Uncle Sam Cleans Up the Mortgage Business

HUD announced yesterday the indictments of more than 400 people in mortgage-related fraud schemes. Operation “Malicious Mortgage”

HUD announced yesterday the indictments of more than 400 people in mortgage-related fraud schemes. Operation “Malicious Mortgage” set out to combat the threat mortgage fraud poses to US and global markets.

HOORAY!!!!

I am thrilled to see Uncle Sam jumping in feet first and cleaning up the slime still hanging around our industry. I’ve written about this often here at tcurranmortgage.com of the low-quality slimebags polluting the mortgage industry and preying on innocent consumers. With all that happened in the Boom-Bust-Meltdown years, there needs to be more “Mr. Clean” action in the mortgage industry. Here then, is the announcement by HUD of a substantial cleanup of our business.

Here in New York, the United States Attorney for New York and the FBI were busy alongside HUD throughout the New York Metro region doing their part in the huge cleanup. As part of Operation “Stolen Dreams” 55 defendants were charged in the Southern District of New York, involving over $45 million in fraudulent loans. Phony mortgage modification scams were uncovered, too, as part of the sweeping undercover investigations.

YAY! Uncle Sam! Good news for consumers; good news for ethical mortgage professionals!

5 Steps To Making An Offer To Buy A Home

When you take these formal steps you are demonstrating to everyone involved in the transaction just how serious a Buyer you are. You will set yourself apart from “the crowd” when you follow my method.

There is a deliberate process to making an offer. I include step-by-step instructions on how this works. My instructions will help you get the house you want, even if you are dealing with a difficult Seller, a Bank-Owned property, or if you are competing against another Buyer for the same house.

I have seen these methods work many times over with my clients over my almost 28 year career as a mortgage professional.

My basic methodology here is one of making your Offer a very formal proceeding. When you take these formal steps you are demonstrating to everyone involved in the transaction just how serious a Buyer you are. You will set yourself apart from the crowd. I have seen this method work time and time again for my Homebuyer clients.

5 Steps To Making An Offer:

STEP 1. Always make offers in writing. Yes, it is absolutely true that offers can be presented verbally. Don’t do that. Put your offer in writing every time. Even if you are in a situation where you and the Seller are sending counter offers back and forth, every new offer should be in writing.

When your offer is in writing, you come across to the Seller as serious. Think about it, anyone who is taking the time to go in to the real estate office and sign the form is serious about buying a home.

Include the following into your written offer:

  • * The amount of your “earnest money deposit” or “good faith deposit.” That is the amount of money you’ll put into escrow with the Seller’s attorney upon signing the contract of sale.
  • * The amount of your mortgage financing. Of course you’ll back this up with a prequalification letter, but you must include the amount of your mortgage in the offer.
  • * Items included in the sale. If the appliances and the chandelier in the dining room are to be included in the sale, make sure they are written in to the offer. This shows the homeowner you were paying attention when you inspected the home and asked, “What’s included in the sale?”
  • * Attorney Information: the name and complete contact information for your attorney.
  • * Anticipated contract date. Always make this date within 48 hours of your offer. Present the assumption the Seller will accept your offer and immediately forward a contract to your attorney.

Again, this demonstrates to the Seller how serious you are. You are in effect saying, “I am so serious about buying this home I want to sign the contract immediately!” Imagine how many other Buyers out there are delaying things like signing the contract (and potentially changing their minds).

  • * Anticipated closing date. This is an interesting point for the offer. I always recommend putting the closing date for an offer within thirty days of the contract. The fact is most closings take place within 60 days of contract, and your attorney will most likely change that date in the contract, but if your offer says “thirty days,” once again you demonstrate how serious you are about buying the home.

STEP 2. Prequalification letter. Your mortgage professional should be available to fax a prequalification letter within hours of your making your offer; even on Saturdays or Thursday evenings.

STEP 3. Mortgage pro phone call. I think a phone call from your mortgage professional to the Listing Agent is a home run. When the Listing Agent hears from the mortgage person directly how eminently qualified you are, imagine how that raises your profile in the mind of the agent and the Seller!

STEP 4. Home Inspection ready to go. When you sign your offer, be sure to tell your Realtor that you’ve already spoken with your Home Inspector and you can have the inspection done tomorrow. Whoa, that’s really the mark of a serious Buyer!

STEP 5. Get ready with your counteroffer. If you offered less than the asking price, then you need be prepared with your counter offer if the Seller either declines or counters your opening offer. All of the steps above should be repeated with the new price replacing the original number. Organization and swift responses rule the day! Oh, you may not want to counter offer. That’s okay, too.

Close-up shot of keys in the lock of open door. One key is in lock another hanging on the ring
Unlock the door to homeownership with this method

Do you have questions?  Click on ASK TREVOR and I’ll respond to any and all inquiries, even if you’re not buying a home in New York State.

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Find me on TWITTER: @tcurranmortgage

I welcome Comments for all my blog entries.  I will be happy to review and approve all legitimate comments provided by readers of tcurranmortgage.com.  If you wish to Comment on any entry, please do so and I will quickly review and approve.

Good luck and Happy House Hunting!

 

Don’t Close those Credit Cards: Your Score could DROP

I have seen folks with fantastic credit have their credit scores drop dramatically because in the months before they met me for the mortgage prequalification they paid off and closed their credit card accounts

Verify. Check it out. Read all about it. “Just the facts m’aam.” That’s me. I hate spouting off about something of which I know nothing, and which I have not verified. Maybe that’s one of the qualities that’s helped me create and maintain a successful career as a Loan Originator since 1989.

Erica, the wonderful and sharply professional office manager at Weichert Property Works in Brooklyn considered cutting up a credit card after she finished paying it off. I argued strongly against that course of action. Her credit score could actually drop if she follows that path.

It’s a little known fact that closing a credit account is almost as bad as having a collection account on your credit history. I’ve seen the results first hand in my role as Loan Originator. Let’s face it, when you’re buying a house, if you can afford to do it, you pay off your outstanding credit cards so you walk into your new home debt free! I know because I did it, too when I bought my first house. You want a clear mind and a worry-free attitude about extra bills on top of your mortgage payment. But the results on a credit score are contrary to that logic, unfortunately.

I have seen folks with fantastic credit have their credit scores drop dramatically because in the months before they met me for the mortgage prequalification they paid off and closed their credit card accounts. Perfect credit histories are affected with a lower score because 12 accounts were paid and closed and reduced to 2 or 3 accounts. I applaud that conservative thinking, but apparently the credit scoring engines don’t.

In plain English, what happens is that you have fewer active credit accounts, therefore you are using less credit therefore your credit score has less to work with in determining your overall use of your credit. That’s the flawed logic (IMHO) of the credit scoring system.

While this opinion is derived originally from my professional experience, I took the time to verify the facts with the source of all things credit score related: The Fair Isaac Corporation, or FICO, the folks who created the algorithm used in credit scoring. You can find that information right HERE.

Hope that helps! (ERICA!)

Delinquent FHA Mortgages: DOWN!

The Federal Housing Administration reports that delinquencies on FHA Insured mortgage loans are down.

The Federal Housing Administration reports that delinquencies on FHA Insured mortgage loans are down.

Many in Congress are worried that the Federal Housing Administration will fail in its attempt to save, bolster and support the crashing housing market. Too many pessimists—and those without a thorough understanding of the longevity of the FHA and it’s ability to weather previous storms—see a future taxpayer bailout of the vaunted agency.

At the end of 2009 and into 2010, HUD (which oversees FHA) took some serious steps towards reigning in potentially damaging loans and Lenders. FHA closed the door on many Lenders who abused the FHA system and subsequently had high default rates. FHA proposed important changes to manage risk on its package of insured loans, including the appointment of a Risk Manager, the increase of the Upfront Mortgage Insurance Premium (which goes into effect April 5th, 2010), and other important changes to the program to protect the viability of FHA to continue to insure mortgage loans for Americans.

It’s not often you see immediate effects from policy changes in an organization as large as HUD, but there it is: FHA statistics report a reduction in delinquencies of FHA Insured mortgage loans. This change is not very large by the standards of current originations, but it’s certainly a good start.

I’ve been originating FHA Insured mortgages since the day I started in the mortgage business in 1989. I have always believed the FHA truly fulfilled its original Congressional mandate from 1934 to make it easier for Americans to become homeowners. I have helped so many families over the years with FHA Insured loans. I’m thrilled to hear this very positive news in a time when good news about anything housing or mortgage related is a rare thing indeed.

I’m still originating today mostly FHA loans as it seems to be the only way most families in the New York Metro region can manage to qualify to buy a home. I have full faith and confidence in the ability of HUD to maintain its potential to insure mortgage loans.

FTC Strikes Against ID Theft Protection “Guarantee”

The Federal Trade Commission announced a settlement with LifeLock for misleading claims about its Identity Theft Protection services.

The Federal Trade Commission, in its advancing campaign against scams and misleading marketing with regards to credit reporting, credit scores and Identity Theft Protection, recently announced it had coordinated a settlement with LifeLock for misleading claims about its Identity Theft Protection services.

“While LifeLock promised consumers complete protection against all types of identity theft, in truth, the protection it actually provided left enough holes that you could drive a truck through it,” said FTC Chairman Jon Leibowitz.

LifeLock agreed to pay $12 Million to settle charges by the FTC and 35 States that Identity Theft Prevention and data security claims were false.

“This agreement effectively prevents LifeLock from misrepresenting that its services offer absolute prevention against identity theft because there is unfortunately no foolproof way to avoid ID theft,” Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan said. “Consumers can take definitive steps to minimize the chances of having their personal information stolen, and this settlement will help them make more informed decisions about whether to enroll in ID theft protection services.”

More information about the settelment and about LifeLock’s false claims on the Federal Trade Commission website.

Protect Yourself from Identity Theft: FREE

Why pay the Credit Agencies for Identity Theft Protection? You can do it yourself for FREE thanks to free information from Uncle Sam.

Those television commercials will scare you into paying for some kind of ID Theft protection from one (or all, depending on your level of paranoia) of the three major credit reporting bureaus (Experian, Trans-Union, Equifax). Since Congress unfettered these agencies from the constraints of selling credit products to the consuming-public, ID Theft protection and credit score watch (allegedly to make your credit history better) are the hot products that consumers fork over cash money for each month in the form of “ID Theft” prevention monitoring and whatnot. Usually the fees are in the range of $10-15 a month, but they can be higher, $25-40 depending on the level of monitoring the consumer desires.

The problem I have with all these services is that the savvy consumer, by spending just a little time each year (and almost NO money) can pretty much get the same level of protection without subscribing to anything nor sending money to the credit bureaus.

Here’s a link to the Federal Trade Commission website that has a wonderful pdf brochure on all you need to know about Identity Theft and how to protect yourself against ID Theft. It’s FREE and it’s here: FTC: Fighting Back Against Identity Theft

Take some time to read the information, then set yourself on the path to protecting your Identity FREE of CHARGE.

I welcome Comments for all my blog entries. I will be happy to review and approve all legitimate comments provided by readers of tcurranmortgage.com. I do not permit unfettered access to comments for obvious reasons: mortgage spammers and their ilk. If you wish to Comment on any entry, please do so and I will quickly review and approve. Thanks for reading tcurranmortgage.com. Hope that helps!

Blah, blah, blah…!

I thought all the internet babble provided by pseudo-experts about the mortgage business had basically disappeared. I was wrong.

I thought all the internet babble provided by pseudo-experts about the mortgage business had basically disappeared. You know back in the day, back in the “BUBBLE” day, when the entire planet seemed to provide yet another internet expert on mortgage financing? I figured that these people all went the way of the Dodo bird, that is, i.e., became EXTINCT when the meltdown brought the entire planet back to reality.

I was wrong.

Hey, what do I know? I’ve been busy these past few years helping people sort through the mess and get mortgage loans to achieve their goals of homeownership. It’s been danged hard work and I have NOT been on the ‘net the way I used to be, back in the DAY. Back in the “BUBBLE” day.

So I see this link from my pal Gary to some website where an interview is under way with some latest and greatest internet expert named “Interfluidity.” Fifteen minutes, pal, that’s all yer gonna get. Because you don’t know what you’re talking about. My comment for the site, quoted below, is currently in moderation and we’ll see if it actually gets published. Point is, what the heck is this guy tawwking about? This “leverage” thing and all this high-falutin’ talk of economic theories and statistics and analyses.

OUT OF TOUCH with the real world where I live and work. Out of touch with the true economic analysis that I have personally witnessed for the past 20 years: can I afford the mortgage payment? DUH! That’s the extent of the “analysis” I have heard from my first time buyer clients since 1989. It’s a tradition that continues to this day. “Trevor, what’s my payment going to be?” That’s what folks want to know. What do they care about the government allegedly over-subsidizing the mortgage industry?

Here’re my comments for that site; lessee if they publish them. Hmm…

“First, what the heck makes this character ANY kind of expert on mortgages, housing and PLAIN vanilla (not “vanilla”) mortgage loans (NOT “contracts!”)???

Second, has this person ever, actually, maybe, possibly, coulda-sorta SPOKEN to a real live homebuyer/homeowner? Because, if he had, he’d realize the true dynamic of the homeownership experience has nothing to do with the economic drivel he espouses. People have families and they just want to own something that is their own “piece of the rock.” I know because I’ve been speaking to these folks in plain English (and Spanish) for the past twenty years helping them achieve that goal.

Third, since you weren’t actually THERE, let me help you to understand Bubble Era Mentality: EVERYONE WAS CRAZY. I sat with homebuyers trying to tell them their $40,000 per year salaries could not support a $975,000 house. I listened to Sub-Prime account executives telling me on the phone to commit fraud to get my clients to qualify (I don’t do Fraud and I don’t make up fancy job titles with exotic income to qualify people for mortgage loans. Never have. Never will.) I was flamed constantly on the internet for hewing to a strict 30year Fixed Rate, buy-what-you-can-afford line. I watched as the media and internet bozos like Mr. Interfluidity told everyone to BUY NOW, BUY More, Be Happy. I was there, and your analysis doesn’t even come close to catching one whit of the trend of those “bubble days.”

Guys, do us professionals who are still standing and who didn’t create this mess a favor: stop talking such nonsense. There’s folks out there who just want to own their own home. It’s not complicated, it’s really very simple.

“Leverage?” I’ve been sitting with first time buyers for 20 years. Not ONE person has EVER used the word “leverage” in a sentence with me. Cut it out.

P.S.: PHIL, you wanted me to get back to blogging, right?!?

Hope that helps!

Comments are wide-open. Fire away. I’m moderating them, of course, to prevent Ye Olde Spamology, but those legitimate comments will be published. Unless you make fun of my old hometown, Woodside.

The MYTH of Credit Inquiries

Multiple mortgage inquiries do not affect a credit score.

When shopping for a mortgage you need to be thoroughly prequalified. This prequalification includes a credit report. Often, clients believe that “too many inquiries” on their credit reports will lower their credit scores. This is basically UNTRUE when it comes to shopping for a mortgage.

I went to the source to verify this information: Fair Isaac which is the company that created and continues to upgrade and maintain the credit scoring systems. Their website clearly indicates that mortgage inquiries do not affect a credit score.

And I quote: “Does the formula treat all credit inquiries the same?
No. Research has indicated that the FICO score is more predictive when it treats loans that commonly involve rate-shopping, such as mortgage, auto and student loans, in a different way. For these types of loans, the FICO score ignores inquiries made in the 30 days prior to scoring. So, if you find a loan within 30 days, the inquiries won’t affect your score while you’re rate shopping. In addition, the score looks on your credit report for rate-shopping inquiries older than 30 days. If it finds some, it counts those inquiries that fall in a typical shopping period as just one inquiry when determining your score.”

You can read this and more great information about credit scores on their website: MYFICO

Hope that helps!

Inspired by Phil Faranda

As I gobbled some crazy good pizza Phil lectured me that I need to be blogging again.

I had lunch with my good pal and Realtor Extraordinaire Phil Faranda the other day. As I gobbled some crazy good pizza Phil lectured me (kindly, as it were) that I need to be blogging again.

In between chomps on the pizza I responded.

GULP. “Been there done that Phil. I used to blog on tcurranmortgage a LOT.” BITE. CHOMP. GULP. YUM.

“Do it again,” says the JPhilip man.

So he got me to thinking. Not just about Pizza, but about blogging again. Then he drew me in ever so craftily when I responded in a rather lengthy way to his posting on his Facebook blog. You can read for yourself how my pizza-enabling-pal became my new blogging-enabling-friend. And I quote: “Trevor, you just wrote a blog post! See how easy?”

I did it again this morning. Got on my soapbox and came real close to ranting and raving in reply to one of Phil’s eloquent and passionate blogs about our interesting business we all work in.

Am I back to blogging BIG-TIME? Since I’m crazy busy in my new role as Director of Business Development for a busy mortgage company, I truly don’t believe I have the time, but I’ll try to come back here to tcurranmortgage.com more often and enlighten y’all with my thoughts and information on mortgages, real estate and the homebuying experience.

Speaking of blogs, do check out Phil’s and also my good friend Gary’s (also known as Dedicated WebMaster of this here tcurranmortgage blog) blog about his search for a home in Babylon.

Hey Phil, here’s a re-cap of a bunch of articles I done blogged “back in the day” about the negotiating process. These are the lessons I’ve learned over my 20 year career as a mortgage professional and the distillation of the advice I have given (and continue to give) my HomeBuyer clients:

How To Make An Offer: Redux 2009

Asking Price Doesn’t Matter To Realistic Buyers

When Is The Best Time Of Year To Buy A Home?

FSBO’s: For Sale By Owner

And, in a more-detailed response to Phil’s FaceBook posting this morning about the Seller who didn’t counter-offer, an excerpt from a rather old blog entry here on tcurranmortgage.com, Negotiating An Offer In A Changing Market. The excerpt from that article is posted here to further illuminate Phil’s point that a Seller should ALWAYS counter-offer a Buyer’s offer no matter how low it is. Phil says that Buyers are so hard to come by that, when you have one in front of you, you (The Seller) must react with more than a “NO” to a lowball offer.

My personal spin on that is the Seller isn’t really serious about selling the house. See more below.

Serious Sellers. Oh boy there are a lot of houses on the market. Don’t let that fool you into thinking they are all ready for the taking by smart Buyers like you.

Assume there is a percentage of Sellers out there who are not serious about selling their homes. They still think it’s last year and the prices are still mega-millions. Note to Sellers: the market has changed!

You want to discern who is serious about Selling and who is standing there thinking their homes are cash cows waiting to be milked by an unsuspecting Buyer. Note to Buyer: that’s not YOU!

Some folks don’t need to move. The job is not relocating to Arizona; it’s not time to retire; they don’t need to buy a bigger house to accommodate the elderly Mom who is moving in with them. Some folks just have this idea they can sell their home and make tons of money. That’s not “serious about selling” in my book.

You can ask a lot of questions to get at the “truth” behind a Seller’s motivations to sell. You may not get answers to your questions, or the answers may reveal nothing of the Seller’s intentions, or, worse, you may be lied to.

In my long experience I have found the best way to get at the secret of whether or not a Seller really wants to/needs to sell a home is to make an offer.

The person who doesn’t respond to an offer probably thinks he’ll just sit tight to get his price. That’s fine, but if the house isn’t worth that price anymore, then you, educated Buyer, will be moving on to greener pastures.

If your original offer is seriously low, and there is no response, try raising it. If still there is no reaction—a counter offer from the Seller is what I consider a reaction—then this Seller probably isn’t serious.

Time for you to move on. There are plenty of houses out there. Keep going until you find a Seller who really is serious about selling their home.

These are just basic suggestions to help you chart the mysterious waters of a cooling market.

You really must be out there looking, looking, and looking some more, making offers, and making more offers in order to develop a good sense of where the market is going and how you can achieve your goal of homeownership.

Thanks Phil for dragging me back here! Let’s see where it goes from here…
TC

I welcome Comments for all my blog entries. I will be happy to review and approve all legitimate comments provided by readers of tcurranmortgage.com. I do not permit unfettered access to comments for obvious reasons: mortgage spammers and their ilk. If you wish to Comment on any entry, please do so and I will quickly review and approve. Thanks for reading tcurranmortgage.com. Hope that helps!