mortgages

If you’re in the process of buying a home for the first time, you’re probably wondering about what you can do to help make the mortgage closing process smoother. To do this, it’s important to understand your role as well as your mortgage lender’s role is in the home-buying process.

Your Mortgage Company’s Role

Your mortgage lender’s role is to make the home buying process as easy as possible. Your banker or loan officer has to ensure you understand all the terms and conditions of your loan before you close on your mortgage.

Your Role

Buying a home is a very complex and exciting and sometimes stressful process. Communication is very important and the easier it is for your mortgage lender to reach you, the smoother the loan process will be. Be sure to let your banker or loan officer know your availability to avoid miscommunications.

Also, make sure you let your mortgage lender know everything that could affect your eligibility for a loan (e.g. other properties owned, actual hours worked, sources of income, etc.) so they can serve you better.

Mortgage lenders grow through referrals, and they want to make sure you’re happy and satisfied with your experience so you tell your friends and family about it. If you have any suggestions, let them know! Any reputable company will be open to hearing about your thoughts.

Mortgage Closing Expectations

Typically it takes about 35 to 50 days from the time of signing an application to closing. If you’re interested in purchasing a short sale or a bank owned property, the closing date may be affected and it may take longer to close your loan.

Third Party Vendors

Keep in mind that mortgage lenders work with third party vendors who also impact the loan process, such as appraisers, title companies, real estate agents, etc. This means that sometimes the process may get delayed as further information is needed from them to close your loan.

Closing Costs

One great feature of VA loans and FHA loans is that the seller may actually cover closing costs. For other types of loans, the closing costs can be rolled into the mortgage. If none of these situations apply to you, you may need to have funds available to bring to closing to cover closing costs, taxes and insurance. These costs mentioned are in addition to your down payment, of course.

Some things that may be included in your closing costs are:

  • Appraisal
  • Flood Certification
  • Tax Service
  • Title Services
  • Lender’s Title Insurance
  • Owner’s Title Insurance
  • Transfer Taxes
  • Real Estate Agent Fees
  • Filing Fees
  • Prepaids or Escrow Reserves
  • Pest Control Inspection

We hope this article helped you learn more about the roles and expectations of the lender and client during the mortgage closing process. Whenever you have a question do not hesitate to contact your mortgage lender. If you are just getting started in the process of shopping for a new home, contact us!

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As our country faces possibly the biggest budget crisis ever, the Obama Administration has created a deficit commission charged with discovering the best ways to bring down the national debt. It has come up with a plan to cut our $3 trillion dollars in debt over the next decade. One of the proposals this commission has suggested is to eliminate the time-honored mortgage interest tax deduction. While this idea has garnered some bi-partisan support, it has also created a major uproar among the mortgage industry associations, who claim now is not the time to mess with the tax break. So who is right?

Opponents of this proposal say it is essential to creating affordability in the housing market.

"It would immediately stop in its tracks any stabilization we are seeing in the housing market and would effectively increase the cost of homeownership for millions upon millions of people," according to Michael Berman, chairman of the Mortgage Bankers Association.

That thought was echoed by Ron Phipps, president of the National Association of Realtors. "Any changes to the deduction, now or in the future, could critically erode home prices and the value of homes by as much as 15%," adding, "it will effectively close the door on the American dream."

In fact, the NAR recently surveyed homeowners and found that almost 75 percent of them consider the deduction “extremely” or “very important.” This suggests that perhaps some may not have bought homes without the tax break.

The current mortgage interest deduction allows homeowners to deduct all of the interest paid on their homes each year from their tax returns. Some interest from mortgages on investment property and home equity loans is currently eligible for the tax deduction. Proponents say that mortgage deduction really only profits the wealthy as lower-income buyers are not likely to itemize their taxes and cannot take advantage of the savings. They say it does not truly encourage homeownership, but simply encourages the wealthy to buy bigger homes than they otherwise would. Furthermore, the Treasury has estimated this mortgage deduction, one of the largest deductions in the U.S. tax code, will cost the government $131 billion in revenue in 2012.

The White House commission has proposed that instead of deducting mortgage interest, homeowners would be given a 12 percent non-refundable tax credit on mortgages up to $500,000. This would make the tax advantage available to all buyers, not just those rich enough to itemize their tax returns. There would also be no credit or deduction for second houses or home equity loans.

The issue comes down to answering the question 'Is the mortgage deduction necessary to the full functioning of the housing market?' In all honesty, no. People bought homes before the introduction of this tax break and they could certainly do so without it. The follow-up question is 'can the economy and the housing market survive the immediate elimination of the mortgage deduction?' That is much harder to answer.

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According to data released by S&P Indices and Experian, the default rate on second lien mortgages has increased for the first time in at least five months.

The agencies’ report shows second mortgage defaults rose from 1.42 percent in March to 1.51 percent in April. First mortgages, on the other hand, saw a decrease in default rates, down from 2.33 percent to 2.16 percent.

These results are based on data extracted from Experian’s consumer credit database, which is populated with individual consumer loan and payment data submitted by lenders to Experian every month.

Experian’s base of data contributors includes leading banks and mortgage companies and covers approximately $11 trillion in outstanding loans sourced from 11,500 lenders. The default indices are developed jointly by Standard & Poor’s and Experian.

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Strategic default refers to a relatively new phenomenon where borrowers who have the capacity to make their mortgage payments but choose instead to default, often because the property value is less than what they owe on the mortgage loan.

Last year, the practice had become such a concern within the industry that Fannie Mae announced policy changes aimed at stepping up penalties against borrowers who simply walked away from their mortgage obligations even though they had the ability to continue payments. But the problem is, how do you pinpoint a strategic defaulter?

The credit assessment firm FICO says it’s developed a method, using consumer behavior analytics, that will allow lenders to identify borrowers who are a risk for strategic default.

FICO Labs research indicates that borrowers whose homes have lost the most value are only twice as likely to default as those whose homes have lost the least value.

All factors point to the fact that strategic defaulters display a different type of credit behavior than distressed consumers who miss payments.

Among current borrowers, the riskiest borrowers were found to be 110 times more likely to commit a strategic default than the least risky borrowers. The riskiest 20 percent of borrowers included 67 percent of those who later committed strategic default.

FICO is already consulting with top mortgage lenders to provide custom analytic solutions for their mortgage portfolios, in order to take preventative action and reduce the costly impact of strategic defaults.

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With the housing market still struggling to recover, the last thing it needs is more expensive mortgages. And yet, that's exactly what it's getting…

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