What's The Latest Buzz In Motgages?
If you are shopping for Del Mar homes, or are the current owners of Del Mar
homes who are looking to refinance your mortgage, here is a valuable resource
that I urge you to look into. I have been spending time recently kicking the
tires of a new Web site, MortgageGrader.com, which has excellent credentials.
It has been developed by Jeff Lazerson, an experienced mortgage broker who
didn't much like the way most brokers did business.
Again, the name of the website is MortgageGrader.com
Lazerson persuaded the Ford Foundation to back an
approach designed to eliminate opportunistic pricing -- the widespread practice
of basing the price on what brokers believe they can induce borrowers to pay.
Mortgage Grader (MG) is an equal opportunity mortgage lender, developing prices
mechanically by sifting through the offers of participating lenders to find the
best deal.
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A good way to understand what
makes MG tick is to compare it with Upfront Mortgage Brokers (UMBs) and Upfront
Mortgage Lenders (UMLs). UMBs are brokers who operate transparently, while UMLs
are online lenders who provide the information needed by borrowers to shop
effectively. MG has much in common with both, but also differs from them in
important ways.
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MG and UMBs both practice broker-fee transparency, and pass through to the
borrower the best wholesale price they can get from the lender. This sets them
apart from most brokers, who quote all-in prices that include an undisclosed
markup.
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There is a difference, however. Where UMBs negotiate their fee with the
borrower, the MG broker fee is fixed, changing only with the loan amount, and
is disclosed in a fee schedule. This eliminates the possibility of adjusting
the broker's fee to the anticipated workload involved in the transaction. I
consider that a small price to pay, however, for the elimination of all
possibility of opportunistic pricing.
UMBs and MG guarantee the lender fees disclosed to the borrower, and credit
the borrower with any rebates received from the lender. Both lock the rate and
other terms when directed by the customer, and provide a copy of the written
confirmation of the rate lock as soon as it has been received from the lender.
MG also has much in common with UMLs. Both depend on the Internet as their
primary source of customers, and rely on technology to exchange information
online with borrowers. Both provide mortgage price quotations adjusted for the
particulars of each transaction. But they part company in what they require of
the borrower before providing the prices.
UMLs require no more information from the borrower than is needed to price
accurately, which in every case involves an input form on one screen that takes
a minute or two to fill out. This makes it easy to shop one UML against
another, or against other online lenders. The UML certification requirements
were designed to this end.
MG, in contrast, requires that the borrower fill out an application form
that is contained on five screens, which took me about 15-20 minutes. That is a
small investment of time for someone applying for a loan. It is a large
investment, however, for someone in shopping mode who is visiting multiple Web
sites and who will be coming back frequently, either to check different
programs or to keep abreast of an ever-shifting market.
The problem is aggravated by the failure of MG to provide users with a way
to save their inputs, and they disappear from the computer after an hour. That
is up from 20 minutes; Jeff extended it after I complained, but what is needed
is more like three weeks. There is no reason to save the prices; they will
change every day anyway and take only seconds to calculate, but I found having
to re-enter five screens of personal data every time I wanted to take another
look at the prices extremely annoying.
Since MG cannot easily be shopped against other online sites, it is
essentially directed to borrowers who have decided to get their loan from one
loan provider. This requires a certain amount of faith that they will fare well
on MG, without checking competitors. Is such faith justified?
I set out to do a comprehensive set of price comparisons against five UMLs,
covering a variety of market niches, which I hoped would answer that question.
Unfortunately, I was able to complete only a few before MG bounced me off, and
I was disinclined to make it my life's work. In the few I did, MG did not have
the lowest price but they were in the ball park.
The large amount of data MG requires borrowers to provide before they can
get prices, which I found so irksome, does have one advantage for borrowers: It
allows MG to better assess whether the borrower meets the lender's underwriting
requirements. Their prices are therefore less likely than those of UMLs to
require adjustment later in the process.
Bottom line: If you prefer to select one loan provider rather than spend
time shopping, MG looks like a good choice. Right now, they are licensed in
California, New York, Florida and Idaho.
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