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As interest rates rise, so do rate-lock complaints. Patricia
Cunningham, Consumer Affairs Manager at the Illinois Office of Banks and Real Estate, says
that in 1994, when interest rates were high, more than 600 rate-lock complaints came in.
In 1995, when interest rates fell, so did the number of complaints -- by half. In 1996,
with interest rates back up again, the number of complaints also rebounded.
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4."Our APR Doesn't
Mean What You Think It Does."
When lenders advertise their loans, they use annual percentage rates, or APRs. The
APR is supposed to help you compare loans on equal terms by combining the fees and points
with a year of interest charges to give you a loan's true annual cost.
The problem is, every lender's APR policies differ. Some include their
application fees in the APR, some don't. So two loans from different banks may have
different APRs even though they have identical rates and points. To complicate things even
more, APRs also vary depending on the size of the loan, whether it is adjustable or fixed,
and on the lenders' requirements for mortgage and title insurance. Not many people
understand the differences, says Keith T. Gumbinger, an analyst with HSH Associates, a New
Jersey mortgage research and tracking service. "We have studied it and determined
that [the APR] is fairly meaningless."
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5. "We Never Met a
Fee We Didn't Like."
It's bad enough being nickel-and-dimed over a checking account. ("What? A $10
charge when someone else's check bounces?") But when banks make home loans, the extra
fees can go through the roof -- often to the point of being illegal.
Lenders are required by Respa, the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, to
give you a good-faith estimate of your closing costs when you hand in your application,
and extra charges are a violation of the law. But some banks try to sneak them in anyway.
"I've seen $150 messenger fees," says Charles Baird, an Atlanta lawyer who has
represented a number of people who have sued their mortgage lenders. "I also see
strange fees, like a 'jumbo warehousing' fee. Many don't refer to any real service, but I
see them on settlement papers all the time. Lenders tend to be very creative when it comes
to fees."
Always ask for a detailed, itemized list of your estimated closing costs when
you hand in your loan application. It's required by law. Then on closing day look
carefully at the figure called "amount financed" on your settlement papers. If
it does not equal the principal you are borrowing, minus any points or interest paid
upfront, ask your loan officer why. It could mean he slipped some fees into the amount
financed and you can guess what that means: You'll pay interest on those charges.
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6. "We're in Cahoots
With Your Real Estate Broker."
When shopping for a product, it's always best to get a recommendation, right? That
depends on who's doing the recommending. A real estate agent who directs you to his or her
favorite lender is not necessarily offering you the best deal. In fact, there's a chance
the lender paid your broker a fee for the referral -- a practice that is illegal.
In a handful of states, such as California and Minnesota, real estate brokers
can negotiate mortgage loans. Depending on how well this area is regulated in your state,
this could be cause for worry. Is the loan offered going to be the best deal you could
get? Peter G. Miller, a former agent and author of The Mortgage Hunter
(HarperCollins, $13.50), raises another concern for the buyer. "The second issue is,
will my confidential financial information be transmitted to the seller? And will that
give the seller a negotiating advantage?" He points out that the real estate broker
is often obligated to get the seller the best possible price for the property. If the
broker knows your financial background, that could prove very useful to the seller.
One way to avoid this pitfall is to hire your own agent, one that will be representing you
as a buyer's agent, and preferably one that will act as an Exclusive Buyer's Agent. In other words, an
agent that never lists property for sale, but only represents buyers.
Other types of lending partnerships are cropping up around the country. For
instance, computerized loan originators, which allow borrowers to scan selected lenders'
deals on PCs, are up and running in many real estate offices. The U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development is currently trying to revise its regulations in this area
to address issues like disclosure of the relationship between the real estate broker and
the lender. The aim is to ensure that consumers can benefit from this kind of system, but
are protected from any possible abuse. In the meantime, you don't necessarily want to
avoid these offers. They may be the best deals around. But "may be" are the
operative words.
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7. "Once You Buy Mortgage
Insurance, Good Luck Canceling It."
You need to buy mortgage insurance because you can afford only 15% of your down
payment, but your lender assures you it's no big deal. Once your equity grows to 20%, he
says, you can bag the insurance payments. Good decision? Nope.
Lenders make it sound easy to get rid of your mortgage insurance, but when that
time comes, they often balk. "It's not true that the borrower can just stop
paying," says Linda Washing, a Manager of Housing Programs at Consumer Credit
Counseling Services Southwest and a former loan officer. "It's the lender's
prerogative."
That can be expensive. On a mortgage on a $200,000 home, with 15% down, a
buyer's mortgage insurance will cost about $43 a month, or $516 a year. With just 5% down,
the cost goes up to $120 a month, which is almost three times as much, according to GE
Capital Mortgage Insurance. Depending on which insurer you go with, it can cost even more.
Some require an additional fee upfront -- on top of the monthly payment -- of as much as
1% of your loan if you put only 5% down. Since your lender typically chooses your insurer,
this is probably going to be beyond your control as well.
The key is to understand the terms of your mortgage insurance obligations
before you close your loan. Get your lender to explain what conditions you have to fulfill
before you can stop paying for insurance. Some lenders simply require an appraisal to
prove you've paid down 20% of the home's value.
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8. "You Should Worry
About Our Finances Too."
The chances that your bank will go under are slim, but it does happen. Shanda and
Steve Falcon know all too well. It took Abbey Financial, a lender in Cambridge, Mass., six
months to refinance the Falcons' mortgage. Four days later, the deal fell apart and Abbey
declared bankruptcy. The Falcons were out no small amount of money, including $1,700 they
paid for a rate lock. And they weren't the only ones. Abbey's bankruptcy stranded 867
other homeowners in six states.
Think it couldn't happen to you? Think again. Things have calmed down since
interest rates have fallen from the highs of 1994. But Mark Thomson, a department of
financial institutions assistant director in Washington State, warns that "rates
could get bumped back up at any time, and the same situation would replay -- if the market
dries up, firms that aren't financially stable are going to have a difficult time."
The upshot: If your mortgage banker or broker shuts down, your file may land on a trash
heap and you'll have to start your loan-hunting-and-gathering expedition all over.
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9. "You're
'Prequalified'? Don't Bank on It."
Lenders will tell you that prequalified borrowers practically have their mortgage
in the bag. But they often don't mean it. Sometimes they will
pre-approve you based on what
you have written or verbally stated with no verification. These are called
"wastebasket" approvals. When it comes to actually getting a mortgage, they
don't mean anything. That final approval is dependent on verification of that information.
This can mean trouble all around. Once a client of Ray Rizio, a real estate attorney in
Bridgeport, Conn., went into contract with a buyer who had been
pre-approved by a local
lender. "Three other deals went into contract based on this
pre-approved buyer -- it
was a sure thing," he says. It wasn't. The buyer wasn't a U.S. citizen, he had five
different employers, and he had horrible credit. "The lender didn't even pull his
credit report," says Rizio.
Happily, lenders are adopting tougher
pre-approval rules. But get it in writing
before you make any plans based on a lender's word.
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10. "What
Happened to Your
Prepayments? Can't Be Sure."
Many homeowners pay down their principal early, bit by bit. It's a great way to
reduce your interest payments over time. But often those extra payments will sit in an
escrow account -- and won't be credited toward your principal -- because your lender
doesn't know what to do with them.
In 1993 Kathleen and Hal Aaron paid an extra $1,017 on their $117,000 one-year
adjustable-rate mortgage for their New York City pied-a-terre. But when they got
their year-end mortgage statement, there was no record of that payment. Where was the
money? The Aaron's lender had stashed it in a savings account. Only after two months of
phone calls and irritation was the bank able to find the cash and put it where it
belonged.
Why aren't lenders on the ball? It confuses payment schedules, for one thing.
But lenders also make money on the interest you pay -- income that's eliminated when you
prepay your principal.
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