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1 Month Option ARM
Same as Flexible Payment ARM.
3/2 Downpayment
Programs offered by some lenders under which a borrower who
is able to secure a grant or gift equal to 2% of the down
payment will only have to provide a 3% down payment from
their own funds. This can be a good deal for a cash-short
borrower.
80/10/10, 80/15/5, and 80/20/0 loan plans
Combination first mortgages for 80% of sale price or value
and second mortgages for 10%, 15%, or 20%. The purpose is to
avoid mortgage insurance, which is required on first
mortgages that exceed 80% of value. See Piggy Back Loans:
Two Mortgages Cost Less than One?
12 MTA
An interest rate index that is used on some ARMs. It is the
average of the most recent 12 monthly values of the Treasury
One-Year Constant Maturity series. See Which Adjustable Rate
Mortgage Index Is the Best?
12 MTA Pay Option ARM
Same as Flexible Payment ARM.
3.95% ARM
A monthly ARM on which the initial rate is 3.95%. See Is a
3.95% Adjustable Rate Mortgage a Good Deal?
100% loan
A loan with no down payment. The loan amount equals the
property value. See 100% Mortgage Loans: Blessing or Curse?
125% loan
A loan for 125% of property value.
40-Year Mortgage
A mortgage with a term of 40 years. See 40-Year Loan or
Modify the 30 and 15?
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A-Credit
A consumer with the best credit rating, deserving of the
lowest prices that lenders offer. Most lenders require a
FICO score above 720 (see Credit Issues). There is seldom
any payoff for being above the A-credit threshold (see Does
the Mortgage Market Reward Virtue?), but you pay a penalty
for being below it.
Acceleration clause
A contractual provision that gives the lender the right to
demand repayment of the entire loan balance in the event
that the borrower violates one or more clauses in the note.
See Should I Lie About My Income?
Accrued interest
Interest that is earned but not paid, adding to the amount
owed. Same as Negative amortization.
Adjustable rate mortgage (ARM)
A mortgage on which the interest rate, after an initial
period, can be changed by the lender. While ARMs in many
countries abroad allow rate changes at the lender's
discretion ("discretionary ARMs"), in the US most ARMs base
rate changes on a pre-selected interest rate index over
which the lender has no control. These are "indexed ARMs".
There is no discretion associated with rate changes on
indexed ARMs. For articles on ARMs, click on Adjustable Rate
Mortgages.
Adjustment interval
On an ARM, the time between changes in the interest rate or
monthly payment. The rate adjustment interval is often
displayed in x/y format, where "x" is the period until the
first adjustment, and "y" is the adjustment period
thereafter. For example, a 5/1 ARM is one on which the
initial rate holds for 5 years, after which it is adjusted
every year. The rate adjustment interval and the payment
adjustment interval are the same on a fully amortizing ARM,
but may not be on a negative amortization ARM. See Should
You Fear Negative Amortization?
Affordability
A consumer's capacity to afford a house. Affordability is
usually expressed in terms of the maximum price the consumer
could pay for a house, and be approved for the mortgage
required to pay that amount. Read How Much House Can You
Afford? , How Much House Should You Buy? and Mortgage
Affordability: Should Government Require It?
Agency
The legal requirement that one party in a relationship has a
fiduciary obligation to the other. See Mortgage Brokers:
Agents or Independent Contractors? And Should Mortgage
Brokers Be Required To Be Agents?
Agreement of sale
A contract signed by buyer and seller stating the terms and
conditions under which a property will be sold.
Alt-A
A mortgage risk categorization that falls between prime and
sub-prime, but is closer to prime. Also referred to as "A
minus".
Alternative documentation
Expedited and simpler documentation requirements designed to
speed up the loan approval process. Instead of verifying
employment with the applicant's employer and bank deposits
with the applicant's bank, the lender will accept paycheck
stubs, W-2s, and the borrower's original bank statements.
Alternative documentation remains “full documentation”, as
opposed to the other documentation options. See What Are
Mortgtage Documentation Requirements?
Amortization
The repayment of principal from scheduled mortgage payments
that exceed the interest due. The scheduled payment less the
interest equals amortization. The loan balance declines by
the amount of the scheduled payment, plus the amount of any
extra payment. For a detailed explanation, see Mortgage
Amortization: How Does It Work? If the payment is less than
the interest due, the balance rises, which is negative
amortization.
Amortization schedule
A table showing the mortgage payment, broken down by
interest and amortization, the loan balance, tax and
insurance payments if made by the lender, and the balance of
the tax/insurance escrow account.
Amount financed
On the Truth in Lending form, the loan amount less "prepaid
finance charges", which are lender fees paid at closing. For
example, if the loan is for $100,000 and the borrower pays
the lender $4,000 in fees, the amount financed is $96,000. A
useless number. See Another Truth in Lending Lie.
Annual percentage rate
See APR.
Application
A request for a loan that includes the information about the
potential borrower, the property and the requested loan that
the solicited lender needs to make a decision. In a narrower
sense, the application refers to a standardized application
form called the "1003" which the borrower is obliged to fill
out.
Application fee
A fee that some lenders charge to accept an application. It
may or may not cover other costs such as a property
appraisal or credit report, and it may or may not be
refundable if the lender declines the loan.
Appraisal
A written estimate of a property's current market value
prepared by an appraiser.
Appraiser
A professional with knowledge of real estate markets and
skilled in the practice of appraisal. When a property is
appraised in connection with a loan, the appraiser is
selected by the lender, but the appraisal fee is usually
paid by the borrower.
Appraisal fee
A fee charged by an appraiser for the appraisal of a
particular property.
APR
The Annual Percentage Rate, which must be reported by
lenders under Truth in Lending regulations. It is a
comprehensive measure of credit cost to the borrower that
takes account of the interest rate, points, and flat dollar
charges. It is also adjusted for the time value of money, so
that dollars paid by the borrower up-front carry a heavier
weight than dollars paid ten years down the road. However,
the APR is calculated on the assumption that the loan runs
to term, and is therefore potentially deceptive for
borrowers with short time horizons. Read Does the Annual
Percentage Rate (APR) Help? Other articles about the APR are
cited under Mandatory Mortgage Disclosure. For a summary of
the differences between the APR and interest cost, see
Annual Percentage Rate Versus Interest Cost.
Approval
Acceptance of the borrower's loan application. Approval
means that the borrower meets the lender's qualification
requirements and also its underwriting requirements. In some
cases, especially where approval is provided quickly as with
automated underwriting systems, the approval may be
conditional on further verification of information provided
by the borrower.
ARM
An adjustable rate mortgage.
Assumption
A method of selling real estate where the buyer of the
property agrees to become responsible for the repayment of
an existing loan on the property. Unless the lender also
agrees, however, the seller remains liable for the mortgage.
Assumable mortgage
A mortgage contract that allows, or does not prohibit, a
creditworthy buyer from assuming the mortgage contract of
the seller. Assuming a loan will save the buyer money if the
rate on the existing loan is below the current market rate,
and closing costs are avoided as well. A loan with a
"due-on-sale" clause stipulating that the mortgage must be
repaid upon sale of the property, is not assumable. See Are
Mortgage Assumptions a Good Deal?
Auction site
See Lead-Generation site.
Authorized user
Someone authorized by the original credit card holder to use
the holder’s card. The card-holder is responsible for the
charges of the authorized user, but the authorized user is
not responsible for paying any charges, including his own.
But sometimes authorized users are dunned for the unpaid
bills of the card holder. See Are Authorized Users At Risk?
Automated underwriting
A computer-driven process for informing the loan applicant
very quickly, sometimes within a few minutes, whether the
applicant will be approved, or whether the application will
be forwarded to an underwriter. The quick decision is based
on information provided by the applicant, which is subject
to later verification, and other information retrieved
electronically including information about the borrower's
credit history and the subject property.
Automated underwriting system
A particular computerized system for doing automated
underwriting. Mortgage insurers and some large lenders have
developed such systems, but the most widely used are Fannie
Mae’s “Desktop Underwriter” and Freddie Mac’s “Loan
Prospector”.
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Back-end fee or commission
Mortgage broker income paid by the lender, same as
yield-spread premium and Negative points.
"Bad-faith estimate"
The practice of low-balling figures for settlement costs on
the Good Faith Estimate to make them appear more attractive
to mortgage shoppers. See A Bad Faith Estimate: Any
Recourse?
Balance
The amount of the original loan remaining to be paid. It is
equal to the loan amount less the sum of all prior payments
of principal. See Mortgage Amortization: How Does it Work?
Balloon mortgage
A mortgage which is payable in full after a period that is
shorter than the term. In most cases, the balance is
refinanced with the current or another lender. On a 7-year
balloon loan, for example, the payment is usually calculated
over a 30-year period, and the balance at the end of the 7th
year must be repaid or refinanced at that time. Balloon
mortgages are similar to ARMs in that the borrower trades
off a lower rate in the early years against the risk of a
higher rate later. They are riskier than ARMs because there
is no limit on the extent of a rate increase at the end of
the balloon period. See Balloon Mortgages.
Balloon
The loan balance remaining at the time the loan contract
calls for full repayment.
Bimonthly mortgage
A mortgage on which the borrower pays half the monthly
payment on the first day of the month, and the other half on
the 15th. See Alternative Early Payoff Plans.
Biweekly mortgage
A mortgage on which the borrower pays half the monthly
payment every two weeks. Because this results in 26 (rather
than 24) payments per year, the biweekly mortgage amortizes
before term. See Biweekly Mortgages.
Blemished borrower
A borrowers have one or more of the following risk factors:
they can only make a very small or no down payment; they
cannot fully document their income and assets; their
property is something other than a single-family home; their
loan is intended to raise cash or to purchase an investment
property; they have low credit scores; their income is low
relative to their expected total obligations; and their
mortgage carries an adjustable rate that will result in
substantially higher payments in a few years. See HR 3915
Would Stick it to Blemished Borrowers.
Bridge loan
A short-term loan, usually from a bank, that "bridges" the
period between the closing date of a home purchase and the
closing date of a home sale. Unsecured bridge loans are
available if the borrower has a firm contract to sell the
existing house. Secured bridge loans are available without
such a contract. Read Buying a New House Before Selling the
Old One.
Builder-financed construction
Having the builder finance the construction. Read Should the
Builder Finance Construction?
Buy-down
A permanent buy-down is the payment of points in exchange
for a lower interest rate. See Points. A temporary buy-down
concentrates the rate reduction in the early years. See
Temporary Buy-Down.
Buy-up
Paying a higher interest rate in exchange for a rebate by
the lender which reduces upfront costs. See Negative Points.
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Cap
Same as Float-down.
Cash Flow Option Loan
Same as Flexible Payment ARM.
Cash-Out refi
Refinancing for an amount in excess of the balance on the
old loan plus settlement costs. The borrower takes
"cash-out" of the transaction. This way of raising cash is
usually an alternative to taking out a home equity loan. For
a discussion of the relative merits of the two approaches,
read Debt Consolidation With a Cash-Out Refinance.
Closing
On a home purchase, the process of transferring ownership
from the seller to the buyer, the disbursement of funds from
the buyer and the lender to the seller, and the execution of
all the documents associated with the sale and the loan. On
a refinance, there is no transfer of ownership, but the
closing includes repayment of the old lender.
Closing costs
Same as Settlement costs.
Closing date
The date on which the closing occurs. See Mortgage Closing
Date: Does it Matter?
CMG plan
A technique for repaying a loan early that involves using
the mortgage as a substitute for a checking account. See The
CMG Plan: Your Mortgage as a Checking Account.
Co-Borrowers
One or more persons who have signed the note, and are
equally responsible for repaying the loan. Unmarried
co-borrowers who live together are advised to agree
beforehand on what happens if they split. See On Buying a
House With a Domestic Partner.
COFI
Cost of funds index. One of many interest rate indexes used
to determine interest rate adjustments on an adjustable rate
mortgage. See What Is a Coffee Loan? and Which Adjustable
Rate Mortgage Index Is the Best?
Conforming mortgage
A loan eligible for purchase by the two major Federal
agencies that buy mortgages, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. See
What Do Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Do?
Construction financing
The method of financing used when a borrower contracts to
have a house built, as opposed to purchasing a completed
house. See Pitfalls in Financing Home Construction .
Contract knavery
Inserting provisions into a loan contract that severely
disadvantage the borrower, without the borrower’s knowledge,
and sometimes despite oral assurances to the contrary.
Prepayment penalties are perhaps the most frequently cited
subject of such abuse. Read What Is Predatory Lending?
Conventional mortgage
A home mortgage that is neither FHA-insured nor
VA-guaranteed.
Conversion option
The option to convert an ARM to an FRM at some point during
its life. These loans are likely to carry a higher rate or
points than ARMs that do not have the option. See Conversion
Option on an Adjustable Rate Mortgage?
Correspondent
A lender who delivers loans to a (usually larger) wholesale
lender against prior price commitments the wholesaler has
made to the correspondent. The commitment protects the
correspondent against pipeline risk. See What Is a
Correspondent Lender?
COSI
Cost of savings index. One of many interest rate indexes
used to determine interest rate adjustments on an adjustable
rate mortgage. See Which Adjustable Rate Mortgage Index Is
the Best?
Co-signing a note
Assuming responsibility for someone else's loan in the event
that that party defaults. A risk not to be taken lightly.
See The Hazards of Co-signing, and Co-Signing a Mortgaage:
How Much Help?
Credit report
A report from a credit bureau containing detailed
information bearing on credit-worthiness, including the
individual's credit history. See What Is a Credit Report?
and Credit Reports and Credit Scores.
Credit score
A single numerical score, based on an individual's credit
history, that measures that individual's credit worthiness.
Credit scores are as good as the algorithm used to derive
them. The most widely used credit score is called FICO for
Fair Issac Co. which developed it. Many of the columns in
Mortgage Credit Issues discuss factors that affect the FICO
score, including Raise Credit Score by Paying Delinquencies?
and Do Credit Inquiries Hurt Your Credit Credit?
Cumulative interest
The sum of all interest payments to date or over the life of
the loan. This is an incomplete measure of the cost of
credit to the borrower because it does not include up-front
cash payments, and it is not adjusted for the time value of
money. See Interest cost.
Current index value
The most recently published value of the index used to
adjust the interest rate on an indexed ARM.
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Deadbeat
A borrower who doesn't pay. See When Good Credit Marries Bad
Credit. And Can a Deadbeat Pay Cash?
Debtaholic
A borrower who cannot handle debt except by complete
abstinence. See Are Credit Problems Cured by the Passage of
Time?
Debt consolidation
Rolling short-term debt into a home mortgage loan, either at
the time of home purchase or later. For columns on the
subject, see Debt Consolidation.
Debt elimination
Scams designed to relieve you of your money by promising to
eliminate your mortgage debt. See Debt Elimination - Dupes
Apply Here.
Deed in lieu of foreclosure
Deeding the property over to the lender as an alternative to
having the lender foreclose on the property. See Options
When Equity in Your Home is Gone and Mortgage Payment
Problems: What If You Can't Pay?
Default
Failure of the borrower to honor the terms of the loan
agreement. Lenders (and the law) usually view borrowers
delinquent 90 days or more as in default.
Deferred interest
Same as negative amortization.
Delinquency
A mortgage payment that is more than 30 days late. For
articles on payment problems, see Payment Problems. Don't
confuse with Late payment.
Demand clause
A clause in the note that allows the lender to demand
repayment at any time for any reason. See What Is a Demand
Clause?
Direct lender
Same as lender.
Disaster Myopia
The tendency of lenders to ignore potential shocks that can
cause them major losses if a long period has elapsed since a
shock has occurred. See Upheaval in the Sub-Prime Mortgage
Market.
Discount mortgage broker
A mortgage broker who claims to be compensated entirely by
the lender rather than by the borrower. See Are Discount
Mortgage Brokers Upfront?
Discount points
Same as points.
Discretionary ARM
An adjustable rate mortgage on which the lender has the
right to change the interest rate at any time subject only
to advance notice. Discretionary ARMs are found abroad, not
in the US. See Can You Have Peace of Mind With an ARM?
Documentation requirements
The set of lender requirements that specify how information
about a loan applicant's income and assets must be provided,
and how it will be used by the lender. See What Are Mortgage
Documentation Requirements?
Down payment
The difference between the value of the property and the
loan amount, expressed in dollars, or as a percentage of the
price. For example, if the house sells for $100,000 and the
loan is for $80,000, the down payment is $20,000 or 20%. To
read articles about the down payment, see Down Payment.
Dual apper
A borrower who submits applications through two loan
providers, usually mortgage brokers. See Is It OK to Submit
Two Mortgage Loan Applications?
Dual index mortgage
A mortgage on which the interest rate is adjustable based on
an interest rate index, and the monthly payment adjusts
based on a wage and salary index. See Dual Index Mortgages.
Due-on-sale clause
A provision of a loan contract that stipulates that if the
property is sold the loan balance must be repaid. This bars
the seller from transferring responsibility for an existing
loan to the buyer when the interest rate on the old loan is
below the current market. A mortgage containing a
due-on-sale clause is not an assumable mortgage.
Effective rate
A term used in two ways. In one context it refers to a
measure of interest cost to the borrower that is identical
to the APR except that it is calculated over the time
horizon specified by the borrower. The APR is calculated on
the assumption that the loan runs to term, which most loans
do not. (See
Does the Annual Percentage Rate (APR) Help?). In most texts
on the mathematics of finance, however, the "effective rate"
is the quoted rate adjusted for intra-year compounding. For
example, a quoted 6% mortgage rate is actually a rate of .5%
per month, and if interest received in the early months is
invested for the balance of the year at .5%, it results in a
return of 6.17% over the year. The 6.17% is called the
"effective rate" and 6% is the "nominal" rate.
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Equity
In connection with a home, the difference between the value
of the home and the balance of outstanding mortgage loans on
the home.
Equity grabbing
A type of predatory lending where the lender intends for the
borrower to default so the lender can grab the borrower's
equity. Read What Is Predatory Lending?
Escrow
An agreement that money or other objects of value be placed
with a third party for safe keeping, pending the performance
of some promised act by one of the parties to the agreement.
It is common for home mortgage transactions to include an
escrow agreement where the borrower adds a specified amount
for taxes and hazard insurance to the regular monthly
mortgage payment. The money goes into an escrow account out
of which the lender pays the taxes and insurance when they
come due. For articles on this subject, see Escrows.
Escrow abuse
The practice of using escrow accounts inappropriately to
generate more income from hapless borrowers. See Escrow
Abuse and Manufactured Foreclosures.
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Fallout
Loan applications that are withdrawn by borrowers, sometimes
because they have found a better deal. See Why Is Locking
Unique to Mortgages?
Fannie Mae
One of two Federal agencies that purchase home loans from
lenders. (The other is Freddie Mac). Both agencies finance
their purchases primarily by packaging mortgages into pools,
then issuing securities against the pools. The securities
are guaranteed by the agencies. They also raise funds by
selling notes and other liabilities. See What Do Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac Do?
Fees
The sum of all upfront cash payments required by the lender
as part of the charge for the loan. Origination fees and
points are expressed as a percent of the loan. Junk fees are
expressed in dollars.
FHA mortgage
A mortgage on which the lender is insured against loss by
the Federal Housing Administration, with the borrower paying
the mortgage insurance premium. The major advantage of an
FHA mortgage is that the required down payment is very low,
but the maximum loan amount is also low. For articles on
FHA, see FHA Mortgages.
FICO Score
See Credit Score.
Final prices
The prices paid by the borrower, as opposed to posted
prices. The distinction is discussed in Why Do Minorities
Pay More For Mortgages?
Financing points
Including points in the loan amount. Read Can Mortgage
Points Be Financed?
First mortgage
A mortgage that has a first-priority claim against the
property in the event the borrower defaults on the loan. For
example, a borrower defaults on a loan secured by a property
worth $100,000 net of sale costs. The property has a first
mortgage with a balance of $90,000 and a second mortgage
with a balance of $15,000. The first mortgage lender can
collect $90,000 plus any unpaid interest and foreclosure
costs. The second mortgage lender can collect only what is
left of the $100,000.
Fixed rate mortgage (FRM)
A mortgage on which the interest rate and monthly mortgage
payment remain unchanged throughout the term of the
mortgage. See Fixed Rate Mortgages.
Fixed-Markup UML
An Upfront Mortgage Lender who discloses his wholesale price
and markup. See A New Approach to Selecting a Loan Provider.
Flexible payment ARM.
Same as Option ARM.
Float
Allowing the rate and points to vary with changes in market
conditions. The borrower may elect to lock the rate and
points at any time but must do so a few days before the
closing. Allowing the rate to float exposes the borrower to
market risk, and also to the risk of being taken advantage
of by the loan provider. See Is it Wise to Float?
Float-down
A rate lock, plus an option to reduce the rate if market
interest rates decline during the lock period. Also called a
cap. A float-down costs the borrower more than a lock
because it is more costly to the lender. Float-downs vary
widely in terms of how often the borrower can exercise
(usually only once), and exactly when the borrower can
exercise. See What Is a Float-Down? Do not confuse with
interest rate increase caps and payment increase caps.
Foreclosure
The legal process by which a lender acquires possession of
the property securing a mortgage loan when the borrower
defaults. See Can a Mortgage Lender Profit From Foreclosure?
Forbearance agreement
An agreement by the lender not to exercise the legal right
to foreclose in exchange for an agreement by the borrower to
a payment plan that will cure the borrower’s delinquency.
See Mortgage Payment Problems: What If You Can't Pay?
Freddie Mac
One of two Federal agencies that purchase home loans from
lenders. The other is Fannie Mae.
Front-end fee
Mortgage broker income paid by the borrower, as
distinguished from the fee paid by the lender, which is
"back-end".
Fully amortizing payment
The monthly mortgage payment which, if maintained unchanged
through the remaining life of the loan at the then-existing
interest rate, will pay off the loan over the remaining
life. See Mortgage Amortization: How Does It Work? On FRMs
the payment is always fully amortizing, provided the
borrower has made no prepayments. (If the borrower makes
prepayments, the monthly payment is more than fully
amortizing). On GPMs, the payment in the early years is
always less than fully amortizing. On ARMs, the payment may
or may not be fully amortizing, depending on the type of
ARM. See How Does Negative Amortization on a Mortgage Work?
Fully indexed interest rate
The current index value plus the margin on an ARM. Usually,
initial interest rates on ARMs are below the fully indexed
rate. If the index does not change from its initial level,
after the initial rate period ends the interest rate will
rise to the fully indexed rate after a period determined by
the interest rate increase cap. For example, if the initial
rate is 4% for 1 year, the fully indexed rate 7%, and the
rate adjusts every year subject to a 1% rate increase cap,
the 7% rate will be reached at the end of the third year.
See What Is an Adjustable Rate Mortgage? and What Is the
Real Price of an Adjustable Rate Mortgage?
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Generic prices
Prices that assume a more or less standardized set of
transaction characteristics that generally command the
lowest prices. Generic prices are distinguished from
transaction specific prices, which pertain to the
characteristics of a specific transaction. See What Mortgage
Market Niche Are You In?
Gift of equity
A sale price below market value, where the difference is a
gift from the sellers to the buyers. Such gifts are usually
between family members. Lenders will usually allow the gift
to count as down payment. See Avoiding Taxes on a Gift of
Equity.
Good fairy syndrome
A belief that somewhere out there is a good fairy who will
solve all our financial (and other) problems. See Mortgage
Fraud and Belief in a Good Fairy.
Good faith estimate
The form that lists the settlement charges the borrower must
pay at closing, which the lender is obliged to provide the
borrower within three business days of receiving the loan
application. See Why Do Lenders Itemize Loan Charges? and
How to Shop Settlement Costs.
Government National Mortgage Association (GNMA)
A Federal agency that guarantees mortgage securities that
are issued against pools of FHA and VA mortgages.
Grace period
The period after the payment due date during which the
borrower can pay without being hit for late fees. Grace
periods apply only to mortgages on which interest is
calculated monthly. Simple interest mortgages do not have a
grace period because interest accrues daily. See What Are
Simple Interest Mortgages?
Graduated payment mortgage (GPM)
A mortgage on which the payment rises by a constant percent
for a specified number of periods, after which it levels out
over the remaining term and amortizes fully. For example,
the payment might increase by 7.5% every 12 months for 60
months, after which it is constant for the remaining term at
a fully amortizing level. See What is a Graduated Payment
Mortgage (GPM)?
Graduation period
The interval at which the payment rises on a GPM.
Graduation rate
The percentage increase in the payment on a GPM.
Guaranteed Mortgage Price Agreement
A proposal by HUD in 2002 to allow lenders and others to
offer packages of loans and settlement services at a single
price. See HUD's Proposals For Reform.
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Hazard insurance
Insurance purchased by the borrower, and required by the
lender, to protect the property against loss from fire and
other hazards. Also known as "homeowner insurance", it is
the second "I" in PITI. See Questions About Home Owners
Insurance.
Historical scenario
The assumption that the index value to which the rate on an
ARM is tied follows the same pattern as in some prior
historical period. In meeting their disclosure obligations
in connection with ARMs, some lenders show how the mortgage
payment would have changed on a mortgage originated some
time in the past. That is not very useful. Showing how a
mortgage originated now would change if the index followed a
historical pattern would be useful, but nobody does it.
Homebuyer protection plan
A plan purporting to protect FHA homebuyers against property
defects. See Is FHA Responsible For the Leaky Roof?
Homeowner's equity
See Equity.
Homeowners insurance
Insurance purchased by the borrower, and required by the
lender, to protect the property against loss from fire and
other hazards. It is the second "I" in PITI. See Questions
About Home Owners Insurance.
Home equity line of credit (HELOC)
A mortgage set up as a line of credit against which a
borrower can draw up to a maximum amount, as opposed to a
loan for a fixed dollar amount. For example, using a
standard mortgage you might borrow $150,000, which would be
paid out in its entirety at closing. Using a HELOC instead,
you receive the lender’s promise to advance you up to
$150,000, in an amount and at a time of your choosing. You
can draw on the line by writing a check, using a special
credit card, or in other ways. See What Is a HELOC and How
Do You Shop For a HELOC?
Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM)
A reverse mortgage program administered by FHA. See Reverse
Mortgages.
Home equity line
Same as HELOC.
Home equity loan
Same as second mortgage.
Home Keeper
A reverse mortgage program administered by Fannie Mae. See
Reverse Mortgages.
Home Owners Loan Corporation
A Federal Government agency established by Congress in 1933
to help families avoid having their homes foreclosed. See
Home Owners Loan Corporation II - a Fable.
Housing bank
A government-owned or affiliated housing lender. With minor
exceptions, government in the US has never loaned directly
to consumers, but housing banks are widespread in many
developing countries. Read Government as Mortgage Lender.
Housing bubble
A marked increase in house prices fueled partly by
expectations that prices will continue to rise. See A Look
at Housing Bubbles.
Housing expense
The sum of mortgage payment, hazard insurance, property
taxes, and homeowner association fees. Same as PITI and
"monthly housing expense."
Housing expense ratio
The ratio of housing expense to borrower income, which is
used (along with the total expense ratio and other factors)
in qualifying borrowers. See Qualifying for a Mortgage.
Housing investment
The amount invested in a house, equal to the sale price less
the loan amount. See How Much House Should You Buy?
HUD1 form
The form a borrower receives at closing that details all the
payments and receipts among the parties in a real estate
transaction, including borrower, lender, home seller,
mortgage broker and various other service providers.
Hybrid ARM
An ARM on which the initial rate holds for some period,
during which it is "fixed-rate", after which it becomes
adjustable rate. Generally, the term is applied to ARMs with
initial rate periods of 3 years or longer.
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Impounds
Same as Escrow.
Indexed ARM
An ARM on which the interest rate adjusts mechanically based
on changes in an interest rate index, as opposed to a
"discretionary ARM" on which the lender can change the rate
at any time subject only to advance notice. All ARMs in the
US are indexed. See Peace of Mind With an Adjustable Rate
Mortgage?
Initial interest rate
The interest rate that is fixed for some specified number of
months at the beginning of the life of a an ARM. The initial
rate is sometimes referred to as a "teaser" when it is below
the fully indexed interest rate. See Information to Evaluate
an Adjustable Rate Mortgage.
Initial rate period
The number of months for which the initial rate holds,
ranging from 1 month to 10 years. See Information to
Evaluate an Adjustable Rate Mortgage.
Interest accrual period
The period over which the interest due the lender is
calculated. If the interest accrual period on a 6 % mortgage
for $100,000 is a year, as it is on some loans in the UK and
India, the interest for the year is .06($100,000) = $6,000.
If interest accrues monthly, as it does on most mortgages in
the US, the monthly interest is .06/12($100,000) = $500. If
interest accrues biweekly, as on a few programs in the US,
the biweekly interest is .06/26($100,000) = $230.77. And if
interest accrues daily, as HELOCs and some other mortgages
in the US do, the daily interest is .06/365($100,000) = $16
.44.
Interest cost
A time-adjusted measure of cost to a mortgage borrower. It
is calculated in the same way as the APR except that the APR
assumes that the loan runs to term, and is always measured
before taxes. The formula is shown in Mortgage Formulas.
Interest cost is measured over the individual borrower's
time horizon, and it may be measured after taxes at the
individual borrower's tax rate. In addition, the cost items
included in interest cost may be more or less inclusive than
those included in the APR. See Annual Percentage Rate Versus
Interest Cost.
Interest due
The amount of interest, expressed in dollars, computed by
multiplying the loan balance at the end of the preceding
period times the annual interest rate divided by the
interest accrual period. It is the same as interest payment
except when the scheduled mortgage payment is less than the
interest due, in which case the difference is added to the
balance and constitutes negative amortization.
Interest-only mortgage
A mortgage on which for some period the monthly mortgage
payment consists of interest only. During that period, the
loan balance remains unchanged. See Interest Only Mortgages.
Interest payment
The dollar amount of interest paid each month. It is the
same as interest due so long as the scheduled mortgage
payment is equal to or greater than than the interest due.
Otherwise, the interest payment is equal to the scheduled
payment.
Interest rate
The rate charged the borrower each period for the loan of
money, by custom quoted on an annual basis. A rate of 6%,
for example, means a rate of 1/2% per month. A mortgage
interest rate is a rate on a loan secured by a specific
property. See Mortgage Interest Rates.
Interest rate adjustment period
The frequency of rate adjustments on an ARM after the
initial rate period is over. The rate adjustment period is
sometimes but not always the same as the initial rate
period. As an example, a 3/3 ARM is one in which both
periods are 3 years while a 3/1 ARM has an initial rate
period of 3 years after which the rate adjusts every year.
See Information to Evaluate an Adjustable Rate Mortgage.
Interest rate ceiling
The highest interest rate possible under an ARM contract;
same as "lifetime cap." It is often expressed as a specified
number of percentage points above the initial interest rate.
See Information to Evaluate an Adjustable Rate Mortgage.
Interest rate floor
The lowest interest rate possible under an ARM contract.
Floors are less common than ceilings. See Information to
Evaluate an Adjustable Rate Mortgage.
Interest rate increase cap
The maximum allowable increase in the interest rate on an
ARM each time the rate is adjusted. It is usually 1 or 2
percentage points, but may be 5 points if the initial rate
period is 5 years or longer. See Information to Evaluate an
Adjustable Rate Mortgage.
Interest rate decrease cap
The maximum allowable decrease in the interest rate on an
ARM each time the rate is adjusted. It is usually 1 or 2
percentage points. See Information to Evaluate an Adjustable
Rate Mortgage.
Interest rate index
The specific interest rate series to which the interest rate
on an ARM is tied, such as "Treasury Constant Maturities,
1-Year," or "Eleventh District Cost of Funds." All the
indices are published regularly in readily available
sources. For a listing and discussion of various indices,
see Adjustable Rate Mortgage Indexes and Which Adjustable
Rate Mortgage Index Is the Best?
Interim refinance
An ill-advised scheme to avoid a prepayment penalty by
refinancing twice instead of once. Read The Interim Mortgage
Refinance Scam.
Internet mortgages
Mortgages delivered using the internet as a major part of
the communication process between the borrower and the
lender. See Using the Internet.
Investor
In real estate, a borrower who owns or purchases a property
as an investment rather than as a residence.
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Jumbo mortgage
A mortgage larger than the maximum eligible for purchase by
the two Federal agencies, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,
$333,700 in 2004 (see Non-conforming mortgage). However,
some lenders use the term to refer to programs for even
larger loans, such as, e.g., greater than $500,000.
Junk fees
A derogatory term for lender fees expressed in dollars
rather than as a percent of the loan amount. See What Are
Junk Fees on a Mortgage?
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Late fees
Fees that lenders are entitled to collect from borrowers who
don't pay within the grace period. Most mortgage notes offer
borrowers a 10 or 15-day grace period, with a late charge of
about 5% on payments received on the 16th or later. Read Are
These Mortgage Late Fees Kosher?
Late payment
A payment received after the grace period stipulated in the
note. Most mortgage grace periods are 10 or 15 days.
Lead-Generation site
A mortgage web site designed to provide leads (potential
customers) to lenders. Where a referral site provides
information about lenders to consumers, with consumers
contacting the lenders, a lead-generation site provides
information about the consumers to the lenders, and the
lenders contact the consumers. They are sometimes called
"auction sites" because lenders post their prices directly
to the consumer. See Mortgage Auction (or Lead Generation)
Sites .
Lease-to-own purchase
A transaction in which a hopeful home buyer leases a home
with an option to buy it within a specified period. See
Lease-to-Own House Purchases.
Lender
See Mortgage lender.
Lien
The lender’s right to claim the borrower’s property in the
event the borrower defaults. If there is more than one lien,
the claim of the lender holding the first lien will be
satisfied before the claim of the lender holding the second
lien, which in turn will be satisfied before the claim of a
lender holding a third lien, etc.
Loan amount
The amount the borrower promises to repay, as set forth in
the mortgage contract. It differs from the amount of cash
disbursed by the lender by the amount of points and other
upfront costs included in the loan.
Loan "churning"
The process of raising cash periodically through successive
cash-out refinancings. It is a scam initiated by mortgage
brokers that victimizes wholesale lenders, with the
connivance of borrowers. See Periodic Mortgage Refinacings:
Who Gets Conned?
Loan discount fee
The term used to describe points on the Good Faith Estimate.
Loan modification
See Mortgage modification.
Loan officer
Employees of lenders or mortgage brokers who find borrowers,
sell and counsel them, and take applications. See Mortgage
Lenders, Mortgage Brokers and Loan Officers.
Loan provider
A lender or a mortgage broker.
Loan-to-value ratio
The loan amount divided by the lesser of the selling price
or the appraised value. Also referred to as LTV. The LTV and
down payment are different ways of expressing the same set
of facts. See What Is the Down Payment?
Lock
An option exercised by the borrower, at the time of the loan
application or later, to "lock in" the rates and points
prevailing in the market at that time. The lender and
borrower are committed to those terms, regardless of what
happens between that point and the closing date. See Locking
the Price of a Mortgage Loan.
Lock commitment letter
A written statement from a lender verifying that the price
and other terms of a loan have been locked. Borrowers who
lock through a mortgage broker should always demand to see
the lock commitment letter. See Did You Pay For Insurance
You Didn't Get?
Lock failure
The inability or unwillingness of a lender to honor a
mortgage price that a borrower had believed was guaranteed.
See Questions About the Failure of Mortgage Locks.
Lock jumper
A borrower, usually refinancing rather than purchasing a
home, who allows a lock to expire when interest rates go
down in order to lock again at the lower rate. See Is the
Borrower Committed by a Mortgage Lock?
Lock period
The number of days for which any lock or float-down holds.
Ordinarily, the longer the period, the higher the price to
the borrower.
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Mandatory disclosure
The array of laws and regulations dictating the information
that must be disclosed to mortgage borrowers, and the method
and timing of disclosure. See Mandatory Mortgage Disclosure.
Manufactured housing
A house built entirely in a factory, transported to a site
and installed there. They are usually built without knowing
where they will be sited, and are subject to a Federal
building code administered by HUD. See Manufactured Housing:
a Messy Picture.
Margin
The amount added to the interest rate index, ranging
generally from 2 to 3 percentage points, to obtain the fully
indexed interest rate on an ARM. See Information to Evaluate
an Adjustable Rate Mortgage.
Market niche
A particular combination of loan, borrower and property
characteristics that lenders use in setting prices and
underwriting requirements. These characteristics are
believed to affect the default risk or cost of the loan. As
examples, borrowers who don't intend to occupy the house
they purchase pay more than those who do, and borrowers who
refinance only the balance on their existing loan pay less
than those who take "cash out". Read What Mortgage Market
Niche Are You In?
Maturity
The period until the last payment is due. This is usually
but not always the term, which is the period used to
calculate the mortgage payment.
Maximum loan amount
The largest loan size permitted on a particular loan
program. For programs where the loan is targeted for sale to
Fannie Mae or Freddy Mac, the maximum will be the largest
loan eligible for purchase by these agencies. On FHA loans,
the maximums are set by the Federal Housing Administration,
and vary somewhat by geographical area. On other loans,
maximums are set by lenders.
Maximum loan to value ratio
The maximum allowable loan-to-value ratio on the selected
loan program.
Maximum lock
The longest period for which the lender will lock the rate
and points on any program. The most common maximum lock
period is 60 days, but on some programs the maximum is 90
days; only a few go beyond 90 days. See Why Is Locking
Unique to Mortgages?
Minimum down payment
The minimum allowable ratio of down payment to sale price on
any program. If the minimum is 10%, for example, it means
that you must make a down payment of at least $10,000 on a
$100,000 house, or $20,000 on a $200,000 house. For articles
on down payment, see Down Payment.
Monthly housing expense
Same as Housing expense.
Monthly debt service
Monthly payments required on credit cards, installment
loans, home equity loans, and other debts but not including
payments on the loan applied for.
Monthly total expenses
Same as Total housing expense.
Mortgage
A written document evidencing the lien on a property taken
by a lender as security for the repayment of a loan. The
term “mortgage” or “mortgage loan” is used loosely to refer
both to the lien and the loan. In most cases, they are
defined in two separate documents: a mortgage and a note.
Mortgage auction site
See Lead generation site.
Mortgage bank
Same as mortgage company.
Mortgage broker
An independent contractor who offers the loan products of
multiple lenders, termed wholesalers. A mortgage broker
counsels on the loans available from different wholesalers,
takes the application, and usually processes the loan. When
the file is complete, but sometimes sooner, the lender
underwrites the loan. In contrast to a correspondent, a
mortgage broker does not fund a loan. For articles on
mortgage brokers and how to deal with them, see Mortgage
Brokers.
Mortgage company
A mortgage lender who sells all loans in the secondary
market. As distinguished from a portfolio lender, who
retains loans in its portfolio. Mortgage companies may or
may not service the loans they originate.
Mortgage lead
A packet of information about a consumer who a loan provider
might be able to convert into a borrower. You become a lead
when you fill out a questionnaire about yourself on-line in
response to a sexy ad. See Mortgage Leads: Are You One?
Mortgage formulas
Equations used to derive common measures used in the
mortgage market, such as monthly payment, balance, and APR.
See Mortgage Formulas.
Mortgage insurance
Insurance against loss provided to a mortgage lender in the
event of borrower default. In most cases, the borrower pays
the premiums. For articles on mortgage insurance, see
Mortgage Insurance.
Mortgage insurance disclosure
Read Disclosure Rules About Mortgage Insurance.
Mortgage insurance premium
The up-front and/or periodic charges that the borrower pays
for mortgage insurance. There are different mortgage
insurance plans with differing combinations of up-front,
monthly and annual premiums. The most widely used premium
plan is a monthly charge with no upfront premium. For a
sample of monthly premiums, see Sample Mortgage Insurance
Premiums.
Mortgage insurance cancellation
Canceling a mortgage insurance policy. Read Canceling
Private Mortgage Insurance (I), and Canceling Private
Mortgage Insurance (II).
Mortgage lender
The party who disburses funds to the borrower at the closing
table. The lender receives the note evidencing the
borrower's indebtedness and obligation to repay, and the
mortgage which is the lien on the subject property.
Mortgage modification
A change in the terms of a loan, usually the interest rate
and/or term, in response to the borrower's inability to make
the payments under the existing contract. See See What If
You Can't Pay? and Mortgage Loan Modifications.
Mortgage payment
The monthly payment of interest and principal made by the
borrower. The formula used to calculate it is shown in
Mortgage Formulas.
Mortgage price
The interest rate, points and fees paid to the lender and/or
mortgage broker. On ARMs, the price also includes the fully
indexed rate and the maximum rate. Read What Is the "Price"
of a Mortgage?
Mortgage program
A bundle of mortgage characteristics that lenders see fit to
distinguish as a distinct instrument. These include whether
it is an FRM, ARM, or Balloon; the term; the initial rate
period on an ARM; whether it is FHA-insured or
VA-guaranteed; and if is not FHA or VA, whether it is
"conforming" (eligible for purchase by Fannie Mae or Freddie
Mac) or "non-conforming".
Mortgage referrals
Advice on where to go to get a mortgage. See Mortgage
Referrals: Who Can You Trust?
Mortgage scams
Deceptive and exploitative schemes by lenders, brokers, home
sellers and sometimes even borrowers. See Mortgage Scams.
Mortgage shopping
Trying to find the best deal on a mortgage. See How to Shop
For a Mortgage.
Mortgage spam
Offers for great mortgage deals that appear unbidden in your
email. See What Should I Do With Mortgage Spam?
Mortgage suitability
The doctrine that mortgage lenders should be held liable for
providing loans that are not suitable for the borrower. See
Mortgage Suitability.
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Negative amortization
A rise in the loan balance when the mortgage payment is less
than the interest due. Sometimes called "deferred interest."
It is explained in detail in How Does Negative Amortization
on a Mortgage Work? Negative amortization arises most
frequently on ARMs. See Should You Fear Negative
Amortization and Is a 3.95% Adjustable Rate Mortgage a Good
Deal?
Negative amortization cap
The maximum amount of negative amortization permitted on an
ARM, usually expressed as a percentage of the original loan
amount (e.g., 110%). Reaching the cap triggers an automatic
increase in the payment, usually to the fully amortizing
payment level, overriding any payment increase cap.
Negative Homeowners Equity
The condition of owing more on the house than the house is
worth. See The Curse of Negative Equity: Is There an Escape?
Negative points
Points paid by a lender for a loan with a rate above the
rate on a zero point loan. For example, a wholesaler quotes
the following prices to a mortgage broker. 8%/0 points,
7.5%/3 points, 8.75%/-3 points. On mortgage web sites,
negative points are usually referred to as "rebates" because
they are used to reduce a borrower's settlement costs. When
negative points are retained by a mortgage broker, they are
called a "yield spread premium". Read Can Mortgage Points Be
Negative? and Ignore Lender Payments to My Broker? On policy
issues connected to negative points, see HUD and Yield
Spread Premiums, and A Better Approach to YSPs?
Net branch
A facility offered by some lenders to mortgage brokers where
de jure the brokers become employees of the lender but de
facto they retain their independence as brokers. One of the
advantages of this arrangement to brokers is that they need
not disclose yield spread premiums received from lenders.
See Must Mortgage Brokers Reveal All Their Charges?
Net jumping
Using a broker's time and expertise to become informed and
creditworthy, then jumping to the internet to get the loan.
See How About Borrowers' Tricks?
Niche
See Market niche.
Nichification
Proliferation in the number of loan, borrower and property
characteristics used by lenders to set mortgage prices and
underwriting requirements. Read What Mortgage Market Niche
Are You In?
No change scenario
On an ARM, the assumption that the value of the index to
which the rate is tied does not change from its initial
level.
No-Cost mortgage
A mortgage on which all settlement costs except per diem
interest, escrows, homeowners insurance and transfer taxes
are paid by the lender and/or the home seller. See Does
"No-Cost" Mortgage Refinance Make Sense? and No-Cost
Mortgages.
Non-conforming mortgage
A mortgage that does not meet the purchase requirements of
the two Federal agencies, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,
because it is too large or for other reasons such as poor
credit or inadequate documentation.
Non-Permanent resident alien
A non-citizen without a green card who is employed in the
US. As distinct from a permanent resident alien, who has a
green card and who lenders do not distinguish from US
citizens. Non-permanent resident aliens are subject to
somewhat more restrictive qualification requirements than US
citizens.
No asset loan
A documentation requirement where the applicant's assets are
not disclosed. See What Are Mortgage Documentation
Requirements?
No Fee Mortgage Plus
A Bank of America program for home purchasers that
eliminates all lender fees except points, and all third
party fees. See No Fee Mortgage Plus.
No income loan
A documentation requirement where the applicant's income is
not disclosed. See What Are Mortgage Documentation
Requirements?
Non-warrantable condo
A condominium that does not meet meet lender requirements,
see Warrantable condos.
No-Surprise adjustable rate mortgage
An ARM with a preset graduated payment combined with
variable term. See The No-Surprise Adjustable Rate Mortgage.
Nominal interest rate
A quoted interest rate that is not adjusted for either
intra-year compounding, or for inflation. A quoted rate of
6% on a mortgage, for example, is nominal. Adjusted rates
are called "effective" see Effective rate.
No ratio loan
A documentation requirement where the applicant's income is
disclosed and verified but not used in qualifying the
borrower. The conventional maximum ratios of expense to
income are not applied. See What Are Mortgage Documentation
Requirements?
Note
A document that evidences a debt and a promise to repay. A
mortgage loan transaction always includes both a note
evidencing the debt, and a mortgage evidencing the lien on
the property, usually in two documents.
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Option ARM
An adjustable rate mortgage with flexible payment options,
monthly interest rate adjustments, and very low minimum
payments in the early years. They carry a risk of very large
payments in later years. See Option (Flexible Payment) ARMs.
Option fee
An upfront fee paid by the buyer under a lease-to-own
purchase, usually 1% to 5% of the price, which is credited
to the purchase price when the option is exercised but is
lost if it is not. See Lease-to-Own House Purchases.
Origination fee
An upfront fee charged by some lenders, usually expressed as
a percent of the loan amount. It should be added to points
in determining the total fees charged by the lender that are
expressed as a percent of the loan amount. Unlike points,
however, an origination fee does not vary with the interest
rate.
Overage
The difference between the price posted to its loan officers
by a lender or mortgage broker, and the price charged the
borrower. See What Is a Mortgage Overage?
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Partial prepayment
Making a payment larger than the scheduled payment as a way
of paying off the loan earlier. See Prepayment.
Paydown magic
Belief that there is a special way to pay down the balance
of a home mortgage faster, if you know the secret. See Are
Some Mortgage Prepayment Methods Better? and Save With a
Large Payment at Closing?
Payment adjustment interval
The period between payment changes on an ARM, which may or
may not be the same as the interest rate adjustment period.
Loans on which the payment adjusts less frequently than the
rate may generate negative amortization.
Payment increase cap
The maximum percentage increase in the payment on an ARM at
a payment adjustment date. A 7.5% cap is common.
Payment decrease cap
The maximum percentage decrease in the payment on an ARM at
a payment adjustment date.
Payment period
The period over which the borrower is obliged to make
payments. On most mortgages, the payment period is a month,
but on some it is biweekly.
Payment power
A program begun by Fannie Mae in 2003-4 that allows a
borrower to skip up to 2 mortgage payments in any 12 month
period, and up to 10 over the life of a loan. See Mortgage
Payment Flexibility Under "Payment Power" and How Would a
Truly Flexible Mortgage Work?
Payment rate
The interest rate used to calculate the mortgage payment,
which is usually but not necessarily the interest rate.
Payment shock
A very large increase in the payment on an ARM that may
surprise the borrower. Also used to refer to a large
difference between the rent being paid by a first-time home
buyer, and the monthly housing expense on the purchased
home.
Payoff month
The month in which the loan balance is paid down to zero. It
may or may not be the term.
Per diem interest
Interest from the day of closing to the first day of the
following month. In some cases, however, the borrower can
get a credit at closing by making the first payment a month
earlier. See Mortgage Closing Date: Does It Matter?
Periodic refinancing
An ill-advised scheme to tap into equity for cash advances
through periodic refinancings. See Periodic Mortgage
Refinancing: Who Gets Conned?
Permanent buydown
Paying points as a way of reducing the interest rate.
Pick a Payment ARM
Same as Flexible Payment ARM.
Piggyback mortgage
A combination of a first mortgage for 80% of property value,
and a second for 5%, 10%, 15%, or 20% of value. These
combinations are designated as 80/5/15, 80/10/10, 80/15/5,
and 80/20/0, respectively. Piggybacks are a substitute for
mortgage insurance for borrowers who cannot put 20% down.
See Piggyback Loans: Two Mortgages Cost Less than One?
Pipeline risk
The lender's risk that between the time a lock commitment is
given to the borrower and the time the loan is closed,
interest rates will rise and the lender will take a loss on
selling the loan. See Why Is Locking Unique to Mortgages?
PITI
Shorthand for principal, interest, taxes and insurance,
which are the components of the monthly housing expense.
PMI
Private mortgage insurance, as distinguished from insurance
provided by government under FHA and VA. See Mortgage
insurance.
Points
An upfront cash payment required by the lender as part of
the charge for the loan, expressed as a percent of the loan
amount; e.g., "3 points" means a charge equal to 3% of the
loan balance. It is common today for lenders to offer a wide
range of rate/point combinations, especially on fixed rate
mortgages (FRMs), including combinations with negative
points. On a negative point loan the lender contributes cash
toward meeting closing costs. Positive and negative points
are sometimes termed "discounts" and "premiums,"
respectively. See Mortgage Points and Rebates.
Portable mortgage
A mortgage that can be moved from one property to another.
These were introduced in the US by E*TRADE Mortgage in 2003.
See Portable Mortgages: A Useful Option?
Portfolio lender
A lender that holds the loans it originates in its portfolio
rather than selling them, as a temporary lender does.
Posted prices
The mortgage prices delivered by lenders to loan officers
and mortgage brokers, as opposed to the final prices paid by
borrowers. The distinction is discussed in Why Do Minorities
Pay More For Mortgages?
Pre-approval
A commitment by a lender to make a mortgage loan to a
specified borrower, prior to the identification of a
specific property. It is designed to make it easier to shop
for a house. Unlike a pre-qualification, the lender checks
the applicant's credit. See Mortgage Qualification Versus
Mortgage Pre-Approval, and Mortgage Pre-Approval: What Is It
Good For?
Predatory lending
A variety of unsavory lender practices designed to take
advantage of unwary borrowers. See the articles on Predatory
Mortgage Lending.
Prepayment
A payment made by the borrower over and above the scheduled
mortgage payment. If the additional payment pays off the
entire balance it is a "prepayment in full"; otherwise, it
is a "partial prepayment." For articles on prepayment, see
Mortgage Prepayment (Paying Off Early).
Prepayment penalty
A charge imposed by the lender if the borrower pays off the
loan early. The charge is usually expressed as a percent of
the loan balance at the time of prepayment, or a specified
number of months interest. Read Mortgage Prepayment
Penalties.
Pre-qualification
Same as qualification.
Price-gouging
Charging interest rates and/or fees that are excessive
relative to what the same borrowers could have found had
they shopped the market. Read What Is Predatory Lending? and
Is This a Good Definition of Predatory Lending?
Primary residence
The house in which the borrower will live most of the time,
as distinct from a second home or an investor property that
will be rented. See What Is a "Primary" Residence?
Principal
The portion of the monthly payment that is used to reduce
the loan balance. See Amortization.
Principal limit
The present value of a house, given the elderly owner's
right to live there until death or voluntary move-out, under
the FHA reverse mortgage program. See Which Reverse Mortgage
Plan Do I Choose?
Private mortgage insurance
Mortgage insurance provided by private mortgage insurance
companies, or PMIs. See Mortgage Insurance.
Processing
Compiling and maintaining the file of information about a
mortgage transaction, including the credit report,
appraisal, verification of employment and assets, and so on.
The processing file is handed off to underwriting for the
loan decision.
Property flipping
Successive sham home sales at progressively higher prices as
part of a scheme to defraud FHA. See What Is Predatory
Lending?
Purchase money mortgage
A mortgage offered by a house buyer as partial payment for
the house. From the seller's point of view, it is seller
financing.
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Qualification
The process of determining whether a prospective borrower
has the ability, meaning sufficient assets and income, to
repay a loan. Qualification is sometimes referred to as
"pre-qualification" because it is subject to verification of
the information provided by the applicant. Qualification is
short of approval because it does not take account of the
credit history of the borrower. Qualified borrowers may
ultimately be turned down because, while they have
demonstrated the capacity to repay, a poor credit history
suggests that they may be unwilling to pay. For articles on
qualification, see Qualifying For a Mortgage.
Qualification rate
The interest rate used in calculating the initial mortgage
payment in qualifying a borrower. The rate used in this
calculation may or may not be the initial rate on the
mortgage. On ARMs, for example, the borrower may be
qualified at the fully indexed rate rather than the initial
rate.
Qualification ratios
Requirements stipulated by the lender that the ratio of
housing expense to borrower income, and housing expense plus
other debt service to borrower income, cannot exceed
specified maximums, e.g., 28% and 35%. These may reflect the
maximums specified by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac; they may
also vary with the loan-value ratio and other factors. See
Qualifying For a Mortgage.
Qualification requirements
Standards imposed by lenders as conditions for granting
loans, including maximum ratios of housing expense and total
expense to income, maximum loan amounts, maximum
loan-to-value ratios, and so on. Less comprehensive than
underwriting requirements, which take account of the
borrower's credit record. See Qualifying For a Mortgage.
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Rate
See Interest Rate.
Rate caps
Limitations on the size of rate adjustments on an ARM, often
expressed in a/b/c fashion: "a" is the maximum rate change
at the first rate adjustment, "b" is the maximum at all
subsequent adjustments, and "c" is the maximum increase over
the initial rate during the life of the contract.
Rate/point breakeven
The period you must retain a mortgage in order for it to be
profitable to pay points to reduce the rate. See The
Break-Even Period For Paying Points on a Mortgage
Rate/point options
All the combinations of interest rate and points that are
offered on a particular loan program. On an ARM, rates and
points may also vary with the margin and interest rate
ceiling.
Rate protection
Protection for a borrower against the danger that rates will
rise between the time the borrower applies for a loan and
the time the loan closes. This protection can take the form
of a "lock" where the rate and points are frozen at their
initial levels until the loan closes; or a "float-down"
where the rates and points cannot rise from their initial
levels but they can decline if market rates decline. In
either case, the protection only runs for a specified
period. If the loan is not closed within that period, the
protection expires and the borrower will either have to
accept the terms quoted by the lender on new loans at that
time, or start the shopping process anew. See Locking the
Price of a Mortgage Loan.
Rate sheets
Tables of interest rates and points that lenders distribute
daily to their loan officer employees or mortgage brokers.
See Questions About Rate Sheets.
Rebate
Same as Negative points.
Recast payment
Raising the mortgage payment to the fully amortizing
payment. Periodic recasts are sometimes used on ARMs in lieu
of or in addition to negative amortization caps.
Referral fees
Payments made by service providers to other parties as quid
pro quo for referring customers. For example, a title
company provides something of value to a Realtor or lender
for sending a customer who requires title insurance. See
Questions About Referral Fees.
Referral power
The ability to direct a client to a specific vendor.
Referral power is based on information and authority of the
referrer, and ignorance of the client. See Questions About
Referral Fees.
Referral site
A mortgage web site that introduces potential borrowers to
participating lenders, in some cases to multiple hundreds of
them. The principal lure to the consumer is information on
generic prices posted by the lenders. See Are Are Mortgage
Referral Sites on the Internet Useful?
Refinance
Paying off an old loan while simultaneously taking a new
one. This may be done to reduce borrowing costs under
conditions where the borrower can obtain a new loan at an
interest rate below the rate on the existing loan. It may be
done to raise cash, as an alternative to a home equity loan.
Or it may be done to reduce the monthly payment. For
articles on refinancing, see Mortgage Refinancing.
Rent premium
An increment above the rent paid on a lease-to-own home
purchase, which is credited to the purchase price if the
purchase option is exercised, but which is lost if the
option is not exercised. See Lease-to-Own House Purchases.
Required cash
The total cash required of the home buyer to close the
transaction, including down payment, points and fixed dollar
charges paid to the lender, any portion of the mortgage
insurance premium that is paid up-front, and other
settlement charges associated with the transaction such as
title insurance, taxes, etc. The total required cash is
shown on the Good Faith Estimate of Settlement that every
borrower receives.
RESPA
The Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, a Federal
consumer protection statute first enacted in 1974. RESPA was
designed to protect home purchasers and owners shopping for
settlement services by mandating certain disclosures, and
prohibiting referral fees and kickbacks.
Retail lender
A lender who offers mortgage loans directly to the public.
As distinct from a wholesale lender who operates through
mortgage brokers and correspondents.
Reverse mortgage
A loan to an elderly home owner on which the balance rises
over time, and which is not repaid until the owner dies,
sells the house, or moves out permanently. See Reverse
Mortgages.
Right of rescission
The right of refinancing borrowers, under the Truth in
Lending Act, to cancel the deal at no cost to themselves
within 3 days of closing. See Rescinding a Mortgage
Refinance.
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Scenario analysis
Determining how the interest rate and payment on an ARM will
change in response to specified future changes in market
interest rates, called "scenarios". See Choosing Between
Fixed and Adjustable Rate Mortgages.
Scheduled mortgage payment
The amount the borrower is obliged to pay each period,
including interest, principal, and mortgage insurance, under
the terms of the mortgage contract. Paying less than the
scheduled amount results in delinquency. On most mortgages,
the scheduled payment is the fully amortizing payment
throughout the life of the loan. On some mortgages, however,
the scheduled payment for the first 5 or 10 years is the
interest payment (see Interest Only Mortgages). And on
option (flexible payment) ARMs, it can be the "minimum"
payment as defined by the program (see Option (Flexible
Payment) ARMs).
Second mortgage
A loan with a second-priority claim against a property in
the event that the borrower defaults. The lender who holds
the second mortgage gets paid only after the lender holding
the first mortgage is paid. For articles on second
mortgages, also known as "home equity loans," see Second
Mortgages.
Secure option ARM
An option ARM on which the initial rate holds for 5 years
rather than one month. See A More Transparent Option ARM.
Secondary markets
Markets in which mortgages or mortgage-backed securities are
bought and sold. See Will My Mortgage Loan Be Sold?, and Do
Secondary Mortgage Markets Help Borrowers?
Self-employed borrower
A borrower who must document income using tax returns rather
than information provided by an employer. This complicates
the process somewhat. See Difficult For Self-employed To
Qualify For a Mortgage?
Seller contribution
A contribution to a borrower's down payment or settlement
costs made by a home seller, as an alternative to a price
reduction. See Are House Seller Contributions Kosher?
Seller financing
Provision of a mortgage by the seller of a house, often a
second mortgage, as a condition of the sale.
Servicing
Administering loans between the time of disbursement and the
time the loan is fully paid off. This includes collecting
monthly payments from the borrower, maintaining records of
loan progress, assuring payments of taxes and insurance, and
pursuing delinquent accounts. See articles on Mortgage
Servicing Problems.
Servicing agent
The party who services a loan, who may or may not be the
lender who originated it. See Is There Recourse Against Bad
Mortgage Servicing?
Servicing release premium
A payment made by the purchaser of a mortgage to the seller
for the release of the servicing on the mortgage. It has no
direct relevance to borrowers.
Servicing transfer
When one servicing agent is replaced by another. Read When
Your Mortgage Lender Goes Bankrupt.
Settlement costs
Costs that the borrower must pay at the time of closing, in
addition to the down payment. For articles on settlement
costs, see Settlement Costs.
Shared appreciation mortgage
A mortgage on which the borrower gives up a share in future
price appreciation in exchange for a lower interest rate
and/or interest deferral. Read Is This Shared Appreciation
Mortgage a Good Deal?
Shopping site
A type of multi-lender web site that offers borrowers the
capacity to shop among multiple competing lenders. See
Recent Developments in Mortgage Web Sites.
Short sale
An agreement between a mortgage borrower in distress and the
lender that allows the borrower to sell the house and remit
the proceeds to the lender. It is an alternative to
foreclosure, or a deed in lieu of foreclosure. See Options
When Equity in Your Home is Gone
Silent second
A second mortgage used to deceive the first mortgage lender,
or to provide preferential (subsidized) terms to qualified
home buyers. See Silent Second Mortgages.
Simple interest mortgage
A mortgage on which interest is calculated daily based on
the balance at the time of the last payment. The daily
interest charge within the month is constant -- interest is
not charged on the interest charges of prior days. See What
Are Simple Interest Mortgages?
Simple interest biweekly mortgage
A biweekly mortgage on which the biweekly payment is applied
to the balance every two weeks, rather than held in an
account as on a conventional biweekly. See Alternative Early
Payoff Plans. Also, The Simple Interest Biweekly Scam.
Single file mortgage insurance
A type of mortgage insurance on which the lender pays the
premium and prices it in the interest rate. See Single File
Mortgage Insurance: An Advance?
Single-lender web site
A web site of an individual lender or mortgage broker who
wants users to select a loan from them. They are easy to
identify because the name of the lender or broker will be
prominently displayed on the screens. Single-lender sites
account for the majority of all mortgage web sites. See
Single-Lender Mortgage Web Sites.
Stated assets
A documentation requirement where the borrower discloses her
assets but they are not verified by the lender. See What Are
Mortgage Documentation Requirements?
Stated income
A documentation requirement where the lender verifies the
source of the income but not the amount. See What Are
Mortgage Documentation Requirements? and Stated Income
Loans: Lie to Get a Better Rate?
Streamlined refinancing
Refinancing that omits some of the standard risk control
measures, and is therefore quicker and less costly.
Subordinate financing
A second mortgage on the property which is not paid off when
a new loan is taken out. The second mortgage lender must
allow subordination of the second to the new first mortgage.
Subordination policy
The policy of a second mortgage lender for allowing a
borrower to refinance the first mortgage while leaving the
second in place. See Subordination Policy of Second Mortgage
Lenders
Sub-prime borrower
A borrower with poor credit, who can borrow only from
sub-prime lenders who specialize in dealing with borrowers
who have poor credit. Such borrowers pay more than prime
borrowers, and are sometimes taken advantage of. Not all
borrowers who deal with sub-prime lenders, however, are
sub-prime borrowers. Some could obtain loans from mainstream
lenders if they properly shop the market. Read Should
Mortgage Borrowers With Poor Credit Shop?
Sub-prime lender
A lender who specializes in lending to sub-prime borrowers.
See What Is a Sub-Prime Mortgage Lender?
Sub-prime market
The network of sub-prime lenders, mortgage brokers,
warehouse lenders and investment bankers who make possible
the delivery of loans to sub-prime borrowers. See Upheaval
in the Sub-Prime Market.
Swing loan
Same as Bridge loan.
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Tangible net benefit
The net gain to a borrower from a refinancing, which some
proposed legislation would make the responsibility of
lenders. See Are Lenders Responsible For a "Tangible Net
Benefit?"
Tax service fee
A fee charged by some lenders at closing to cover the cost
of paying taxes on the borrower's property when they come
due, or (if the borrower is paying the taxes), verifying
that the payment has been made.
Teaser rate
The initial interest rate on an ARM, when it is below the
fully indexed rate.
Temporary buydown
A reduction in the mortgage payment in the early years of
the loan in exchange for an upfront cash payment provided by
the home buyer, the seller, or both. See What Is a Temporary
Buydown?
Temporary lender
A lender that sells the loans it originates, as opposed to a
portfolio lender who holds them.
Term
The period used to calculate the monthly mortgage payment.
The term is usually but not always the same as the maturity.
On a 7-year balloon loan, for example, the maturity is 7
years but the term in most cases is 30 years. For articles
on the subject, see Mortgage Term.
Title insurance
Insurance against loss arising from problems connected to
the title to property. See Questions About Title Insurance.
Total housing expense
Housing expense plus Monthly debt service.
Total expense ratio
The ratio of Total housing expense to borrower income.
Total interest payments
The sum of all interest payments to date or over the life of
the loan. This is an incomplete measure of the cost of
credit to the borrower because it does not include up-front
cash payments, and it is not adjusted for the time value of
money. See Effective rate.
Total expense ratio
The ratio of housing expense plus current debt service
payments to borrower income, which is used (along with the
housing expense ratio and other factors) in qualifying
borrowers. See qualification requirements.
Truth in Lending (TIL)
The Federal law that specifies the information that must be
provided to borrowers on different types of loans. Also, the
form used to disclose this information. See Does Truth in
Lending Help?
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Underage
Fees collected from a borrower by a loan officer that are
lower than the target fees specified by the lender or
mortgage broker who employs the loan officer. See What Is a
Mortgage Overage?
Underwriting
The process of examining all the data about a borrower's
property and transaction to determine whether the mortgage
applied for by the borrower should be issued. The person who
does this is called an underwriter.
Underwriting requirements
The standards imposed by lenders in determining whether a
borrower qualifies for a loan. These standards are more
comprehensive than qualification requirements in that they
include an evaluation of the borrower’s creditworthiness.
Upfront Mortgage Broker (UMB)
A mortgage broker who charges a set fee for services
provided, established in writing at the outset of the
transaction, and acts as the borrower's agent in shopping
for the best deal. For articles on UMBs, see Upfront
Mortgage Brokers. UMBs are listed at List of Upfront
Mortgage Brokers.
Upfront Mortgage Lender
A lender offering loans on the internet who provides
mortgage shoppers with the information they need to make an
informed decision before applying for a mortgage; and
guarantees them fair treatment during the period after they
apply through to closing. See Upfront Mortgage Lenders.
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VA mortgage
A mortgage with no down payment requirement, available only
to ex-servicemen and women as well as those on active duty,
on which the lender is insured against loss by the Veterans
Administration. See Are VA Mortgage Loans a Good Deal?
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Waive escrows
Authorization by the lender for the borrower to pay taxes
and insurance directly. This is in contrast to the standard
procedure where the lender adds a charge to the monthly
mortgage payment that is deposited in an escrow account,
from which the lender pays the borrower’s taxes and
insurance when they are due. On some loans lenders will not
waive escrows, and on loans where waiver is permitted
lenders are likely either to charge for it in the form of a
small increase in points, or restrict it to borrowers making
a large down payment. See How Can I Avoid Escrows on My
Mortgage?
Warehouse lender
A firm that lends to temporary lenders against the
collateral of closed mortgage loans prior to the sale of the
loans in the secondary market. Warehouse lenders can call
the loans if the loans "in the warehouse" drop in value. See
Upheaval in the Sub-Prime Market.
Warrantable condos
A condominium project with features that lenders view as
protections against hazards that would threaten the value of
condo units. These features include the project being
completed with most units sold rather than rented, no one
party owning more than 10% of them, adequate insurance
coverage of common structures, and an ownership association
independent of the developer.
Wholesale lender
A lender who provides loans through mortgage brokers or
correspondents. The mortgage broker or correspondent
initiates the transaction, takes the borrower's application,
and processes the loan. As distinct from a Retail lender.
Wholesale mortgage prices
The interest rate and points quoted by wholesale lenders to
mortgage brokers and correspondent lenders. See Wholesale
Mortgage Prices.
Workout assumption
The assumption of a mortgage, with permission of the lender,
from a borrower unable to continue making the payments. See
Mortgage Payment Problems:What If You Can't Pay?
Worst case scenario
The assumption that the interest rate on an ARM rises to the
maximum extent permitted in the note. On a one-month ARM
with no rate adjustment caps, for example, the rate would
jump to the maximum rate stipulated in the note in month 2.
Wrap-around mortgage
A mortgage on a property that already has a mortgage, where
the new lender assumes the payment obligation on the old
mortgage. Wrap-around mortgages arise when the current
market rate is above the rate on the existing mortgage, and
home sellers are frequently the lender. A due-on-sale clause
prevents a wrap-around mortgage in connection with sale of a
property except by violating the clause. See What Is a
Wrap-Around Mortgage?
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Yield-Spread premium.
Same as Negative points.
Yield-Spread premium abuse
The practice by mortgage brokers of pocketing a rebate from
the lender for delivering a high-rate loan, without the
knowledge of the borrower. See Eliminating Yield Spread
Premium Abuse.
Yield Curve
A graph that shows, at any given time, how the yield varies
with the period to maturity. Usually, the curve slopes
upwards but occasionally it slopes down or is flat. A flat
yield curve means that yields on long-term bonds are not
much higher than those on short-term notes. See With a Flat
Yield Curve, Which Mortgages Are Best?
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