Bad credit home loans

- Image via Wikipedia
“Anyone can qualify regardless of credit”. “No application refused”. “No minimum credit score required”. The ads are still out there and mostly on Craigslist. Generally those ads are not from mortgage lenders or banks but from mortgage lead generation companies. Unlike mortgage companies lead generators are not required to be licensed, don’t offer home loan services and are not held to the strict standards of mortgage companies in advertising so they make a lot of outrageous claims hoping to get as many people to give them their information as possible.
The truth is there just aren’t any conventional home loans for people with “bad credit”. Not even FHA as is often misconstrued. FHA home loans, just like conventional home loans, actually require a relatively clean credit history although they do allow some negative reporting – even that is limited to scope and history.
How to be denied for a loan application
Actually this should be title “How to kill your chance of closing on time” or “How to sabotage your own home purchase or refinance”. Then again this is the short, short list of a long list of things you can do to bring your loan process to a screeching halt.
Be reminded of the number of people who put a lot of effort in your loan to get it to the closing table. In fact from my office door right now I can see four full-time people who work behind the scenes on every loan. I can see the set-up person, the processor, the compliance officer and the underwriting department supervisor. That doesn’t include your insurance company and the people who touch the policy there, the agents and all the people in their employment who work on your file, the appraiser, inspector, title office and all the people who are involved in working on your file and others. When you do not close all of the work of all of those people is for nothing. That time could have been invested in someone who doesn’t do the things we are talking about today.
Over the years I have seen a lot of reasons for people to be denied a loan after then have been pre-qualified and before they close. Everything from quitting their job to buying a new boat to something as simple as applying for a student loan and being approved. Here is the rule of thumb:
From the time you are pre-approvedĀ to the time you have your keys and paperwork in your hands plus about 90 days do not apply for any credit, quit your job, spend your saving, cash out your 401K, co-sign with someone on a loan, or anything else with your money or your credit. Think I’m kidding? I’ve seen it happen no less than two dozen times in the last few years.
Hopefully you are working with a loan officer who knows how to properly instruct you at the time of application or pre-approval and who knows how to accurately answer your questions about changes in employment, income, savings, or credit. If not call me and I’ll find one for you. I know loan officers in almost every state. Now get some popcorn and enjoy this brief video
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KoC3on2apH0
Related articles by Zemanta
- Mortgage Loan Rates Fall Below 5% (online.wsj.com)
- Mortgages: Blame the Building if the Mortgage Falls Through (nytimes.com)
- 9 accused in Obama loan records breach case face arraignment (seattletimes.nwsource.com)
- Home mortgages – approved vs. cleared (zillow.com)
- June 1 Fannie Mae has lenders pull a NEW credit report prior to ordering loan documents and/or closing. (visionaryrealtynews.com)
- Loan demand to buy U.S. homes sinks post tax credit (financialpost.com)
Mortgage payment calculation made simple

- Image via Wikipedia
Any real estate agent who has been in the business more than a few minutes and has shown a home or two has been asked the question, “how much would the payments be?” Chances are the agent does not have their mortgage calculator in their hands to input the mortgage rate, loan amount and other important factors. However, they do have their brain available and can easily estimate a mortgage payment for any home.
Real estate agents are not expected to be mortgage professionals but customers shopping for a new home do expect them to be able to answer the monthly payment question. There is a very simple way of calculating a mortgage payment based on any rate and it can easily be done without a calculator or even pen and paper.
Calculating the interest would be quite straight forward. The trick is always getting the principal added back in to the payment. So, in disregard to accuracy to the penny (or even the dollar for that matter) you can use some historic data to calculate the mortgage payment.
How long do real estate closings take?
Sounds easy to ask, doesn’t it? “When can we close?”
Sure, everyone would like to hear, “Oh, just whenever you’re ready!”
The truth? Whether you are a real estate investor looking for a mortgage for acquisition, rehab or construction or you are a homeowner just looking to purchase a home there are a couple of points you need to be aware of when it comes to closing speed and dates for any mortgage loan.
Closings are not demandable even by your real estate agent – a common fallicy among inexperienced agents. Many moving parts are involved in closing on a purchase or a refinance. Pay special attention to the list of items at the end of this article which can cause delays. Take special note to how many of those are under your control or within the control of the lender/broker. The person who will actually be making the final scheduling of your closing will be the lender who will pass that information to the processor who will pass it to the attorney. Real estate agents do not control or have the ability to affect closing dates and times (although some want to force the issue around their schedule it’s actually up to the lender first and you second – I don’t care when you close so long as you close!)
Here is an average sampling of how this works. You’ve already called us and been prequalified – since you know that’s the correct order of things – and now you’re shopping and you’ve found a house.
1. We know the most often required documents so we gather those from you ahead of time.
2. You make an offer on a house.
3. A couple of days later that offer is accepted.
4. Generally, the offer is going to show a closing date 30 days from the day the offer was made. Not from the day it was accepted.
5. You tell us the offer was accepted so we start “start the ball rolling”.
6. An appraisal must be done and this requires an executed sales contract. Sometimes we get that in our office right away, sometimes – for one reason or another – it is delayed. Appraisals take 2 days to a week as a general rule.
7. While we’re waiting on the appraisal we’ll “update your docs” which means we’ll ask for current pay stubs, bank statements, and any other documentation to prove income and assets. If you get those back to us right away there’s no delay. If you drag your feet – there is a delay!
8. We’ll need insurance documentation – this is entirely dependent on the co-operation of your insurance company. As I am writing this our processing department is “having fits” with an insurance company who has held up a closing for over 5 days while we wait on proper documentation. That’s rare, most insurance companies are prompt and professional.
9. Once we have all the required documentation we send the “package” to the underwriter. Underwriting can take as little as one hour and as much as several days. The deciding factor is underwriter workload.
10. The underwriter may ask for additional documentation. If they do you can (a) argue with the processor about having to provide it and end up sending it anyway or (b) get it back in as quickly as possible.
11. Once the underwriter has issued a “Clear To Close” with no further conditions you’re good to go.
Average closing time from application to close? About 14 days industry wide. It can happen in as little as 48 hours but that is rare [edit: since this article was originally published in 2006 new federal regulations have been passed requiring a minimum of 3 business days for the borrower to contemplate the mortgage offer before the lender can proceed which adds a little time to closing].
Lenders and brokers who advertise 24 hour closings are omitting the first 10 steps from above. NOBODY can close a purchase loan in 24 hours from the time your offer was accepted.
Delays in closing can be caused by many things. More often than not delays are caused by one or more of the following:
1. Fully executed contract delayed. This happens more often on foreclosures where the seller is a bank and it takes them a few days to sign the contract and return it.
2. Appraisal coming back with a value lower than the sales price. Very rare but it has happened.
3. Appraisal coming back with “subject to repair” comments which exceed those allowable by the lender.
4. Lack of co-operation from the insurance company. Loss-Payee Clauses are requested in writing and are generally returned within 24 hours. Anything longer is considered a delay.
5. Lack of co-operation from current mortgage company in returning pay-offs or Verification of Mortgage (VOM).
6. Lack of co-operation from employer in returning Verification of Employment (VOE).
7. Income and/or assets on application used for pre-qualification being overstated and not supportable by documentation.
8. Borrower’s earnest money check not being deposited into the Real Estate Broker’s escrow account.
9. Problems with the title to the property – discovery of liens or multiple title changes in short succession.
These are just a few “hiccups” that are fairly commonplace on my side of the desk. The most important thing to remember is that the staff at your mortgage broker or lender is working for you. They don’t get paid unless and until your loan closes. So guess what? That’s right! They really want your loan to close.
It takes dozens, often hundreds, of man-hours to take a loan from application to closing. There are many people involved in the process that you never know exist. Some of them work on commission and only get paid if your loan closes. Others are on salary and of that group some just don’t care.
Most broker’s are very committed to you. I can speak for my own staff and say they definitely take it personally … the good and the bad.
Ken Cook – Georgia – FHA, USDA, VA and Conventional Home Loans (678) 439-8683 NMLS ID 208452 – Originally published in Active Rain on July 24, 2006.
3 important points to mortgage qualifications
The mortgage process, especially for those who are denied or delayed, is an enigma to most. Understanding a few basics, three in fact, can help open the windows and let some light on the mysterious inner-workings of mortgage lenders. Getting denied or being quoted a higher rate than you heard advertised need not be a huge question mark.
Every conventional lender, those who lend according to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guidelines, builds their lending criteria equal to or more stringent than the guidelines offered by those to mortgage holding giants – unless they are selling to Ginnie Mae or another mega investor. In those guidelines are some very simple first steps so important to the lending process they can be the cause for the vast majority of denials or increase costs of credit.

- Image via Wikipedia
Whether you are applying for money to purchase a home or to refinance one you currently own these three points are crucial to your success in obtaining a good mortgage.
Number One: Employment and Income
Chances are if you skip around from job to job, especially in different industries, and you have large gaps of time between them you will be considered too high risk at least for a prime loan. Even if you have steady employment history if your income is not verifiable to the amount you need for a good debt ratio you can also be denied or incur the cost of risk in the form of a higher interest rate.
Buying short sales with FHA loans

- Image by Getty Images via Daylife
With thousands of new homes entering the foreclosure process every month in each market area the question arises ever more frequently, “Can I use an FHA loan to purchase a short sale property?”
For the readers not familiar with short sales let us first define the term as it applies to real estate. As “short sale” on real estate is when the existing lien holder(s) agree to accept a lower amount than is currently owed on the existing loan(s).
If you need an example suppose the home owner has only one mortgage for $350,000 (existing payoff) on a home. Perhaps that home is currently valued only at $275,000. The home owner cannot refinance, the lender has failed to modify and foreclosure is looming so the lender agrees to accept a sales price equal to the current appraised value even though it is a full $75,000 lower than (short of) the payoff.
Answering the question, “can an FHA loan be used to purchase a short sale”, really is too simple. The answer is “yes” provided the property and transaction fall within FHA insurance guidelines. Remember FHA has maximum loan amounts, guidelines for property type and guidelines for property use.
Related articles by Zemanta
- Gov’t aims to help more “underwater” homeowners (sfgate.com)
- Government to push lenders to do short sales (sfgate.com)
What is a streamline mortgage?
Regardless of the industry there are certain buzzwords or words that seem like they are created simply to confuse the outsider. Near the bottom of the list for business goals should be confusing customers. Unfortunately it does happen and the one who stands the highest chance for damage is the most valuable of all; the customer.
Mortgage professionals throw around terms like an alphabet soup that would frighten even Vanna White. Words like ten oh three (1003) and respa (RESPA – Real Estate Settlement and Procedures Act) fall out of their mouths like jelly beans out of a pinata.
![]()
Making it even a little more confusing for you different agencies use the same term to apply to different meanings and vice versa. Streamline and streamlined for example.
The Federal Housing Administration (FHA) makes available a couple of different “streamline” loans. Freddie Mac (FHLMC) has their “streamlined” loan. Essentially they are the same product and if you phone an FHA lender and ask for a “streamlined” loan they will neither laugh at you nor hang up on you.
For all practical purposes streamline loans, whether a streamline refinance or otherwise, indicate something less is required or they go faster than a standard loan. For the FHA streamline refinance a little less documentation is required and sometimes less evidence of value is required.
What is APR on Mortgage Interest? Deceiving!
Most home owners and home buyers have no idea what APR (Annual Percentage Rate) is. I know this because of the over 3000 borrowers I have dealt with a very large percentage have questioned it. Oddly enough most loan officers don’t fully understand APR and those who do often understand it just enough to manipulate it to make theirs look lower than someone else’s.
The APR has been a major part of the home buying process since 1974 when the current Truth In Lending (TIL) form was introduced as a result of the Truth In Lending Act (TILA). It was “supposed” to give shoppers a level shopping ground for comparing rates and closing costs. All it did in actuality is allow savvy salesmen to manipulate yet another number to confuse the borrowing public.
What the APR is supposed to be is the base interest rate plus the cost of closing calculated as a percent of the loan and spread over the life of the loan. In other words if your closing costs are $5000 on a $100,000 loan that would be 5% divided by 12 months (annualized)? would be .416% so add that to the original interest rate of 5% and now your APR should be 5.16% – sounds simple, right?
Where it gets complicated is when you start comparing different types of loans, different ways of calculating closing costs, who is paying closing costs, whether there are discount points, etc. For example on that same loan the loan officer may be showing the seller paying some or all of the closing costs so they don’t become an actual part of the buyer’s repayment. Would that make the APR 0% – technically it would. However since all fees still must be disclosed it does not. The procedure is flawed and it’s not the worst way to shop for a mortgage but it’s close.
The MOST important things about a mortgage are the following:
- Down Payment – how much equity participation are you establishing in the beginning?
- Loan Amount – what is the actual amount borrowed?
- Terms of the Loan – is it fixed or adjustable? When is it due? How many payments are to be made?
- Total of Payments – if you pay the loan off full term how much will you repay?
- Monthly Payment (Principal and Interest) – this is where the rubber meets the road.
Closing costs and discount points can be manipulated and disguised. Interest rates can be adjustable and that’s tricky unless you understand floor, index, margin, cap, and period. That’s an entirely different post in itself. Furthermore not all “costs paid at closing” are a part of the APR. In fact unless the fee is a direct result of the loan finance it is not a part of the APR. That’s where I’ve seen a lot of TIL forms not properly completed – especially by some of the bigger lenders and banks.
If I were shopping for a mortgage today I would not look at the annual percentage rate as much as the 5 items listed above. If I like all of them and they are better than what another lender offered then I would take it.
Try this simple Excel file [download]
Should I Refinance Today?
By the time you read this article everything will have changed. One thing is certain about the mortgage banking industry and that is change. Do not take this as a smack on the face because it certainly is not intended to be but it should be somewhat of a wake-up. The truth is the far above average home owner and real estate investor are not capable of properly answering this question. We, and I include myself, make the terrible mistake of thinking if we know a few terms about something that we understand it well enough to make important decisions. Most people are not capable of making wise or even correct mortgage decisions. The frightening part is most loan officers also do not have any idea how to really determine if a certain mortgage is the best for you.
Be not dismayed: Even financial planners are often wrong with their advice.
So, am I the genius to answer the question? No. But I will give you a little more information than you probably already had to help you make the best possible decision you can make for yourself, your family or your investment strategy. More than that this may help you avoid “tricks” used by the so-called “no closing costs” providers. By the way, “no closing cost home loans” do not exist. There is no such thing as no closing costs. There are always closing costs and one way or another you always pay them. Repeat that to yourself: there is no such thing as a loan with no closing costs. If you refuse to believe that you are beyond help and get everything you deserve. (I write that with a sideways smile.)
There is a long standing argument among many people as to which is more important between interest rates and monthly payments. The bottom line is: nobody can answer for you. They can pontificate for weeks but ultimately it is your decision. So let me direct this to you about the difference between interest rates and monthly payments and how this could become an issue.
Most people automatically assume that if you have a lower interest rate you will have a lower monthly payment. They also often assume, and to their detriment, that a lower payment or lower interest rate may be the best loan. Neither is true and both are true but the paradox is simple to decode. FOr example a fifteen year mortgage has a lower interest rate but a higher monthly payment. A forty year mortgage has a higher interest rate but a lower monthly payment. So which best fits your goal?
For today I can actually offer a loan to the right buyer for 4.75% with no discount points. This loan has an APR of 4.893 which is still phenomenal. What you, Mr. or Ms. Borrower, need to understand about numbers like this is this is not *your* number. In fact it is the best case scenario number. Your rate may in fact be much higher from any and every lender -not just us. There are “hits” to rate and adjustments to pricing which are, in part, dictated by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. Those are called Loan Level Pricing Adjustments and they are based on the risk presented to FNMA or FHLMC by the borrower, the property and the type of loan.
If you and I were on the golf course and you asked, “Ken, is this a good time for me to refinance?” If I did not start my answer with, “What are you trying to acheive?” I would be a fool to answer. This may be a great time for you to refinance you loan with interest rates as low as they are today but this may be a horrible time for you to refinance if you are living in a home with an upside down mortgage, you have had a change in careers or an income drop, your debt-to-income ratio is off the charts or any other number of reason. Now, if you are one of the few who qualifies for the advertised rate and you have equity in your home (which you would to qualify for that rate) then yes, this is probably one of the best times in recent history to refinance in to a long term fixed rate mortgage.
Call me and let me be honest with you. We can refinance your Fannie Mae loan in Georgia or Florida and your FHA loan anywhere in the southeast. 866-946-0120
What the New PMI Tax Deduction Can Do For Real Estate
It can mean more sales. It will most certainly mean more refinances at higher LTV’s. If you are a real estate agent you can use this as a tool for people who were hesitant to get into that dream home (because of PMI) to do so and enjoy this deduction and they can choose ONE LOAN and not a PIGGY BACK – although your mortgage professional should be the one to demonstrate the numbers for the CLIENT to make the choice. Generally speaking piggy backs have a higher blended interest rate than a single higher LTV loan but people choose them to avoid PMI. But if PMI is tax deductible that cures the need for a piggy back.
Here is something to keep in mind: The current version HR5970 only allows for the deduction on NEW LOANS and evidently terminates on 12/31/2007. In other words the deduction apparently is good for only ONE YEAR.
![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=75a08de4-00ca-4c4b-a37e-a0f6eee5f268)
![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=69b0dc7a-17b5-4d3f-b3cd-adb88e66b308)
![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=ff28a2f2-e9f5-4e5b-8ba2-d9df5771efa7)











Twitter
Skype