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Bad financial real estate advice from money experts |
| George Chaney |
It's not uncommon in real estate to come across bad financial advise. However, on rare occassions that advise or counsel is so proposterous, it just begs to be addressed.
You see, financial specialists have the tendency to say "shop for a rate". However, rate is only one factor you should consider when looking for a loan, and it's not even the most important.
Bad advice is easy to give. As a matter of fact, any advise is easy to give. I've seen it published in several publication, most recently in Yahoo's financial section, (the article we refer to - http://biz.yahoo.com/pfg/e02credit/art012.html ), that if your FICO score is lower than 600, you can expect to pay an extremely high rate of interest.
This from a so called "financial expert"! From what I can see, she looks more like a self serving marketing profiteer professional in the "how can I make as much money as I can for myself" game!
If you've got challenged credit, don't let some financial "professional" tell you, or imply, that you can expect to pay a 9% interest rate!
Nonsense!
This is simply not true in more than 50% of the cases! Anyone that would state this has no knowledge or is inadequately prepared to address such an important financial issue without providing full disclosure of options, alternatives and corrective actions. Especially with so much money at stake!
The fact is, you can have a 500 to 600 credit score and get just as nice an interest rate as someone with a 680 or 750 FICO.
How? By doing things the right way when preparing for your mortgage loan. This fact alone can save you, the credit challenged, tens of thousands of dollars in the first two years of home ownership!
Such words, written by a supposed "Financial Professional" should never be printed without full disclosure of all the facts and alternatives that help home buyers avoid home loans that charge excessively high market rates!
Poor credit means these home buyers need better education, preparations and tools to buy their first home the right way, the first time.
There are risks and benefits with every mortgage product on the market and each are designed to meet the needs of a niche clientele. "Specialty Programs" have special pricing because in reality, it means you as the borrower are either hiding something, need exceptions or are unable to document something. This entails a higher risk and thus a higher rate.
Today's market trends say the biggest factor in the average home buyers mortgage decisions is not life of loan, but the short term cost of money over a 3 to 5 year period. Most new home buyers are younger and just starting out with plans for family and upgrades. Terms of loans offered to this type of buyer only change if the client plans to own the home for longer than 7 years or under money personality constraints.
Any mortgage consultation should factor short term financial goals, long term financial goals, the clients money personality (very important when selecting a program to protect the clients interest), clients risk comfort, payment saving, reinvestment return (for savers and investors), product benefits, market risks and the all important home appreciation. While there are other questions, they trickle into client specific criteria and are not relevant to every borrower.
This does not even begin to address the needs of hundreds of thousands of potential home buyers who every month, begin the process of buying a home, yet lack funds to make a down payment. For example:
Do prospective lenders know where to get the home buyer down payment money through government grants and do they do it? Do they know the cost of a blended rate of an 80/20 piggie back vs. the cost of a single note in real rate paid? Do they recognize, on long term notes, that today a back end HELOC has a much higher potential cost to a borrower that only makes interest payments Vs. The cost of a single note with MIP or in some cases PMI? Do they recognize the value, in real dollars, a 3% down payment can make towards the cost, in interest rate and effective dollars, of borrowing almost all funds. Do they know how to create a down payment where no down payment existed? Do they understand how to, and when to, do any LEGAL creative financing that not only meets down payment needs, but also the need for closing costs? Does the Loan Specialist understand credit and how to help credit challenged buyers quickly gain FICO points or prepare for a loan? Do they know how to take a buyer with a 500ish credit score and get them a 5.5% or 6% 30 year fixed rate loan, with as little as $500.00 out of their pocket to close? Does the loan representative have enough integrity to tell a borrower when they can't afford a home even if they can qualify using an Alt A Product or the wrong product?
Frankly, you could do a risk reward analysis, and "how to", for every type of mortgage product, including finance options with down payment assistance and for everyone of them there will be winners and losers. The losers usually occur with BAD COUNSEL!
The most important questions on matching a client with a program are asked during the initial interview with the client. While "professional" advise givers say shop rates and upfront cost (costs to close), that is the worst way a home buyer can shop for a mortgage and can cost a home buyer thousands upon thousands of dollars. It just seems to be the popular and "easy out" for advise givers as dollars you see are much easier to factor than dollars you don't.
As a professional, my philosophy with rate shoppers is "do you want the rate today, or do you want the rate you'll actually get?" While rate is an important factor, rates change every day, and on an active market day, they can change by the hour depending on which direction mortgage backed securities are moving. The fact is, all conventional investment money comes from three sources (Fannie, Freddie and Gennie), and the rest from other types of mortgage backed securities and banks.
Money costs every investment lender basically the same amount. This means on any given day, rates could vary up to .25% depending upon when a lender updates their rates to reflect changes in market. Rate hedgers, in our industry, have a great advantage as they quote rates based on where they think the market is moving since no rate is guaranteed until it's officially locked! This is a very common practice used by the type of person that will ....take advantage of clients. However, try locking a rate with a hedger and you'll be surprised at the points, or added fees, that show up after the fact should that rate hedger be wrong on his projection.
I used to work with a guy a couple years ago that beat everyone's rate and closing cost. It didn't matter if it was true or right. He played the market and with the downward trend in rates, he usually won. The fact is, he didn't know a thing about his products, he sold rate and costs. (just how you sillies say consumers should buy.... )
A buyer who rate shops may be getting quoted today's rate from one company, tomorrows rate from another, and a bet on next weeks rates from a third. It's like comparing apples, to oranges to pears and the client will never know what they're getting. In reality, the number one priority for the average home buyer should and must be the quality of the counsel they get, how the products meet their needs, then the rate, then the costs to close.
Lenders only have control over LENDER FEES! Yes, in fact, the more challenged your credit, the higher these fees will be. However, for home buyers using standard products and underwriting, It's silly and misleading to say "shop closing costs" as the home owner/buyer/seller typically has control over 3/4 of all the fees associated with closing their loan! Can you imagine? ( Depending on points and origination charges for credit challenged buyers. Why? Because A credit paper requires LESS work to close.), lender fees ( the things we control), in most instances, equal less than 20% of the total costs to close or less than $800 to $1200.00 depending on program type. The rest we just estimate because they are third party charges outside our control.
So, was the great counsel and options you got worth an extra $300.00 in lender fees?
The decision on the program any home buyer selects will be based upon the questions the mortgage representative asks, the clients needs/money sense and the range of products presented to choose from.
The wrong program can at worst cost a client their home, and at best will cost them between 7% to 15% of the amount they financed to get out of. Once they close, they risk wasting the initial cost of the closing, plus the interest they pay on the first year of the loan, in addition to any pre-payment penalty associated with the loan (yes, odds say when a borrower gets bad advise on a program, they get stuck in a bad loan with a prepayment penalty to). A very expensive decision.
Shopping a mortgage rate and closing cost is like baking a cake without the flour. This is not a car you're buying and Mortgage Companies are not car dealers (though some fly by night out fits may act like it). Your home is an investment and should be treated in every way as an investment. You want and need to maximize your return while at the same time, minimize your costs and exposure. However, quality counsel is not free and comes with a price.
Yes, I've had past clients refer friends who got themselves into the "wrong loan" situation. It's not pretty! I've also had plenty of rate shoppers come crawling back to me a month later after I've worked hard for them, at no cost, asking me to give them that deal I would have originally given without any unethical "bait and switch". Never will I knowingly deal with a borrower who rate shops me and goes to another lender only to come back.
This is especially so with my credit challenged clients. They come to you begging and crying, you spend 2 months working with them and their credit spending countless hours and your own money getting things fixed and ready for presentation the right way. Then, when I offer a 527 FICO borrower a 6% 30 year fixed rate on an underwritten and approved loan, it's amazing how attitude changes once you tell them they're approved.
As if your time, your knowledge and the service you provided has no value. They then go and shop me (again, as you sillies recommend) and because another lender promises them a 1/8% better in rate and no origination, they kick you to the curb! Then..when they can't get approved they have the NERVE to call you back asking for help again! Please, I have this bad habit of laughing at them and saying no thank you.
I'm certain there are dozen of my former clients, who sold me out, still waiting for that allusive approval or great rate they would of gotten, if only they weren't so arrogant.
So, is that 1% more in closing costs, or .125% more in rate you pay a professional worth it? Home owners, buyers and advise givers under estimate the value of good counsel, product knowledge and experience.
In the end, bad advise will hurt them in more ways than a slight rate difference on an un-locked loan or a $300.00 difference in LENDER Fees. Heck, I could tell you plenty of stories where I have saved home buyers tons of money over the life of their loans doing what you the "experts" say can't be done, and yes, it did cost them 2% in my lender fees at closing. I sleep well knowing the job I did for them is far more than most in our industry are capable of.
Bad advise in real estate, especially from those who don't understand the complex nature of the industry, is the worst thing a home buyer needs. Good counsel, service, support and solutions all come with a price and are well worth the investment of a few dollars."
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Anns my sister, said Andy raggedly.-John Foster
Another 7 days has gone by. mused Tom weakly.
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