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Real
Estate Related FAQ’s
by
Carl Hampton
08/04/2006
What is PMI? Can I get rid of the PMI on my
loan?
PMI or Private Mortgage Insurance is
normally required when you buy a house with
less than 20% down. Mortgage insurance is a
type of guarantee that helps protect lenders
against the costs of foreclosure. This
insurance protection is provided by private
mortgage-insurance companies. It enables
lenders to accept lower down payments than
they would normally accept. In effect,
mortgage insurance provides what the equity
of a higher down payment would provide to
cover a lender's losses in the unfortunate
event of foreclosure. Therefore, without
mortgage insurance, you might not be able to
buy a home without a 20% down payment.
The cost of PMI increases as your down
payment decreases. Example: The cost of PMI
on a 10% down payment is less than the cost
of PMI on a 5% down payment. Your PMI
premium is normally added to your monthly
mortgage payment.
The decision on when to cancel the private
insurance coverage does not depend solely on
the degree of your equity in the home. The
final say on terminating a private
mortgage-insurance policy is reserved
jointly for the lender and any investor who
may have purchased an interest in the
mortgage. However, in most cases, the lender
will allow cancellation of mortgage
insurance when the loan is paid down to 80%
of the original property value. Some lenders
may require that you pay PMI for one or two
years before you may apply to remove it.
To cancel the PMI on your loan, contact your
lender. In most cases, an appraisal will be
required to determine the value of your
property. You will probably also be required
to pay for the cost of this appraisal.
Another way of cancelling the PMI on your
loan is to refinance and to get a new loan
without PMI.
Can my loan be sold? What happens if my
lender goes out of business?
Your loan can be sold at any time. There is
a secondary mortgage market in which lenders
frequently buy and sell pools of mortgages.
This secondary mortgage market results in
lower rates for consumers. A lender buying
your loan assumes all terms and conditions
of the original loan. As a result, the only
thing that changes when a loan is sold is to
whom you mail your payment. If your loan has
been sold, your existing lender will notify
you that your loan has been sold, who your
new lender is, and where you should send
your payments from now on.
If your lender goes out of business, you are
still obligated to make payments! Typically,
loans owned by a lender going out of
business are sold to another lender. The
lender purchasing your loan is obligated to
honor the terms and conditions of the
original loan. Therefore, if your lender
goes out of business, it makes little
difference with regards to your loan
payments. In some cases, there may be a gap
between the date of your lender's going out
of business and the date that a new lender
purchases your loan. In such a situation,
continue making payments to your old lender
until you are asked to make payments to your
new lender.
What is a rate lock?
You cannot close a mortgage loan without
locking in an interest rate. There are four
components to a rate lock:
1. Loan program.
2. Interest rate.
3. Points.
4. Length of the lock.
The longer the length of the lock, the
higher the points or the interest rate. This
is because the longer the lock, the greater
the risk for the lender offering that lock.
Let's say you lock in a 30-year fixed loan
at 8% for 2 points for 15 days on March 2.
This lock will expire on March 17 (if March
17 is a holiday then the lock is typically
extended to the first working day after the
17th). The lender must disburse funds by
March 17th, otherwise your rate lock
expires, and your original rate-lock
commitment is invalid.
The same lock might cost 2.25 points for a
30-day lock or 2.5 points for a 60-day lock.
If you need a longer lock and do not want to
pay the higher points, you may instead pay a
higher rate.
After a lock expires, most lenders will let
you re-lock at the higher of the original
rate/points or current rate/points. In most
cases you will not get a lower rate if rates
drop.
Lenders can lose money if your lock expires.
This is because they are taking a risk by
letting you lock in advance. If rates move
higher, they are forced to give you the
original rate at which you locked. Lenders
often protect themselves against rate
fluctuations by hedging.
Some lenders do offer free float-downs--i.e.
you may lock the rate initially and if the
rates drop while your loan is in process,
you will get the better rate. However, there
is no free lunch--the free float-down is
costly for the lender and you pay for this
option indirectly, because the lender has to
build the price of this option into the
rate.
What do you do if the rates drop after you
lock?
Most lenders will not budge unless the rates
drop substantially (3/8% or more). This is
because it is expensive for them to lock in
interest rates. If lenders let the borrowers
improve their rate every time the rates
improved, they spend a lot of time relocking
interest rates, since rates fluctuate daily.
Also they would have to build this option
into their rates and borrowers would wind up
paying a higher rate.
Lock-and-shop programs.
Most lenders will let you lock in an
interest rate only on a specific property.
If you are shopping for a house, some
lenders offer a lock-and-shop program that
lets you lock in a rate before you find the
house. This program is very useful when
rates are rising.
New-construction rate locks.
Most lenders offer long-term locks for new
construction. These locks do cost more and
may require an up-front deposit. For
example, a lender might offer a 180-day lock
for 1 point over the cost of a 30-day lock,
with 0.5 points being paid up-front, as a
non-refundable deposit. Most long-term
new-construction locks do offer a
float-down--i.e. if rates drop prior to
closing, you get the better rate.
What is an Annual Percentage Rate (APR)?
The annual percentage rate (APR) is an
interest rate that is different from the
note rate. It is commonly used to compare
loan programs from different lenders. The
Federal Truth in Lending law requires
mortgage companies to disclose the APR when
they advertise a rate. Typically the APR is
found next to the rate.
Example:
30-year fixed
8%
1 point
8.107% APR
The APR does NOT affect your monthly
payments. Your monthly payments are a
function of the interest rate and the length
of the loan.
The APR is a very confusing number! Even
mortgage bankers and brokers admit it is
confusing. The APR is designed to measure
the "true cost of a loan." It
creates a level playing field for lenders.
It prevents lenders from advertising a low
rate and hiding fees.
If life were easy, all you would have to do
is compare APRs from the lenders/brokers you
are working with, then pick the easiest one
and you would have the right loan. Right?
Wrong!
Unfortunately, different lenders calculate
APRs differently! So a loan with a lower APR
is not necessarily a better rate. The best
way to compare loans in the author's opinion
is to ask lenders to provide you with a
good-faith estimate of their costs on the
same type of program (e.g. 30-year fixed) at
the same interest rate. Then delete all fees
that are independent of the loan such as
homeowners insurance, title fees, escrow
fees, attorney fees, etc. Now add up all the
loan fees. The lender that has lower loan
fees has a cheaper loan than the lender with
higher loan fees.
The reason why APRs are confusing is because
the rules to compute APR are not clearly
defined.
What fees are included in the APR?
The following fees ARE generally included in
the APR:
--Points - both discount points and
origination points
--Pre-paid interest. The interest paid from
the date the loan closes to the end of the
month. Most mortgage companies assume 15
days of interest in their calculations.
However, companies may use any number
between 1 and 30!
--Loan-processing fee
--Underwriting fee
--Document-preparation fee
--Private mortgage-insurance
The following fees are SOMETIMES included in
the APR:
--Loan-application fee
--Credit life insurance (insurance that pays
off the mortgage in the event of a borrowers
death)
The following fees are normally NOT included
in the APR:
--Title or abstract fee
--Escrow fee
--Attorney fee
--Notary fee
--Document preparation (charged by the
closing agent)
--Home-inspection fees
--Recording fee
--Transfer taxes
--Credit report
--Appraisal fee
An APR does not tell you how long your rate
is locked for. A lender who offers you a
10-day rate lock may have a lower APR than a
lender who offers you a 60-day rate lock!
Calculating APRs on adjustable and balloon
loans is even more complex because future
rates are unknown. The result is even more
confusion about how lenders calculate APRs.
Do not attempt to compare a 30-year loan
with a 15-year loan using their respective
APRs. A 15-year loan may have a lower
interest rate, but could have a higher APR,
since the loan fees are amortized over a
shorter period of time.
Finally, many lenders do not even know what
they include in their APR because they use
software programs to compute their APRs. It
is quite possible that the same lender with
the same fees using two different software
programs may arrive at two different APRs!
Conclusion :
Use the APR as a starting point to compare
loans. The APR is a result of a complex
calculation and not clearly defined. There
is no substitute to getting a good-faith
estimate from each lender to compare costs.
Remember to exclude those costs that are
independent of the loan.
What is the difference between
pre-qualifying and pre-approval?
A pre-qualification is normally issued by a
loan officer, who, after interviewing you,
determines the dollar value of a loan you
can be approved for. However, loan officers
do not make the final approval, so a
pre-qualification is not a commitment to
lend. After the loan officer determines that
you pre-qualify, he/she then issues you a
pre-qualification letter. This
pre-qualification letter is used when you
are making an offer on a property. The
pre-qualification letter indicates to the
seller that you are qualified to purchase
the house you are making an offer on.
Pre-approval is a step above
pre-qualification. Pre-approval involves
verifying your credit, down payment,
employment history, etc. Your loan
application is submitted to an underwriter
and a decision is made regarding your loan
application. If your loan is pre-approved,
you are then issued a pre-approval
certificate. Getting your loan pre-approved
allows you to close very quickly when you do
find a house. A pre-approval can help you
negotiate a better price with the seller,
since being pre-approved is very close to
having cash in the bank to pay for the
house!
Have an opinion or a question you would like
me to answer? Write to me!
http://www.CarlHampton.com
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