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Sub-prime
Mortgage
Shop Around Before going Sub-prime
If the first mortgage lender you speak to suggests that you
"need" a sub-prime loan to acquire your dream home (or to
refinance the one you own) you don't have to take their word for
it.
Experts say that as many as 1/3 of people who wind up paying the
higher interest rates (and other costs associated with subprime
home loans) could have gotten a conventional mortgage loan at a
lower rate if they had done some basic comparison shopping
before making their loan purchase decision.
The subprime mortgage market "is the fastest growing segment of
consumer finance. Between 1994 and 2004 the subprime market grew
more than 90 percent. Much of that growth came through
aggressive marketing to people refinancing their homes.
(continued below)
Homeowners are "spammed" with offers to refinance. Many
junk-mail offers come with fake checks made out to the
homeowner, and all they have to do is refinance their home to
get the real check and mortgage -- often times subprime -- that
goes with it.
Many people who fall into the subprime trap have accepted one of
these offers without checking to see what other mortgage lenders
can do for them.
If you are tempted by one of these subprime mortgage loan
offers, shop around first for the lowest total cost loan you can
get. Besides looking at the interest rate, look at loan
initiation fees, processing charges, and prepayment penalties.
Lenders must give you a Good Faith Estimate of all the costs and
fees for the loan. Compare it to the Good Faith Estimates from
at least two other lenders, before making any decision. |