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SECRETS
EXPOSED!
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Insights,
Opinions & Commentary
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| Knowledge
is Power |
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Have
you heard this before? "So what's the big
deal with me learning about my industry? As a
new owner of my own shop I know it's all about
Production. Making bank deposits in my company
checkbook because I bring in customers and
closing them – so that's where I focus all my
attention! How to find customers, sell them
& close them - is all that matters to
me!"
That's actually a common thought, and the
absolutely wrong one to focus on. That's our
opinion on that limited thinking about staying
in business over any length of time. Our
industry is slow to change many things and the
one hand, yet changing all the time. Which is
one reason mortgage loan providers have to stay
flexible and nimble, to survive longer than just
a year or two.
Instead, had you been attending State &
National conferences and conventions to ‘learn
and not play'; carefully studied industry trade
papers on a regular basis, imagine what you
would have seen coming, and prepared yourself
for: Potential law suits against you, after
having seen articles about mortgage brokers
getting sued who didn' clearly realize they were
responsible under Truth in Lending (not just
‘lenders'), when you advertise to consumers by
flyer, newspaper, Internet. etc. as compliance
with Reg. Z disclosures is mandatory (12 C.F.R.
Part 226, Supplement 1, Official Staff
Interpretations, 226.2: Definitions and Rules of
Construction 01/01/01). Like maybe you have a
website, you post Rates but neglect to show APR
as well.
You would have been reading about the Gramm
Leach Bliley Financial Modernization Act of 1999
– Privacy Statement and know that the required
security protection features, needs to be in
place pursuant to the Federal Trade Commission
Regulations on or about July 15, 2003; and that
as per 16 CFR Section 314(d) you are responsible
for seeing your outside service providers –
including processors and telemarketers – (1)
have a manual from you, and (2) that you have a
written contract with each of them stating they
will comply with GLB 67 Federal Register (like
maybe you use an outside processor and 'hoped'
she had adequate security measures in place for
your files at her house). Or how about the new
telemarketing - no call lists and fax
restriction laws? You might not have set up an
expensive telemarketing department to solicit
former customers, or new ones either. Besides
the fines you may get, you would not have spent
the money to start up those endeavors! Only to
shut them down 60 days later ….
Or what if you operated in South Carolina, and
saw how the predatory regulations devastated
your North Carolina office's production, when
they had major legislation changes. Had you been
reading the trade papers all along, you might
have side-stepped the subsequent Georgia fiasco,
where almost every major lender "ran for
the hills" – and where you had started to
open up a new branch office maybe!
Unfortunately, we have heard many stories where
new shop owners didn't pay much attention to
current events in this ever changing industry,
and they were driven out of business.
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| OUR
NEWS |
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101' & our 'Subprime 101' are the two most
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Mortgage Industry" training collection!
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in future issues. Thank You
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| Prime
vs. Subprime - Mysterious Stips |
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We
spotted this question on an Internet residential
real estate mortgage industry discussion group
last week. "I continually see posts from
people with last minute closing issues.
Specifically, stips/conditions that mysteriously
appear. From what I am able to gather from the
posts, it appears that the loans involved are
not prime/A paper loans. My personal experience
is that last minute stips/conditions never
happens with prime/A Paper loans, but is
generally the norm with subprime. I do all my
own processing and do both refinances and
purchases, and have dealt with numerous prime
lenders and numerous subprime lenders. And the
results are consistent. Thus, I can only assume
that last minute "out of the blue"
stips/conditions are simply the nature of the
subprime business ...."
The conclusion drawn by the individual who
started this commentary is partially true. What
appears to be ‘last minute out of the blue
stips' are indeed the nature of the
non-conforming industry when incomplete packages
are submitted to wholesale funding sources.
Because, unlike ‘black-box' conforming
lending, the applicants are not uniform. In
conforming, guidelines and approvals can be
programmed into computers, and loan
determinations can be effortlessly obtained via
data entry in their intelligent Internet
accessed engines, resulting in instantaneous
decisions. Of course, there is a certain
technique to this procedure, but generally it's
pretty clear-cut. The subprime customer, at
times have uncommon kinds of income, unusual
property types, and they use their equity
differently (if it's a routine non-purchase re-fi
kind of transaction), usually debt consolidation
loans not rate & term re-fi's. Making the
transition from black-box stip lists to the
non-conforming processes, signals a need to
study all the pieces of paper you collect in a
subprime file carefully. They often are full of
surprises – that's the difference!
Will this situation continue for this
individual? Probably so. Even "good"
conforming loan providers need to understand
what all the differences are between these
different types of lending. If you have
experienced a similar situation to this poster,
we suggest you hook up with a good
trainer/mentor consultant right away. Every loan
file that gets goofed up, could end up costing
you many thousands of dollars in lost income,
and a lot of heartburn too!
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