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  • Bad Credit Home Mortgage Loan – 3 Tips to Get a Loan

    Posted on May 16th, 2010 admin No comments
    Ross T Richards asked:




    At some stage in your life you are most likely to suffer from financial hardship. This can occur for a vast number of reasons. If this is your time or current situation let us take a look at three tips to help you recover as quick as you possibly can:

    1. A bad credit home mortgage loan is somewhat rear but certainly not impossible. First of all you will need to make a list of the financial lenders who are prepared to lend money to clients with bad credit. Now do bear in mind that the interest rates, terms and conditions of the loan will be very strict and probably higher. What you need to look for is a company with the lessor interest rate. You must also understand that these companies charge a higher interest rate than standard lenders because their clients have a higher risk of defaulting on their mortgage loan.

    2. Banking history is very important whether you have bad debt or not. Lenders prefer to know that you are able to save. The amount is not important it is more so that you are able to do it. If you can show at least six months of a savings history that is more brownie points in your favor. If you think you are not able to save any additional money, seek the advice of a budget service. They will assist you with money management ideas and techniques.

    3. Clear some of your debt. If you can at least make a start to clear your debt again this is favorable for getting a bad credit home mortgage loan. Ignoring your debt till you reach the point of bankruptcy is not a good plan! Talk to your creditors to see what type of payment arrangement can be organized. You will be surprised how attitudes can change when you are willing to repay your debt. Ignorance annoys more people than you can imagine especially bank managers!

    Amber
  • Mortgage Charges: What Mers and a Microwave Have in Common

    Posted on February 23rd, 2009 admin No comments
    Kristin Abouelata – Home Loans asked:


    As you’re sitting across from your mortgage lender who is going over, line by line, the charges and fees associated with your loan, he/she mentions MERS.  It’s only costing you $4.95, so you don’t pay particular attention to it.  I mean after all, $4.95 is nothing compared to the state tax stamp fee or other line items you see.  But, aren’t you curious as to exactly what MERS is?  At face value it sounds like something you should get an inoculation to avoid.  But in actuality, it’s a little system that has revolutionized the mortgage industry.

     

    MERS is kind of like a microwave.  You never knew how much you depended upon it until you consider taking it away.  Seriously.  Our microwave was broken for a short period of time, and I couldn’t believe how much we used it or how much it simplified our lives.  Half the food I cooked became a real trial to prepare the old fashioned way. Not to mention heating up leftovers. Ironically, it’s a very similar situation for the mortgage industry if they had to do away with MERS all of a sudden.  It would be perplexing, annoying and time consuming.

     

    MERS stands for Mortgage Electronic Registration System. If you visit the MERS website (www.mersinc.org), you can read their overview: “MERS was created by the mortgage banking industry to streamline the mortgage process by using electronic commerce to eliminate paper.  Our mission is to register every mortgage loan in the United States on the MERS (registered trademark) System.”  Nice.  Everyone likes paperless systems these days.

     

    In the old days, if you sold a loan on the secondary market, you had to assign the mortgage to the new buyer.  You created a paper assignment and recorded it at the courthouse.  If there was an error on the assignment, you had to correct it (have it initialed by the appropriate parties) and re-record it.  Then you sent this original recorded document to the new buyer for them to keep.  If they in turn sold the loan, they had to prepare another assignment, record it and forward it, along with the first recorded assignment, onto the new buyer.  And so on and so forth.  Lots of paper being printed, recorded, regenerated and reconstituted.  MERS came up with a fabulous system to eliminate this nightmare.  Now, when you sign a mortgage, MERS assigns a unique identifying number to that mortgage.  The lender, upon closing, registers the loan with MERS to show it exists.  Then, any transfers can be done electronically.  The mortgage servicing and mortgagees can also be tracked electronically, which allows for title searches to be streamlined.  It’s a beautiful thing.  This system has saved a lot of time and energy for the industry.

     

    However, if you were to tell a mortgage operations person that MERS was going away, and they were going back to paper assignments, it wouldn’t go over well.  They would probably be at a total loss.  Sort of like tossing someone a bag of popcorn and telling them to cook it without a microwave.



    RUDY