Sunday, February 7, 2010

First Home Purchases - Home

First Home Purchases - Home
It was time to change the address of this website, so we did; to one that better reflect the unique real estate and mortgage financing content we provide to our readers and supporters. First Home purchases will continue to be a source of information for persons seeking to purchase homes and refinancing presently owned homes, as well as available mortgage loan programs - FHA 203k, 203b and conventional mortgages - with which to do the financing. Rest assured 'first home purchases' will make every effort to provide relevant and usable content which we hope will be beneficial to all our visitors. Thanks.

Javeton

A message to followers and supporters of this blog:

Thank you for your support. We will continue working to provide the most relevant and useful information about current FHA-insured programs and related topics. Occasionally, we'll post content from our other sites based entirely on its value to you. Please let us know what you think in the comments section. Thanks and God Bless!

Javeton


For more about 203k, please visit the HUD website. To find out if you qualify for 203k financing, visit a HUD-approved lender at http://www.unitednorthern.com/New_20_Jersey.html. Please send inquiries to Tony Phillips. For additional 203k mortgage sources and relevant information, please visit the recently launched B.K.HECM Home Loan search.

 




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humor



If the government can't run business, how come businesses always run to the government for a bailout when it runs into trouble?
FHA-insured mortgages, government run for 75 years. Lest we forget?

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Borrower-Friendly Loans - Home

Borrower-Friendly Loans - Home We have begun a New year and New Decade and with four days to go before the end of the first month, many of us have looked to the future with the hope of accomplishing significant goals we have set for ourselves. The folks at Borrower-friendly Loans are making similar preparations and as such will continue efforts to provide relevant and beneficial mortgage financing data on a consistent basis. We encourage you to contact us with any suggestions you may have.



A message to followers and supporters of this blog:

Thank you for your support. We will continue working to provide the most relevant and useful information about current FHA-insured programs and related topics. Occasionally, we'll post content from our other sites based entirely on its value to you. Please let us know what you think in the comments section. Thanks and God Bless!

Javeton


For more about 203k, please visit the HUD website. To find out if you qualify for 203k financing, visit a HUD-approved lender at http://www.unitednorthern.com/New_20_Jersey.html. Please send inquiries to Tony Phillips. For additional 203k mortgage sources and relevant information, please visit the recently launched B.K.HECM Home Loan search.

 




Click the TOM-SL button to subscribe to 3-in-1mortgage information services. This is a free service!
Add my expertise to your Google search results



humor



If the government can't run business, how come businesses always run to the government for a bailout when it runs into trouble?
FHA-insured mortgages, government run for 75 years. Lest we forget?

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Closing

A mortgage loan application generally does not reach the closing department unless an underwriter authorizes the closing by clearing outstanding conditions and 'signing off' on the loan to close. What does this mean? Well, all those who were holding the proverbial collective breath when the loan was submitted for underwriting can relax a bit, because signing off is indicative that the loan approval process was a success. This means that they will all soon be seated at a closing table reveling in what has been a successful transaction; But, there is a reason to slow down here just a bit. The closing department must coordinate with the borrower(s) and/or borrower's attorney in order to schedule a closing date

Academics

Closing a mortgage loan really consists of one important step between the underwriting department and the closing table. The lender's closing department is the place where a loan application undergoes final checks for items pertinent to the closing. The closer must ascertain the presence of a hazard insurance policy with adequate enough coverage, a new survey if necessary - and if not necessary - a survey inspection and/or survey reading, a satisfactory title report complete with adequate mortgage insurance coverage, endorsements, and most importantly, the true owner(s) of record as reflected in the title report has to be consistent with the purchase contract, application docs and everything in the loan file relevant to property ownership.

I must point out here that reports providing title, appraisal and credit data must be made part of the file while still in processing so that they are underwritten, but the closer still has a responsibility to make sure nothing has changed that may have a negative impact on the loan; in such a case it would be returned to underwriting for a decision to proceed or not, depending on the particular situation. Absent any such problems, when the lender's closer determines that everything is in order, he/she schedules a closing date & time agreeable to all parties involved in the closing (buyer, seller, their attorneys, the title closer and the lender) and a closing finally takes place.

The contents of traditional mortgage closing rooms - or offices if you like - are a twelve foot long table complete with eight to ten chairs surrounding it, several receptacles filled with various paper clip items and ink pens; there may be a calculator or two; and at least one telephone. The telephone in a mortgage closing room is as important as the table and chairs and may be more important since documents can be signed in just about any spot in the building, including the floor; but abstract company's title closer must have a phone in order to make sure that all outstanding liens against the subject property are either paid up to date or will be paid to the lien holder's 'satisfaction', who in turn will issue appropriate documents (satisfactions) as proof that the debts are satisfied.

Since the abstract/title company - hired by the borrower's attorney to insure a client's good title to the property - will insure a purchaser's ownership rights as well as a mortgagee's (the lender) legal claim (the mortgage), the title closer has the unenviable task of verifying, confirming and certifying all documents, figures and instruments relating to an ongoing mortgage closing in order to present a clean 'bill' to the parties before the closing is declared complete.

Every title closer I have known throughout my thirty year career carried a valid notary stamp and freshly inked pad. It is their stock in trade. When a title closer receives checks satisfying items on the title bill, chances are that the numbers have all been crunched, the lender's stack of documents are all signed, the seller (in the case of a real estate purchase transaction) is relatively happy (there may have been price adjustments, but were negotiated), the borrower is nervously happy (what a debt to be repaid), and the lawyer(s) have left their clients with instructions to "contact my office" if you have any problems or concerns.

When a mortgage loan application ends with handshakes and well-wishes among parties to the transaction, it is considered to have been a success by all those who had a part in the process. The mortgage loan officer successfully originated, the processor successfully processed, the underwriter successfully underwrote, the lender's closer successfully navigated the loan to a closing table, and the principals were successful in accomplishing what they set out to accomplish. Is it an easy process? absolutely not! Is it worth the extra time to get it right? What's your opinion?

Please reply at the bottom of this page


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iSnare.com Certified Author



A message to followers and supporters of this blog:

Thank you for your support. We will continue working to provide the most relevant and useful information about current FHA-insured programs and related topics. Occasionally, we'll post content from our other sites based entirely on its value to you. Please let us know what you think in the comments section. Thanks and God Bless!

Javeton


For more about 203k, please visit the HUD website. To find out if you qualify for 203k financing, visit a HUD-approved lender at http://www.unitednorthern.com/New_20_Jersey.html. Please send inquiries to Tony Phillips. For additional 203k mortgage sources and relevant information, please visit the recently launched B.K.HECM Home Loan search.







Click the TOM-SL button to subscribe to 3-in-1mortgage information services. This is a free service!
Add my expertise to your Google search results



humor



If the government can't run business, how come 'business' always run to the government for a bailout when it runs into trouble?
FHA-insured mortgages, government run for 75 years. Lest we forget?

Thursday, December 31, 2009

Underwriting

The responsibilities of an underwriter will increase under the new regulations due mostly to the changes in implementing the RESPA disclosure (Good Faith Estimate & Truth-in-Lending) documents. The new guidelines which takes effect on January 1, 2010 will certainly increase an underwriter's workload, but more importantly, the flexibility in decision-making may be greatly reduced. the following paragraphs provide a glimpse of those responsibilities.

When an application for mortgage loan reaches the underwriting stage, two things are true. First, the various documents, disclosures and verifications have been provided in a manner that is acceptable to the processor; and second, the processing stage is effectively over. That is not to say that the file may not be sent back to processing, but for the most part the fate of that loan now rests with the ultimate decision maker.

It is at this stage where all parties to the transaction start to hold a collective breath. If a processor's job is highly specialized, then an underwriter's task is intensively so. The terms guidelines, regulations, predatory laws, and investor requirements are repeated in casual conversations among industry professionals to underscore specific areas which may be affected as change in the industry takes effect.

Learn how to sell your hard-to-sell home!

An underwriter must approach these terms differently because it is the underwriter's job and responsibility to be quite certain that each loan he/she is entrusted with is underwritten in accordance with each program guideline, and that each regulation governing mortgage lending is adhered to. In addition, an underwriter must insure that the loan is not in violation of certain predatory laws of the State in which the property is located.

Oh yes, the loan still has to be approved if it is deemed to have met all approval criteria by that same underwriter. Here is the thing which may be surprising to many people; Most of the loans do ultimately get the approval nod (or sign-off) due to an underwriter's ability to recognize potential "red flags" during the course of working on a particular file and require that they be removed, corrected or reasonably explained with "acceptable documentation", where necessary.

I am fortunate to have worked with some very studious, committed and intelligent FHA underwriters who managed to balance compliance with the regulations and guidelines with the pressures and demands of borrowers, their attorneys, and loan officers - I was sometimes included in that last category - and still was able to approve loans and maintain an excellent underwriter's rating at the same time.

HUD's position, traditionally, was that an underwriter who wished to underwrite FHA-insured loans, must be directly answerable to HUD by undergoing HUD-endorsed training and a certification process - in addition to any and all previous education - and receiving that agency's stamp of approval.

So, when a FHA loan is approved, and the commitment letter issued after going through the process outlined above, be rest assured that the borrower's qualification for that loan has been well documented and the closing is within reach.

View Author's profile



A message to followers and supporters of this blog:


Thank you for your support. We will continue working to provide the most relevant and useful information about current FHA-insured programs and related topics. Occasionally, we'll post content from our other sites based entirely on its value to you. Please let us know what you think in the comments section. Thanks and God Bless!


Javeton



For more about 203k, please visit the HUD website. To find out if you qualify for 203k financing, visit a HUD-approved lender at http://www.unitednorthern.com/New_20_Jersey.html. Please send inquiries to Tony Phillips. For additional 203k mortgage sources and relevant information, please visit the recently launched B.K.HECM Home Loan search.





Click the TOM-SL button to subscribe to 3-in-1mortgage information services. This is a free service!
Add my expertise to your Google search results



humor


If the government can't run business, how come business always run to the government for a bailout when it runs into trouble?
FHA-insured mortgages, government run for 75 years. Lest we forget?

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Processing

The term processing could apply to just about any multi-step undertaking, but when the subject is mortgage lending, processing of the loan application is as specialized a function as some of the most document-intensive businesses you can imagine. The position requires a processor to be uniquely qualified and therefore compels an aspiring processor to obtain the education and training necessary to be as efficient and thorough as the position demands.

In a mortgage loan application, the end of the origination stage marks the beginning of the processing stage, which effectively places responsibility of loan preparation for underwriting on the processor. Just as the loan officer must be able to identify and address potential problems at the origination stage, a processor is expected to verify income and assets with acceptable documentation as well as ascertain the borrower's credit is satisfactory enough to merit submission to underwriting.

It is at this stage where many a loan is held up for reasons unforeseen by the borrower, originator or processor due to the simple fact that several different elements are added to the equation; especially in the case of a FHA mortgage. Specific issues could be the appraisal report (which may or may not reflect a value sufficient enough to support the loan), verification of employment (VOE), verification of deposit (VOD), proof of down payment, all required disclosures (including RESPA disclosures, and State-specific predatory documents), and a number of other requirements which must be dealt with before the loan application package can be submitted to an underwriter for approval.

If everything falls into place in a timely manner - appraised value is adequate, VOE is returned by employer, VOD is returned by depository, and all disclosures are in order, then a processor can prepare the loan for underwriting. However, that's a very big "if" because invariably it is necessary to wait for a verification to be completed correctly and returned, or there could be an issue with the appraisal which delays the process.

It is reasonable to opine here that one of the first lessons a processor learns is to submit to underwriting a fully processed loan application package; Otherwise the package may be returned to processing for completion; so when a borrower wonders why the "process" takes so long to complete, the answer can be found in possessing a clear understanding of the steps required at each stage of the mortgage application process, especially stage two. Processors are often accused of delaying or preventing a loan closing, but such accusations are unfounded because in many cases, a loan processor has absolutely no control over the actions of other parties involved.

Mortgage related sites of interest:


  • Energy Efficient Mortgage


  • Energy Efficient Rehab Adviser


  • United Northern Mortgage Bankers


  • North Shore Advisory



  • A message to followers and supporters of this blog:

    Thank you for your support. We will continue working to provide the most relevant and useful information about current FHA-insured programs and related topics. Occasionally, we'll post content from our other sites based entirely on its value to you. Please let us know what you think in the comments section. Thanks and God Bless!

    Javeton


    For more about 203k, please visit the HUD website. To find out if you qualify for 203k financing, visit a HUD-approved lender at http://www.unitednorthern.com/New_20_Jersey.html. Please send inquiries to Tony Phillips. For additional 203k mortgage sources and relevant information, please visit the recently launched B.K.HECM Home Loan search.






    Click the TOM-SL button to subscribe to 3-in-1mortgage information services. This is a free service!
    Add my expertise to your Google search results



    humor



    If the government can't run business, how come businesses always run to the government for a bailout when it runs into trouble?
    FHA-insured mortgages, government run for 75 years. Lest we forget?

    Saturday, December 19, 2009

    Origination

    The new RESPA regulation which was signed into law by President Bush on July 30, 2008 as part of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act (HERA), and will take effect on January 1, 2010 is expected to have a profound effect on how business is done in the mortgage industry, from loan origination to loan closing.

    A central part of HERA is the Secure and Fair Enforcement (S.A.F.E) Mortgage Licensing Act which, according to HUD's website...

    "...is designed to enhance consumer protection and reduce fraud by encouraging states to establish minimum standards of licensing and registration of state-licensed mortgage loan originators. SAFE also mandates the creation of a Nationwide Mortgage Licensing System and Registry NMLSR, and encourages all states to provide for a licensing and regulatory regime for all residential mortgage loan originators."

    As it stands today, the origination stage of a mortgage application the first of the four stages necessary to complete a mortgage loan application. The process will remain unchanged for the most part, but how each stage is implemented and the qualifications of the individual responsible for implementation is at the heart of the new regulation. The following is a description of the origination stage of a mortgage loan and the mortgage loan officer's duties:

    The mortgage approval process consists of several stages, including origination, processing, underwriting - which includes issuance of the commitment letter - and closing. The entire process could be in the range of thirty to ninety days, depending on the mortgage type, borrower's information and property information.

    In order for the process to work efficiently, the origination stage must be handled professionally and correctly by a well trained loan officer; and if he/she has a few years experience in the industry, that is even more comforting to the borrower who has placed trust and confidence in that person to get the loan approved and closed.

    Mortgage loan officers are responsible for making sure that the application is completed correctly and all required origination documents and qualification criteria are met, so the more confident a borrower feels toward the representative of a lender, the less likely there will unnecessary delays in the process.

    A borrower's credit report is among the more important documents in the mortgage origination package. Loan officers must be able to determine whether or not the borrower's credit status, income qualification ratios, and assets (in the case of a purchase) meet the lender's program guidelines in order to better serve that borrower.

    In many cases, if a borrower's income or assets is at issue, some actions may be taken to address these concerns without additional help from third parties, but in the case of the credit report, professional credit agencies may have to be consulted. Credit agency professionals are able to determine the presence of errors in a consumer credit report, contact credit bureaus, and request corrections to, and/or removal of them.

    Although free credit reports are made available to consumers by the three major repositories - Experian, Equifax and Trans Union - many consumers have relied on the services of professional credit agencies to interact with the credit bureaus on their behalf in correcting/removing credit report errors.

    A mortgage loan officer should recognize any potential discrepancies in the report before submitting a loan for processing. Informing a borrower of potential problems and suggesting possible solutions at the origination stage will save valuable time as well as money that would otherwise be spent by that borrower.

    Under the new regulations, the loan officer's duties will be the same but he/she will be performing those duties with an acquired twenty hours of education, a passing grade of a national exam, as well as a state exam in many states and NMLS registration status. It is expected that the new regulations will increase the quality of mortgage loans on the national level.

    Javeton-

    Tuesday, December 1, 2009

    Bigwigs Debate 'Too Big to Fail' -- Seeking Alpha

    Bigwigs Debate 'Too Big to Fail' -- Seeking Alpha

    As one who believes in, and writes about affordable housing at every opportunity, I certainly can't fathom the TBTF concept. There are many who believe that our government is too big as it exists, and yet here we are debating whether certain institutions (not of the government) ought to be permitted - actually enabled - to continue operating on such a scale that their failure spells doom for the rest of us.

    'TBTF' just doesn't seem a reasonable or acceptable societal structure under which to live, so I'm anti-TBTF and I hope those we elect to address these matters share these sentiments. The above article authored by Carolyn Austin is very thought-provoking and, to her credit, she has opened what I believe to be one of the more profound discussions of our time. Take a look!

    Javeton

    A message to followers and supporters of this blog:

    Thank you for your support. We will continue working to provide the most relevant and useful information about current FHA-insured programs and related topics. Occasionally, we'll post content from our other sites based entirely on its value to you. Please let us know what you think in the comments section. Thanks and God Bless!

    Javeton


    For more about 203k, please visit the HUD website. To find out if you qualify for 203k financing, visit a HUD-approved lender at http://www.unitednorthern.com/New_20_Jersey.html. Please send inquiries to Tony Phillips. For additional 203k mortgage sources and relevant information, please visit the recently launched B.K.HECM Home Loan search.





    Click the TOM-SL button to subscribe to 3-in-1mortgage information services. This is a free service!
    Add my expertise to your Google search results



    humor



    If the government can't run business, how come businesses always run to the government for a bailout when it runs into trouble?
    FHA-insured mortgages, government run for 75 years. Lest we forget?