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Scientists
who study and measure human behavior find that buying
a home is one of the most stressful experiences of our
lives. Contributing significantly to this anxiety is waiting
for the mortgage to be approved. Much of the homebuyers'
unease results from not knowing what is going on. You
know credit checks anad verifications of employment are
taking place-but what makes the difference between getting
or not getting that loan, and how long does it take? This
page can dispel at least some of that anxiety by detailing
the steps the lender takes in making the loan decision-process
called "underwriting."
Listed
below are the topics addressed on this page.
Are You a Good Risk?
The Initial Interview
Consumer Safeguards
Is Your Income Sufficient?
Income Requirements
Income/Expense Standards
Debt
Is Your Credit Good?
Credit Information Safeguards
Can You Make The Down Payment?
Is The House Worth The Price?
Do I Get The Loan?
Are
You a Good Risk?
Just as wise stock market investors carefully research
the companies in which they plan to buy stock, careful
mortgage lenders investigate the financial background
of each loan applicant. In lending the prospective homebuyer
the money to buy the home, the lender assumes a long-term
risk. The assumption is that the borrower is going to
eventually repay the loan and in the meantime make the
loan payments on time.
Once
all the information is collected and eligibility is established,
the lender decides whether to extend the homebuyer credit.
In other words, lenders analyze the risk of lending (making
the investment), and match it to an appropriate interest
rate and loan term.
There
are no established, industry-wide standards for underwriting,
though most lenders follow standards set by government-related
agencies, private mortgage insurers, private mortgage
investors or institutional investors. The vast majority
of mortgage lenders attempt to approve a loan application
if at all prudently possible, but to approve a loan that
will become delinquent serves no one's best interest.
The burden falls on the lender to establish that an applicant
is qualified.
The
Initial Interview
The process usually begins with an interview where the
prospective borrowers and a representative of the lender
sit down to discuss the potential loan. Increasingly,
however, lenders are not requiring a face-to-face meeting
and accept a completed application by mail. Many lenders
today will even qualify you for a loan before you begin
to shop for a home. Many lenders advertise this service
in the local newspaper, but any lender can provide it.
Knowing approximately how much money you are qualified
to borrow can save you time and prevent disappointment
when you are looking at houses.
When
going to see a lender for an initial interview, you should
take:
Purchase contract for the house if you have one. Certificate
of Eligibility from the Veterans Administration (VA) if
you want a VA loan. (Note: If you do not have one, the
lender will obtain the information for you from your service
records. Bank account numbers and the address of your
bank branch. This will save the lender time in checking
your credit. Credit card bills for the past several billing
periods. Pay stubs, W2 forms or other proof of employment
and salary. If you are self-employed, you should be able
to present balance sheets, tax returns and other information
about your business.
The
important document that gets the whole process rolling
is the loan application. It asks in-depth questions concerning
you, your income, assets and liabilities, your credit,
and your legal history, as well as a description of the
property you wish to buy. The lender will verify the information
you provide on the application before making the decision
whether to extend the loan.
Applicants
usually will know after the initial interview if they
are qualified for the type and size of loan they want.
Lenders try to let the borrower know as quickly as possible
if they really are not qualified for the size of loan
that they request.
Consumer
Safeguards
The initial interview sets in motion some important consumer
safeguards. The Truth-in-Lending disclosure requirements
provide the applicant with an estimated yearly cost for
the loan - the Annual Percentage Rate (APR). The other
important disclosure that follows from the Real Estate
Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA), a federal law. This
requires lenders to provide homebuyers with information
on known and estimated closing costs.
The
initial interview also starts a clock that will allow
applicants to know whether or not they have been approved
in about 30 to 60 days from the submission of a completed
application. If the loan is denied, the lender must disclose
the specific reason (s) for the rejection.
Is
Your Income Sufficient?
Following the initial interview, or loan application,
the first step the lender takes is to verify your employment
or income. This is done by mailing employment and income
forms to current and past employers, and it will help
the lender determine how much debt you can successfully
take on.
Income
Requirements
A general rule is that you can qualify for a loan of up
to twice the family's income (i.e. a family with income
of $30,000 a year usually can qualify for a mortgage of
up to $60,000). Often, the amount you earn may not be
as important as how you earn it. Bonuses and commissions
can vary greatly from year to year, and lenders are reluctant
to depend on them if they make up a large percentage of
your income. There are similar problems when a large portion
of your salary is based on overtime pay, and you rely
on it to qualify for the loan. In the case of bonuses
and commissions, the lender will want to verify your bonus
and commission status back two or three years to get a
better idea of what you earn from those sources on average.
In the case of overtime, the lender will establish whether
the work is expected to continue and whether or not the
amount of overtime income is reasonable for the extra
work. After establishing these points, the mortgage lender
will make a decision as to how much to allow for these
additional sources of income.
If
you are self-employed, you should plan on producing a
balance sheet, profit and loss statements and copies of
your federal income tax returns for the past two or three
years. Tax returns may also be required to verify other
income claims, such as when income from securities is
a major source for mortgage payments.
Income/Expense
Standards
Lenders use a set of general standards (income/expense
ratios which show how much income is used for various
expenses) to test the application for qualification. These
standards are based on what experience shows a homeowner
can spend to own the home and also take care of other
long-term financial obligations, though lenders use their
own discretion in making the final decision.
Lenders
generally say that housing expenses (including mortgage
payments, insurance, taxes and special assessments) should
not exceed 25 percent to 28 percent of the homeowner's
gross monthly income. For Federal Housing Administration
(FHA) loans, this figure is not to exceed 29 percent of
the homebuyer's gross monthly income. With loans guaranteed
by the Department of Veteran's Affairs (VA), lenders measure
prospective homebuyers with Residual Income, or the monthly
income minus expenses. The remainder is then measured
against geographical and family size data to qualify the
borrower.
Your
lender will work out these figures for you when you sit
down to discuss the mortgage you want.
FHA
Loans Housing Expenses = 29% gross monthly income Housing
Expenses plus Long-Term Debt = 41% gross monthly income
Debt
Lenders usually define long-term debt as monthly expenses
extending more than 10 months into the future. These expenses
should not exceed 33 percent to 36 percent of the homeowner's
gross monthly income. FHA-insured mortgage lenders define
long-term debt as monthly expenses extending 12 months
or more into the future, and look for these expenses plus
housing expenses not to exceed 41 percent of the homeowner's
gross monthly income.
Is
Your Credit Good?
Before extending credit, lenders will want to examine
the risk of not getting the money back. To do this lenders
will look at four crucial aspects of your credit history
when you apply for a mortgage: History of past credit
- what were the size and terms of past loans? Type of
Credit - have you obtained real estate, auto, personal
or other installment loans in the past? Attitude toward
credit - are active accounts current , and is there any
recent bankruptcy or judgment? Lapses in employment or
debt repayment - how many unexplained lapses are there,
and for how long?
From
the information uncovered by these four questions, lenders
can develop a fair idea of just how you will handle your
responsibilities once you have signed the contract for
repaying the loan. However, lenders cannot examine everything
when putting together a credit history. They have two
extremely important limitations on credit information
gathering.
Credit
Information Safeguards
The first limitation is the Fair Credit Reporting Act,
which was designed to ensure fair and accurate consumer
credit reporting. The Fair Credit Reporting Act stipulates
that lenders must certify the purpose for which the information
is sought and use it for no other purpose. The Act also
prohibits reports based on subjective information from
neighbors and others concerning character, general reputation
and other personal aspects. Certain other credit information,
such as bankruptcy more than seven years before, is also
prohibited unless the principal involved in the action
was $50,000 or more.
The
second consumer safeguard limiting the credit information
lenders can use to make a mortgage decision is the Equal
Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA). ECOA prohibits discrimination
in lending based on race, color, national origin, sex,
marital status, age (provided the applicant may legally
contract), and the fact that all or part of the applicant's
income comes from a public assistance program.
Lender's
are also prohibited by law from asking: Questions concerning
the applicant's spouse, unless the spouse will be contractually
liable, the spouse's income will be used to qualify, the
applicants live in a community property state, or the
applicant will use child support, alimony or separate
maintenance payments from a spouse or former spouse to
qualify.
questions
concerning future parenting plans (although the lender
may ask the ages and current number of children the applicant
has).
Can
You Make The Down Payment?
Lenders expect homebuyers to have enough money available
to make the down payment of between 10 and 20 percent
of the asking price for the house-though FHA and VA loans
require smaller down payment (0 to 5 percent) and to pay
their share of the closing costs (3 percent to 6 percent
of the loan amount). If, however, you cannot come up with
a 20 percent down payment, a lender can make you a loan
for as little as 5 percent down. He will, however, require
you to carry private mortgage insurance for conventional
(not FHA or VA loans), for which you will pay a premium
for the first year and an additional monthly fee in subsequent
years.
Sources
on which prospective homebuyers may draw for the down
payment and the closing costs include savings, stocks/bonds,
Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs), pension funds,
real state holdings, life insurance policies, mutual funds
or employee savings plans.
Homebuyers
may also rely on another source of funding for the down
payment-a gift, or money given by a parent or other relative
that need not be repaid. a person may give another person
up to $10,000 per year without either party being taxed.
A married couple, therefore, could give a child or spouse
as much as $40,000 for a down payment tax-free. Remember,
however, that if you use gift money for a down payment,
you will need to present a letter so stating and signed
by both the giver(s) and the receiver( s) to your lender.
Mortgage
lenders send a form to the homebuyer's savings institution(s)
to verify the amount available for purchasing the house,
as well as the amount of outstanding loans with that institution.
Is
The House You Are Buying Worth The Price?
Mortgage lenders also examine the real estate being purchased
to make sure that, in case of foreclosure, the lender
has a salable property. The property's acceptability is
established by an independent appraisal.
The
appraiser looks not only at what the home is worth today,
but how the neighborhood's dynamics will affect the property
value in the future. The three main points the appraiser
checks are:
Physical security of the property. age, structural soundness,
landscaping, etc.
Location.
The kind of neighborhood, surrounding houses, access to
transportation, commercial development nearby, etc.
Local
government's plans for the area. how zoning and taxes
will affect the property in the years to come.
Do
I Get The Loan?
Your lender has made all the checks. Your income, credit,
assets, property and all necessary documentation have
been scrutinized. Now comes the big decision.

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