resulting cost increase can kill your loan approval. Ensure your lender is accounting for the possibility of higher rates so your loan approval remains valid if rates rise while you’re home shopping.

Since your mortgage lender is involved in all parts of a financed home purchase, use The Lending Coach to be your best guide.

Here are the five common mistakes that can cause hiccups in your mortgage process. Ask your mortgage lender to help you steer clear of them.

1. Excluding details of your financial profile

A good mortgage lender will begin by reviewing your basic personal and contact information, employment and residence history, income, assets and debts.

Simple, right? Only if you answer every question, whether it’s in person or on a form. If you don’t provide absolutely every detail about your financial profile, it can throw off the entire loan process.

2. Not providing every single piece of documentation

Next your lender will ask for detailed documentation for your entire profile, including:

  • 30 days of pay stubs
  • Two years of tax returns and W-2s
  • Year-to-date business financial statements if you’re self-employed
  • Two months of statements for all asset accounts
  • Explanations and paper trails of all deposits (and often withdrawals) above $1,000
  • A home insurance quote with adequate coverage
  • Full financials on any other homes or businesses you own

If one single page of any piece of documentation is missing, you’ll be asked to provide it. If your income is commissioned or variable in any way, you must authorize your lender to verify income directly with current and past employers.

The lender will also run your credit, which can reveal employers, addresses, debts and other credit inquiries that you didn’t disclose. If new information comes to light, you’ll be required to explain and document all of it.Another-Happy-Homeowner1

3. Confusing approval with pre-approval

Misinterpreting approval status kills deals and can take years off your life. So remember this and live long in your new home: get your loan approved by an underwriter before you write any offer to buy a home.

Getting a mortgage “pre-approved” means you’ve talked to a lender (#1 above), or you may have even provided some documents (#2 above) and been told your profile looks good — but make no mistake, this isn’t a loan approval.

Be sure you ask to get “underwriting approved” and obtain a formal loan commitment in writing. Anything short of this means your profile has been evaluated, but your actual loan approval doesn’t officially begin until your loan agent submits your file to an underwriter.

4. Not sharing home offer details with the lender

The purchase contract — or offer you write on a home — dictates critical transaction timing milestones like how many days you have to secure loan approval and how many days you have to close.

Your real estate agent will take the lead here, but make sure your lender and agent are in sync, because the lender must provide these critical milestone dates that your agent writes into the contract.

If you miss either of these dates in your contract, you risk losing your initial deposit on the home. The only way your lender can provide accurate timelines is if they’ve executed all the steps above properly.

5. Being unrealistic or uninformed about rates

When a seller accepts your offer, you’re in contract to buy your home and ready to lock a rate for your mortgage. You can’t lock before you’re in contract because a rate lock runs with a borrower and a property.

This means you’re subject to rate market movement until you’re in contract, and rates change throughout each day as bond markets trade. Rates are priced based on how long they’re locked, so a shorter lock (such as 15 or 30 days) has a lower rate than a longer lock (60 days, for example).

Understanding Earnest Money

earnest_money_depositThe earnest money deposit is an important part of the home buying process. It tells the seller you’re a committed buyer, and it helps fund your down payment.

How Much Should You Put Down in the Earnest Money Deposit?

The amount you’ll pay for the earnest money deposit will depend on a few factors, such as policies and limitations in your state, the current real estate market, and what the seller requires. On average, however, you can expect to hand over 1-2% of the total purchase price as earnest money.

When Do You Pay the Earnest Money, and Who Holds It?

In most cases, after your offer is accepted and you sign the purchase agreement, you give your earnest money deposit to the title company. In some states, the real estate broker holds the deposit.

Always check the credentials of the firm or broker taking the deposit and verify that the funds will be held in escrow. Never give the earnest money to the seller; it could be difficult or impossible to get it back if something goes wrong.

After turning over the deposit, the funds are held in an escrow account until the home sale is in the final stages. Once everything is ready, the funds are released from escrow and applied to your down payment.

If the deal falls through, a small cancellation fee is usually taken out of the deposit, but the remainder remains in escrow. Whoever holds the deposit determines whether you should get the money back under the terms of the purchase agreement. Make sure that the purchase agreement covers how a refund is handled.

Link to Realtor.com: Understanding Earnest Money

What’s Ahead for Jumbo-Loan Borrowers in 2016

The stock-market dip is likely to keep interest rates on jumbo loans below 4% for a while longer, which also could make borrowing larWSJ 8 Ballge sums more attractive.

Source: What’s Ahead for Jumbo-Loan Borrowers in 2016

Believe it or not, the market for jumbo loans is a good one.  Lenders have some fantastic products to offer that can help put customers into a larger home or refinance their existing mortgage.

Jumbo borrowers have loans that exceed conforming limits of government-back loans, $417,000 in most places and $625,500 in some high-cost areas. The Federal Housing Finance Agency didn’t raise baseline limits last year because home prices haven’t returned to prerecession levels nationwide.

Per the WSJ report, unless the bottom falls out of the economy, jumbo lenders predict continued demand. Regional banks and nonbank lenders were able to expand their jumbo mortgage volume largely because of continued enthusiasm on the part of big banks to buy and hold them in portfolio.

Now might be a good time to consider moving up or refinancing your jumbo loan!

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