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A: Your
wife is right. The more attractive the quote, the more
likely it is phony -- meaning that the lender or broker
has no intention of honoring it.
What's the point? To rope you in.
If
you are purchasing a house, the cost of terminating the
process with one loan provider and starting again with
another becomes increasingly high as you move toward
your home closing date. As your bargaining power recedes
with the passage of time, you become increasingly
vulnerable to various tricks for increasing the price.
Loan
providers who offer phony quotes figure once you are in
the application process, they have a good chance of
landing you as a borrower.
I
know a mortgage broker who aims to make a 2.5 point
markup on all loans (each point is 1% of the loan
amount), but includes only a 0.5 point markup on prices
he quotes over the telephone. For example, if this
broker has a quote from a wholesale lender of 8.25% and
1 point, he quotes you 8.25% and 1.5 points -- a markup
of only 0.5 points. If he lands you as a customer, he
finds a way to recover the point (or more) before the
loan terms are locked.
Brokers who practice this deceit are called "sunshine
blowers" by those that don't.
How
do they get away with it? Loan providers legally can't
be held to a price quote. Since the market is volatile,
yesterday's price may not apply today. All loan
providers, including the sunshine blowers, warn
borrowers that price quotes aren't firm until they are
locked.
For
example, suppose market interest rates rise after the
initial quote, with the original wholesale quote of
8.25% and 1 point now 8.25% and 1.5 points. The broker
tells you "Sorry, the market has gone against us, the
loan you want is now at 8.25% and 3 points." The broker
makes an extra point by pretending that the increase in
market rates was larger than it was.
Conversely, if the wholesale quote falls to 8.25% and
zero points, the broker can make his 1.5 point markup by
providing you with the terms originally quoted. The
broker merely ignores the decline in market rates.
You
can attempt to forestall this trickery by monitoring
changes in the market after you get a price quote, but
probably you won't get far.
The
broker will point out that your market information is
general and does not accurately describe the specific
segment of the market relevant to your loan. Only the
broker has that information. You will probably lose this
argument because you're fighting on the broker's turf,
and you have a closing date on the near horizon.
It
would be a different story if the broker agreed
initially to share his market information with you. If
the broker in my example revealed the wholesale lenders'
price quotes, you would know exactly how the market
relevant to you had changed. But then the broker would
not be able to modify his low-ball markup, which is why
most brokers keep wholesale prices to themselves.
When
you shop, unless you inform the loan provider otherwise,
he generally assumes:
*The
loan is below $322,700 (the maximum for purchase by
Federal secondary market agencies in 2003), and above
some minimum-- usually around $50,000.
*There will not be a second mortgage on the property
when the deal closes.
*The
property is single-family, detached and constructed on
site.
*You
and all co-borrowers intend to occupy the house as your
permanent residence.
*Your credit rating and that of your co-borrowers is
good.
*You
have enough cash to pay the required down payment and
settlement costs.
*Your income is high enough to meet maximum ratios of
housing expense to income and total expense (including
monthly payments on existing debt) to income required
for the loan program you select.
*You
can fully document your income and financial assets.
*You
are a US citizen or a permanent resident alien.
If
you don't meet all these specifications, you are subject
to a price increase.
When
you are shopping for a loan, it is always best to reveal
how your case differs from these standards. In dealing
with shoppers, loan providers will raise the rate by no
more than necessary. If you don't reveal the information
until it is too late to back out, and if you are
unfortunate enough to have fallen into the hands of a
rogue, you will pay dearly for your mistake.
An attractive alternative is to hire an honest expert to
shop rates for you. That's what Upfront Mortgage Brokers
do. Acting as your representative, they can shop the
market a lot better than you can.
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