Long Beach Home Purchase - Financing Rip-Offs To AvoidLong Beach Home Purchase - Financing Rip-Offs To Avoid
Long Beach Homes, Realtors...... and Lenders Oh My!
The sub-prime problems have really shaken up the industry and have changed not just the way loans are approved but relationships between Realtors and their preferred lenders. Recently I sent a buyer to a local Long Beach Lender, who we have used occasionally on and off for several years. The client needed credit cleaning so they would be in the lenders hands until such time as they were ready to begin their house hunt - about 2 months was estimated. I made a follow-up call to the lender, about 5 weeks into the 2 months, to check on their progress and asked "How are things going with Mary and John?" He replied "Who?". I was stunned! He quickly remembered who I was referring to and then told me that the credit cleaner had some personal issues and it didn't work out. HUH? No calls to me and my buyers were left unattended. The lender apparently didn't understand the level of trust that was placed in his hands.
Mary and John came to my office the next day. We spent the entire day together. They called Brian Brady, Americas Most Opinionated Mortgage Broker who laid out a very do-able financial plan for them. They were treated with respect, loans were arranged for them-at very reasonable interest rates, pre-penalty's were done away with, a financial plan was put into place for the buyers to re-finance both loans in 6 months and make their dream of owning a Long Beach Home come true, without getting raped financially. (There is enough equity in this Long Beach property to allow this strategy.) Mary and John opened escrow yesterday on a Long Beach Home that they are ever so excited about.
Brian provided us with a loan-commitment letter immediately. For those of you who are unfamiliar with this term let me explain this in simple terms. Unlike the run of the mill loan brokers, Brian is a Direct Lender. That means that the actual lenders trust him so much they have given him the power to approve the loan, based on their guidelines, himself. Brian is the end of the line. If Brian says you are approved, you are approved! I would like to explain the value of a Loan Commitment letter (or lock-in letter).
Any lender who cannot provide you with a LOAN COMMITMENT LETTER within a couple of days, has not secured the loan on your behalf. No matter what they are telling you! This is the reason so many Long Beach Homes are falling out of escrow. Agents do not know enough about the loan process to demand lock-in letters, or loan commitment letters from the buyers lender.
Listen closely Buyers: If you have a loan commitment letter, you do not have to worry about being Baited and Switched.
Be careful they are waiting for you.
You speak with several lenders who assure you that the big bad OTHER LENDER was just ripping you off, but they can get you such a deal:" ("Do you know that old saying? If it sounds too good to be true.... it probably is.") So you go ahead and sign on for the lower rate. Don't feel bad, a lot of other people have fallen into this same trap. These lenders are charismatic and convincing. But they do not provide you with a LOAN COMMITMENT LETTER, because they cannot, they have not secured the loan.
A couple of weeks into your escrow the big bad lender calls the poor little buyer and states "You know that loan I mentioned (no commitment words being minced here) well that program has been discontinued, but I have this other program that is a good fit and will only cost you a tiny bit more in interest. He never mentions the fee schedule for this loan and you don't know to ask. When it comes time to sign your loan documents, the lender is nowhere to be found, the fees are double what you were originally quoted, the lender will not answer his phone, neither will his manager and you are faced with a nightmare decision to make. Either pay the undisclosed outrageous fees, or back out of the escrow within days of closing, possibly losing your good faith deposit, maybe the seller will extend the escrow a month so you can try to secure another loan? Never a good situation to be in.
***Clients names are fictitious, but you know who you are.
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http://www.longbeachrealestatehome.com/008FF4 Posted on May 18, 2007 10:38:44 by Laurie Manny
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To begin your search for the perfect home or to sell your home in the Long Beach area, begin your journey by calling Laurie Manny at (562) 212-5420.











As a Long Beach Realtor many buyers contact me in need of other services. We Realtors generally have a group of vendors that have become valuable team members. Vendors who have proven themselves over the years to provide great customer service and care for our clients.
He called the buyers, brought them into his office for a 3 hour meeting and arranged a loan for them, then called me to let me know what he had done and the terms of the loan. He complained about a collection on Johns credit for $130 and one on Mary's for $30. Both were items in dispute that they did not owe, minor junk that should not have mattered. As a result he quoted them an additional 2% interest on both the first and second, jacked their fees up to over $14,000 plus a $6500 origination fee and told both the buyers and myself this was the best they could hope for. When I asked him if he was actually going to be able to close this loan he said "I hope so?". Well folks, that is just no-where near good enough for me or my clients. He is soooooo fired! I call this kind of work shlock and there is no place for it in my business, not now, not ever!
Bait and Switched, hmmmm, how does that happen? Well a realistic l







