Showing posts with label mortgages. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mortgages. Show all posts

Monday, October 15, 2012

Big jump in VA mortgages reported

refinance, mortgages, reverse mortgages, closing, settlement,
Applications for VA mortgages jumped 50% according to a story in the New York Times.
MORTGAGES guaranteed by the Department of Veterans Affairs surged by 50 percent in the fiscal year ended Sept. 30, as tighter credit standards on conventional financing made these programs all the more attractive to current and former military members.
VA mortgages are available to former and current members of the military. My parents obtained one when they bought their home in 1960. The attractiveness of the VA loan program is due to low rates guaranteed by the US government. Borrowers also benefit now that rates have dropped.
Borrowers who already have a V.A.-backed mortgage can get an interest-rate reduction relatively easily. The department’s streamlined refinance program doesn’t require these borrowers to “re-prove” that they qualify, said Nathan Long, the chief executive of Veterans United Home Loans, an online broker of V.A. loans. Information about VA loans is readily available on the Internet.
 Read the full story here.

For your next title order or
if you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.
Stephen's Title Agency, LLC
165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101
Fairfield, NJ 07004
Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628
E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com

Saturday, March 3, 2012

Mortgage interest rates to rise due to hidden fee

Loan fees are about to rise, and you won't even know it.  The fee in question is a guarantee fee collected by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac that is part of the interest rate you pay.  It's not set forth on the settlement statement because it does not have to be disclosed.

According to the New York Times,
INSIDE the interest rate quoted on your home lies a small hidden fee that has been charged by government-sponsored entities like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for more than three decades. It’s an add-on rate known as the guarantee fee.
Everyone has to make a living, including Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, don't you think?  But just think of the fees collected over the years that seem to have been squandered in the so-called "sub-prime crisis."  In any event, it means a small rise in interest rates is coming in the days ahead.

Read the full story here.

For your next title order or
if you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.
Stephen's Title Agency, LLC
165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101
Fairfield, NJ 07004
Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628
E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Denied a mortgage? Maybe here’s why

The New York Times’ Vickie Elmer addresses reasons for mortgage loan application rejection.
“WE regret to inform you...” Nobody applying for a new mortgage or a refinancing wants to see or hear these words. But last year more than two million people were turned down for home loans, according to federal data, often because they didn’t meet certain lender requirements or because their applications were incomplete or otherwise problematic. Lenders’ underwriting criteria have become more rigorous in recent years; some banks have tightened up beyond federal requirements.
Here are the six biggest triggers for rejection, according to industry experts.
  • INSUFFICIENT INCOME Lenders want to make sure you can afford to make the mortgage payments. Someone who earns, say, $40,000 a year need not bid on a $750,000 apartment, unless there’s a trust fund with quarterly payouts or other money available. Also, lenders typically look for at least a two-year track record of income, which could hurt those who may have switched jobs recently.
  • CLOUDY FINANCIAL PICTURE. Generally, total debt payments, including the mortgage, cannot exceed 45 to 50 percent of your adjusted gross monthly income. Borrowers may be surprised at what counts and what doesn’t.
  • BAD CREDIT Lenders typically reject applicants with a FICO score below 620. Failing to pay your mortgage on time affects your score.
  • LOW APPRAISAL. This is the predominant reason people are denied home loans today, according to industry experts.
  • PROPERTY PROBLEMS. Issues within an apartment unit or a house such as major repairs have to be addressed. In our area of NJ, there are several condominiums with lawsuits pending against them that have turned into deal killers.
  • INFORMATION MIX-UPS. About 12 percent of new mortgage applications were denied because of unverifiable information or incomplete credit applications, according to the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council.
Read the full article.
For your next title order or
if you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.
Stephen's Title Agency, LLC
165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101
Fairfield, NJ 07004
Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628
E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com

Monday, September 26, 2011

Who’s giving you the best mortgage deal?

The New York Times suggests vetting the lender when you buy a home.
“BEFORE buying a house, borrowers will undoubtedly do a thorough check of the property, examining its structural soundness and the surrounding neighborhood, among other things; they will research the best type of loan, comparing interest rates, terms and fees. But not all borrowers do due diligence on their lenders.”
“Ferreting out good information is not that easy. For one thing, different kinds of lenders are held to different rules, licenses and disclosure requirements. Some states, like New York and New Jersey, require mortgage brokers to complete criminal background checks through the state police.”
So what to do?  According to industry experts they  
“suggest that borrowers focus more on the individual who would be their mortgage broker, loan officer or loan originator. Among the questions borrowers should be asking them: How long have they been in the field? How well or promptly do they answer questions? Do they want to know the borrower’s financial goals? A look at their work experience and background on their LinkedIn profile may also be helpful.”
What should you look for?

  • are good listeners, and helpful with personal-finance questions.
  • size might be one factor.
  • whether a blemish on a firm’s record, say a large number of foreclosures or a class-action lawsuit settled three years ago, will dissuade you from cultivating a helpful relationship.
  • governmental and quasi-governmental sites may be helpful.

A minefield? Maybe.  Read the full article to learn more.

For your next title order or
if you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.
Stephen's Title Agency, LLC
165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101
Fairfield, NJ 07004
Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628
E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com

Friday, September 23, 2011

New York mortgage tax - how can it be reduced

A client posed a question yesterday-

"I have a borrower who is trying to save money on a refinance in Manhattan, any ideas?"

"Sure," I said, "use a CEMA."

CEMA is shorthand for Consolidation, Extension and Modification Agreement. It helps to save mortgage tax because the original mortgage being paid-off is assigned to the new lender instead of being satisfied. The mortgage tax is paid only on the amount of the loan being given by the new lender. The two mortgages are "consolidated" into one by the CEMA.

The New York Times has an interesting article on the money saving aspects of a CEMA transaction. Read it here.


For your next title order or


if you have questions about what you see here, contact


Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.


Stephen's Title Agency, LLC


165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101


Fairfield, NJ 07004


Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628


E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com

Monday, August 29, 2011

No light at the end of the foreclosure tunnel. Bad loans continue to rise for NJ banks

The Record reports that


“Toxic loans held by New Jersey-based banks continued to climb in the second
quarter even as bad loans at U.S. banks declined, according to new government
data.”

“The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said Tuesday in its quarterly industry profile that loans more than 90 days past due or no longer accruing interest at New Jersey's 117 banks and thrifts rose to 3.61 percent of total loans as of June 30, up from 2.91 percent a year earlier. Those banks' combined seriously delinquent debt climbed in each of the past four quarters.”
Even the once vaunted Hudson City Savings Bank is feeling the pain. As the Record notes,


“Paramus-based Hudson City Savings Bank, the largest thrift based in New Jersey
and a high-end residential mortgage lender, had 123 foreclosed properties on its
books at the end of June, up from 52 a year earlier.”

Why?


“A weak economy, persistent high unemployment and a slow foreclosure process
have all contributed to the recent rise in bad loans throughout the state, said Bill Brewer, partner at the Livingston office of Crowe Horwath LLP, a community bank auditor. "Banks have had a hard time moving this stuff off the books," he said. "The banks have the capital to withstand this, but it is a continuing problem.’"


Read more of the whys and wherefores here.



For your next title order or

if you have questions about what you see here, contact

Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.

Stephen's Title Agency, LLC

165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101

Fairfield, NJ 07004

Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628

E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com

Monday, August 22, 2011

Helping underwater homeowners? Not flood, mortgages.

The New York Times editorial pages takes on the cause of underwater homeowners, folks whose property is worth less than the mortgage or mortgages on it. Principal relief? Who's going to judge who's entitled to it?


Neither Congress, nor federal regulators, nor state or federal prosecutors have yet to conduct a thorough investigation into the mortgage bubble and financial bust. We welcomed the news that the Justice Department is investigating allegations that Standard & Poor’s purposely overrated toxic mortgage securities in the years before the bust. We hope the investigative circle will widen.

Tens of millions of Americans are being crushed by the overhang of mortgage debt. And Congress and the White House have yet to figure out that the economy will not recover until housing recovers — and that won’t happen without a robust effort to curb foreclosures by modifying troubled mortgage loans.

Read the complete editorial.

For your next title order or

if you have questions about what you see here, contact

Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.

Stephen's Title Agency, LLC

165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101

Fairfield, NJ 07004

Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628

E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com


stephen flatow stephen's title agency mortgages underwater

Monday, August 8, 2011

Families claim Wells Fargo gyped their parents over reverse mortgages

Bloomberg news reports, "Wells Fargo Sued Over Reverse Mortgage Policies by Borrowers "

“Wells Fargo & Co. was accused in a group lawsuit of ignoring federal rules on reverse mortgages and forcing homes into foreclosure instead of giving heirs a chance to buy them.

“Estates and surviving spouses have the right to purchase properties at 95 percent of appraised value after the death of a borrower who took out a federally insured reverse mortgage, lawyers for a California man said in the complaint filed Aug. 3 in federal court in San Francisco.

“Wells Fargo hasn't been notifying heirs of this right and has been starting foreclosures if demands aren't met for repayment of the full mortgage balance, according to the complaint filed by the son of a California homeowner. The plaintiff, Robert Chandler, also sued the Federal National Mortgage Association, or Fannie Mae.”

Wells Fargo alleges that it complied with HUD guidelines; guidelines that only came into effect in April 2011.

Read the full story.






For your next title order or if you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.,

Stephen's Title Agency, LLC,

165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101
Fairfield, NJ 07004, Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628
E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Wells Fargo to pay $85M to settle case

The AP reports,

“Wells Fargo & Co. has agreed to pay $85 million to settle civil charges that it falsified loan documents and pushed borrowers toward subprime mortgages with higher interest rates during the housing boom.

“The fine is the largest ever imposed by the Federal Reserve in a consumer-enforcement case, the central bank said Wednesday.

“Wells Fargo, the nation's largest mortgage lender, neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing as part of the settlement. The bank agreed to compensate borrowers who were steered into higher-priced loans or whose income was exaggerated.”

Wells Fargo was accused of inflating borrowers' incomes on loan applications from 2004 until 2008. Sales reps also pushed borrowers towards subprime loans, even if they were eligible for lower rate mortgages.

“Between 3,700 and roughly 10,000 people could be compensated under the settlement, the Fed said. The payments will likely range from $1,000 to $20,000.”

Read the full report.

For your next title order or
if you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.
Stephen's Title Agency, LLC
165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101
Fairfield, NJ 07004
Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628
E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - http://www.stephenstitle.com/


Wells Fargo, mortgages, fraud, subprime,Stephen Flatow, Stephen's Title

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Adjustable rate mortgages do have advantages

 
The New York Times’ Maryann Haggerty writes about The Appeal of Adjustable Rates
 “THE 30-year fixed-rate loan has earned its reputation as the sensible, conservative move in the aftermath of the financial crisis, especially with near-low interest rates. But despite risks, some borrowers still are getting or keeping adjustable-rate loans, which have even lower rates.”

“Adjustable rate mortgages generally attract borrowers when rates are high. The rate is set for a specific time — generally one, five or seven years — and then it adjusts to prevailing rates within boundaries. That means payments can go up. Payment shock has caused plenty of problems over the years. [From the Ed – shows us the cases.] Rates can also go down, as borrowers who took out ARMs five to seven years ago are finding now. But it’s tough to imagine how rates could get much lower than now, short of Japan-style negative rates.”

According to Sari Rosenberg of Manhattan Mortgage Company whom we’ve worked with, “If a person is debt-averse and has a history of paying off his or her mortgage within 5 to 10 years, then he or she would definitely consider an ARM.”

Who else would benefit?  According to Ms. Rosenberg, “I have another client who knows he is selling his home within the next few years and even with the closing costs he will be saving money,” so he took out a three-year ARM.

“Keith Gumbinger, a vice president of HSH Associates, a financial publisher in Pompton Plains, N.J., said, “ARMs are good for borrowers with short-term time frames, usually seven years or less.”

“Conversely, ARMs aren’t wise for borrowers who plan to stay put, Mr. Gumbinger said, or those who would have trouble managing rising payments. That includes people who expect cash-flow strains, such as those starting a family.”

Is an ARM right for you?  A savvy mortgage counselor can help.  Read the full story.

For your next title order or
if you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.
Stephen's Title Agency, LLC
165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101
Fairfield, NJ 07004
Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628
E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com

Saturday, April 2, 2011

Soldiers lose homes. How could it happen?

The New York Times reports,
“The Justice Department is investigating allegations that a mortgage subsidiary of Morgan Stanley foreclosed on almost two dozen military families from 2006 to 2008 in violation of a longstanding law aimed at preventing such action.”
 It seems that
“Saxon Mortgage Services, is one of several mortgage and lending companies being investigated by its civil rights division. The inquiry is focused on possible violations of a federal law that bars lenders from foreclosing on active-duty service members without a court hearing.“
“[A]s many as 23 military foreclosures were under scrutiny in the Justice Department investigation.”
Federal, and many state, laws have what’s called a “civil relief act” designed to protect active duty service men and women from being foreclosed. Federal law requires a judge to “hold a hearing at which the service member is represented before granting a lender the right to foreclose on the service member’s home, even in states where a court order is not required for civilian foreclosures. As early as 2005, advocates for military families were complaining that banks and other lenders were frequently violating the law.”

Read the full article U.S. Inquiry on Military Family Foreclosures

For your next title order or
if you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.
Stephen's Title Agency, LLC
165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101
Fairfield, NJ 07004
Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628
E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com

Friday, April 1, 2011

Problems With New Good Faith Estimate Forms. Ya think!

The New York Times reports on “Problems With New Good Faith Estimate Forms.”

“THE revamped Good Faith Estimate form, which arrived just over a year ago, has helped give home buyers and homeowners looking to refinance their mortgages a better understanding of their borrowing costs

“But industry experts say the three-page, line-by-line disclosure — which lenders must provide within three days of receiving a loan application — still falls short of telling borrowers exactly what they will be paying. Some in the mortgage industry complain that it can even distort or obscure the true cost.”
We have had difficulties with lenders and their preparation of the Good Faith Estimate (GFE.) That which was intended to be a simplified method of explaining loan costs is anything but that. And, lenders do not uniformly provide us, as settlement agents, with information that needs to be reported. In other words, even lenders are confused about what information goes on which line.

Read the full article by Lynnley Browing.
For your next title order or
if you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.
Stephen's Title Agency, LLC
165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101
Fairfield, NJ 07004
Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628
E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com

Thursday, March 31, 2011

NJ mortgage foreclosures- Court wearing rose colored glasses?

Sarah Portlock writing in The Star-Ledger reports on the settlement of the New Jersey Supreme Court’s involvement in the mortgage foreclosure crisis. The settlement “will require six of the country’s biggest mortgage lenders to disclose the specifics of how they foreclose on homeowners has been” court approved.

“Under the agreement, retired Judge Richard Williams will review the lenders’ foreclosure processes to ensure all filed documents are based on personal knowledge and accurate business records. He also has the power to periodically review a sample of future foreclosures.”
Nonsense. Can anyone define “personal knowledge” in the day of e-commerce where everything, absolutely everything is compiled, kept and disseminated electronically? We no longer live in the days of bookkeepers wearing eyeshades sitting hunchbacked over ledger books.
“The settlement was made public two weeks ago, and comes four months after Chief Justice Stuart Rabner issued a three-part initiative to investigate what could be rogue foreclosure filings, noting a staggering increase in caseload and concerns judges had inadvertently "rubber stamped" files that had inadequate or inaccurate paperwork. In response, the banks argued they had already revised their foreclosure procedures.”
Read - Judge approves settlement to review mortgage foreclosure process

For your next title order or
if you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.
Stephen's Title Agency, LLC
165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101
Fairfield, NJ 07004
Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628
E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com

Monday, March 21, 2011

Adjustable Rate Mortgages back in vogue?

The New York Times Lynnley Browning reports on the move back to the once despised adjustable rate mortgage.
“IN the years since the financial crisis, adjustable-rate mortgages, or ARMs, with their low initial interest rates that changed over time, have been considered riskier than fixed-rate loans and shunned by most buyers. But these days more people are being persuaded to give the loans a try.”
However, the mortgage seems to have learned one lesson of the mortgage melt down.
“This time around, lenders are rolling out more conservative ARM products — without the gimmicky extra-low “teaser” rates that adjust every six months, or the “pick-a-pay” and “option” features that allow borrowers to pay less than the monthly interest, only to be hit with a huge bill down the road.”
“Those ARMs were hallmarks of the subprime mortgage boom that fueled the soaring rate of mortgage defaults and home foreclosures nationwide.”
Lenders ranging from Equity Now in New York to Bank of America are increasing the number of ARM transactions.
“Mortgage brokers and lenders say the loans most in demand are the “5/1” and “7/1,” in which the initial interest rate is fixed for the first five or seven years — after which many homeowners typically think about selling or refinancing anyway — then adjusted annually at a capped rate toward a maximum level.”
While many have railed against the risk inherent in changes of interest rates over time, I believe history reveals that ARMs were safe due to caps on increase amounts at each step and over the lifetime of the loan. For a homeowner who plans on selling within a few years, the ARM may give her a nice discount in rate.

Starting rates are usually one to one and a half percentage points below those of 30-year fixed-rate loans.

“But one catch is that getting an ARM may now be harder.
“Last summer Fannie Mae, the government buyer of home loans, said lenders must qualify borrowers on either the initial rate plus two percentage points, or on the full index rate to which the initial rate is tied, whichever is greater.”
While ARMs may be attractive to some, it’s doubtful that the number of ARM transactions will approach the 1994 high of about 70 percent of all home purchases.

Read the full report More Borrowers Are Opting for Adjustable-Rate Mortgages

For your next title order or
if you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.
Stephen's Title Agency, LLC
165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101
Fairfield, NJ 07004
Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628
E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com

Monday, March 14, 2011

Is it becoming harder to get a mortgage? Looks as though it is.

Marc Santora of The New York Times writes about “New Worries for Buyers Seeking Mortgages.”


Frankly, there are horror stories out there about getting mortgages.

For one prospective apartment buyer,
“the moment she stepped into the two-bedroom apartment at 59th Street and First Avenue, with its oversized windows and sweeping views of the Queensboro Bridge, she just knew.”
And her offer was accepted.
“That was in August. But it was only in February, nearly six months later, that she finally closed on the $1.15 million apartment.
“In the intervening months, as she battled through a computer glitch and reams of documentation, Ms. Herman underwent a crash course in the complexities of navigating the mortgage market — which itself continues to undergo profound change.”
 “The dread of not finding a lender after the market collapsed in 2009 has been replaced by uncertainty, confusion and frustration. According to brokers and lenders, the list of demands that stand between finding a place to buy and signing on the dotted line simply never stops morphing.“
And it looks as though more change are coming to the mortgage market as the Obama administration plans to reduce the role of the federal government in the mortgage market by, for instance, lowering the limit on loan amounts for loans to be bought by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as well as reducing loan amounts for FHA and VA loans.
“And let’s not forget the federal government’s proposal to eliminate the mortgage interest tax deduction for high-income earners; the changes in the way brokers will be compensated because of new regulations; and the fact that banks — despite recent profits — are still leery of lending. Taken together, all these elements create a situation that can paralyze potential buyers. “
The result of all this is that “confusion and uncertainty can have the same impact as fear, unfortunately,” said David S. Marinoff, a mortgage broker and managing director of the Guard Hill Financial Corporation."

Summing up the problems facing the market is this from Jonathan J. Miller, the president of the appraisal firm Miller Samuel and a market analyst for Prudential Douglas Elliman,
“housing does not truly recover until lending does. It is currently dysfunctional.”
Once again the crystal ball goes dim.

Read the full story.

For your next title order or
if you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.
Stephen's Title Agency, LLC
165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101
Fairfield, NJ 07004
Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628
E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

MERS – The big bad wolf?

The New York Times lays part of the blame for the mortgage collapse at the feed of the Mortgage Electronic Registration System, Inc., we all know as MERS. In a report headlined “MERS? It May Have Swallowed Your Loan” By Michael Powell and Gretchen Morgenson MERS is taken to task.

“Never heard of MERS? That’s fine with the mortgage banking industry—as MERS is starting to overheat and sputter. If its many detractors are correct, this private corporation, with a full-time staff of fewer than 50 employees, could turn out to be a very public problem for the mortgage industry.”

“Judges, lawmakers, lawyers and housing experts are raising piercing questions about MERS, which stands for Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, whose private mortgage registry has all but replaced the nation’s public land ownership records. Most questions boil down to this:

“How can MERS claim title to those mortgages, and foreclose on homeowners, when it has not invested a dollar in a single loan?

“And, more fundamentally: Given the evidence that many banks have cut corners and made colossal foreclosure mistakes, does anyone know who owns what or owes what to whom anymore?”
As courts have stepped in to protect defaulting homeowners from the specter of foreclosure, every angle to stick it to the banking industry (and thereby the rest of the consuming public.)

We in the title industry were introduced to MERS as a convenient way to insert a nominee in the chain of title to a mortgage. Gone would be the days of lost assignments of mortgage and deeds of trust—something that gave us many a nightmare.

Instead, this admitted convenience to lenders and the real estate industry, and to paraphrase Forrest Gump, has now jumped up and bit the banking industry in the butt.

Examples:
“The Arkansas Supreme Court ruled last year that MERS could no longer file foreclosure proceedings there, because it does not actually make or service any loans. Last month in Utah, a local judge made the no-less-striking decision to let a homeowner rip up his mortgage and walk away debt-free. MERS had claimed ownership of the mortgage, but the judge did not recognize its legal standing.”
“And, on Long Island, a federal bankruptcy judge ruled in February that MERS could no longer act as an “agent” for the owners of mortgage notes. He acknowledged that his decision could erode the foundation of the mortgage business.”
MERS was designed to streamline the ownership system in the days of mortgage securitization “but critics say the MERS system made it far more difficult for homeowners to contest foreclosures, as ownership was harder to ascertain.”

Challenges to MERS were raised by county clerks around the country. After all, they would be cut out of a lucrative source of income raised from recording assignments of mortgage, but they lost in light of the nation’s desire to speed up the mortgage process.
“We lost our revenue stream, and Americans lost the ability to immediately know who owned a piece of property,” said Mark Monacelli, the St. Louis County recorder in Duluth, Minn.” (Oh please.)
“Some experts in corporate governance say the legal furor over MERS is overstated. Others describe it as a useful corporation nearly drowning in a flood tide of mortgage foreclosures. But not even the mortgage giant Fannie Mae, an investor in MERS, depends on it these days.”
In any event, MERS is being made the whipping post for a larger problem—greed of lenders and borrowers.

Read the full article at MERS? It May Have Swallowed Your Loan

For your next title order or
if you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.
Stephen's Title Agency, LLC
165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101
Fairfield, NJ 07004
Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628
E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com

Monday, February 28, 2011

F.H.A. Loans to cost more

From the New York Times, Lynnley Browning writes about the increase in F.H.A. insurance premiums scheduled to take effect for loans taken out on or after April 18, 2011.
“FEDERAL Housing Administration mortgages, the government-insured loans that have surged in popularity in recent years, will be getting slightly more expensive this spring.
“The F.H.A. announced this month that it was raising the annual mortgage insurance premium for borrowers by a quarter of a percentage point — to 1.1 or 1.15 percent of the loan amount for 30-year fixed-rate loans, and 0.25 or 0.50 for 15-year or shorter-term loans.”
While the F.H.A. is calling the rise a “marginal increase,” “industry experts say that some consumers, especially those considered marginal borrowers, may now be prevented from buying or refinancing a property.”

This is the second change in premium rates in the past 12 months, having last gone up in November 2010.
“The increase does not apply to F.H.A. loans already in place, or to F.H.A. reverse mortgages or home-equity conversion (HECM) loans.”
The raise is necessary because F.H.A. reserves have fallen below required levels.

Read more, F.H.A. to Raise Insurance Premiums.

For your next title order or
if you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.
Stephen's Title Agency, LLC
165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101
Fairfield, NJ 07004
Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628
E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com

Friday, February 18, 2011

Does applying for a mortgage make you dizzy?

From Realty Time, Don't Be Mystified By The Mortgage Maze
by Broderick Perkins

Years after the housing market tanked and sank the economy, more than 70 percent of Americans say getting a mortgage today is a serious national problem, according to a new study by MortgageMatch.com, a home loan and information site operated by Move, Inc.

According to the MortgageMatch.com survey, today's lending environment is so confusing many borrowers are experiencing high levels of stress and frustration.

More than one in five recent home buyers (20.9 percent) told MortgageMatch.com, waiting to hear if they were approved for a mortgage was more stressful than waiting to hear if they got a job.

MortgageMatch.com says home buyers can significantly improve their chances of getting a mortgage application approved on the best possible terms in today's tough lending marketplace by taking the following steps.

• Pay down your debt as much as you can before applying for a mortgage.

By reducing your debt as much as you can, you will improve your debt-to-income ratio and your credit score.

• Clean up your credit long before you apply for a mortgage.

Pull one or all of your three annual credit reports from AnnualCreditReport.com and check yourself, before you wreck yourself.

• Don't make a major purchase on credit and don't apply for new credit before you apply for a mortgage or at any point before your mortgage closes. Purchases and credit accounts increase your debt and hurt your debt-to-income ratio.

• Increase your down payment. The more you put down the better your rate and your chances at scoring on that loan application. If you can't increase your money down, buy a cheaper home. Now is not the time to stretch.

• Get all your docs in a row before you apply for a mortgage. Don't waste time or raise the ire of lenders who are tougher than ever on documentation for income, assets, financial obligations and more.

• Know and prepare for your cash requirements. Cash expenses, beyond the down payment can crush you. Educate yourself.

• Larger loans raise your costs.
• Negotiate tough. Ask for a purchase price lower than the value. In today's marketplace, many sellers are willing to deal. Go for it.

• Don't get taken. When you see rates attractive rates advertised on the Internet or TV don't froth. Advertised rates maybe what you see, but they are often not what you get.

Read the full article, Realty Times - Don't Be Mystified By The Mortgage Maze

Broderick Perkins parlayed a 30-year career in old-school journalism into a digital-age news service offering editorial content and related consulting services.
The award-winning consumer journalist, originally from Wilmington, DE, is founder, publisher and executive editor of the bootstrap DeadlineNews Group, a Silicon Valley-based content provider specializing in residential real estate, consumer news and consulting.


For your next title order or
if you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.
Stephen's Title Agency, LLC
165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101
Fairfield, NJ 07004
Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628
E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Calculating the Annual Percentage Rate

The New York Times’ Lynnley Browning is a little off his fine writing in this article dealing with the annual percentage rate calculations required by lenders.


THE lending industry has tried to make it easier for borrowers to understand thetrue cost of a mortgage by disclosing both its interest rate and its annual percentage rate, or A.P.R. But consumers may often wonder which figure they should focus on when buying or refinancing a property.
This is the first mistake in Browning’s report. It was not the lending industry that focused on making a loan’s true cost understandable, it was the folks in Washington, D.C. who promulgated the Truth-in-Lending Act.


The answer, many mortgage experts say, may seem counterintuitive: while the A.P.R. is popularly seen as providing a more complete picture of what you are actually paying each month, it often omits some costs.

Yes, that’s true, but what is overlooked is the underlying premise of the APR—that all lenders will have to calculate the APR the same way. There never was a promise that consumers would have to do some homework in figuring out which loan was best for them.

“When someone calls for a quote, we always give the interest rate, not the A.P.R.,” said Melissa Cohn, the president of the Manhattan Mortgage Company, a brokerage firm. “The A.P.R. is not all-inclusive.”
Whoa, if they did that in print, it would be a violation of Federal law.

When you read the full report you will see that the argument is being made for the further dumbing down of the loan process by including ALL costs in the APR calculation. In reality that sounds like a plan that would work, but by lumping in costs that are fixed in the marketplace, such as, mortgage tax in NY, and those that vary by company, for example, credit checks, you create a scene that is ripe for errors.

For your next title order or
if you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.
Stephen's Title Agency, LLC
165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101
Fairfield, NJ 07004
Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628
E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com

Monday, February 14, 2011

Imagining Life without Fannie and Freddie

From the New York Times’ Gretchen Morgenson.
KUDOS to Treasury and the Department of Housing and Urban Development for some straight talk about the nation’s broken mortgage system.
A report to Congress from those departments, published on Friday, provided some long-awaited analysis by the Obama administration about what went wrong in housing finance — and how to fix it.
The report, entitled “Reforming America’s Housing Finance Market,” zeros in on the perverse incentives created by the nation’s mortgage complex during the years leading up to the panic of 2008. The Treasury’s recommendation that we wind down Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and let the private mortgage market step in is spot on.
So what’s next?
Still, it is not clear that such moves, sensible though they are, will be enough to prevent taxpayers from having to bail out institutions that back mortgages in the future. That is because the debate over how to put the Treasury’s ideas into effect will soon become a brawl. Powerful participants are already working overtime to keep taxpayers on the hook.

The opponents to reform: the Mortgage Bankers Association, the Financial Services Roundtable and the Center for American Progress. They are urging the creation of a new federally-related entity.

Taxpayers surely do not want to create new government-sponsored enterprises that may later fail. So why not work toward a system where the government is solely the home lender of last resort? That way, the private market could operate in good times; the government would step in only if the market froze up.

Friday’s report seems to be leading in this direction. But it supplies no road map to a government system that provides a catastrophic insurance program only for those times when the private market is not working.

There is much to hash out if we are to build an effective housing finance system in America. Being truthful about what went wrong in the past, the report paves the way for a meaningful discussion. But we must also be sure that the solutions do not bring us back to where we began. That is where the real fight will be fought.


Read the full article.

For your next title order or if you have questions about what you see here, contact
Stephen M. Flatow, Esq.
Stephen's Title Agency, LLC
165 Passaic Avenue, Suite 101
Fairfield, NJ 07004
Tel 973-227-4724 - Fax 973-556-1628
E-mail Stephenstitle AT comcast.net - www.stephenstitle.com