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Home Buyers - Did Your Mortgage Application Get
Rejected
Home Buyers Help for Getting Your Home Mortgage
Approved
Home Buyers - Did Your Mortgage Application Get Rejected? Here
is Part 1 of a 2 part article that helps you get your Home
Mortgage Approved.
Attention Home Buyers: Don't be surprised if your
friendly lender, the one who invites you to sit down and apply
for a mortgage, ushers you politely out the door empty-handed
after you've chatted a bit.
The sudden chill isn't personal. The Mortgage Bankers
Association, or MBA, in Washington, D.C., estimates that about
half of all mortgage applicants are now being turned down.
Though refinancing approvals remained static, the acceptance
rate on mortgage applications suffered a 10 percentage-point
drop, from 63 percent in the first half of 2007 to 53 percent
in the first half of last year, according to mortgage data
tracked semi-annually by the association. Since then, further
tightening of credit standards means at least half of
mortgage-seeking consumers can't squeeze through to acceptance,
says MBA spokeswoman Carolyn Kemp.
Instead of yielding to shame, anger or any of the usual
emotions associated with rejection, today's Home
Buyer who is intent on buying or refinancing should
adopt a pragmatic stance, since clear-eyed determination may
eventually land them a loan.
Here's how:
1. Get a read on the reason
If you are a Home Buyer and you submitted a formal application,
federal law dictates that you're entitled to a formal
rejection.
Expect an "adverse action" notice, spelling out the reasons for
turning you down, which these days is likely to state that the
loan amount you're seeking is too large compared to the current
appraised value of your home, says Joe Theisen, president of
the Wisconsin Mortgage Professionals Association and branch
manager of Fairway Independent Mortgage Corp. in Madison,
Wis.
If it's not your home's value that's the issue, it may be your
personal credentials, such as your creditworthiness, work
history or debt load.
When credit is the issue, an adverse-action notice is required,
naming the credit reporting agency that provided the data on
which the lender based its decision, according to Federal Trade
Commission rules. You're also entitled to a free credit report;
see the FTC Web site for more information.
Given the odds of acceptance, a lender may not require you to
pay a few hundred dollars to submit a formal application, which
includes the cost of a professional appraisal on the property.
Instead, he may pull a credit score, and tell you what you're
likely eligible for, says Marc Savitt, president of the
National Association of Mortgage Brokers.
2. Find a fix
Qualifying as a home buyer for a mortgage isn't a
black-and-white issue. Rather, different loans at varying rates
may be available, depending on how risky a lender thinks a
particular mortgage will be. If you don't qualify at 5.5
percent, for instance, you may be able to get the nod for a
loan at 6 percent or 6.5 percent.
However, many borrowers, especially those who are refinancing,
need a certain rate to reach the monthly payment they want. Not
only are rates higher for risky loans, but there are now
upfront "point" charges dictated by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,
the two big mortgage guarantors currently under government
control, Savitt says.
To get a good rate, some borrowers may be able to make changes
- like lowering the amount of the loan they seek.
When a borrower isn't far from the qualifying mark, he may be
able to reapply and be approved relatively quickly. For
instance, if you're within reach of a 740 credit score, which
is usually required for the best rate, you might pay down a
balance on a credit card and hit the target, Theisen says.
Check back for Part 2 Tomorrow
If you're thinking about buying a home check out our
Home Buyer Rebate
Program. We give you 33% of our commission when you use
one of our agents to help you purchase your next
home.
by Linda Bills - 4/9/09
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MSNBC - bankrate.com
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