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Tag Archive for 'mortgage scams'

Is Equity Stripping X-Rated?

Here's a mortgage scam disguised as a good deal. Your dear Great Aunt Martha calls you to crow about her new mortgage -- she cut her payment in HALF! Isn't that wonderful?! Well, maybe not. She might have just gotten stripped.
What do I mean by stripped? No, the lender didn't get to see Great Aunt Martha naked (shudder). But they might have made off with her home equity. Here's how it works.

The homeowner (usually older and having a lot more home equity than education) is approached by a sleazeball, perhaps even door-to-door. She might even give him lemonade and cookies......he abuses the nice lady's hospitality by offering her a new mortgage but leaving out silly little details like mandatory disclosures. Say that she only has $100,000 left on her original $300,000 home loan. Her payment at 7% is $1,996 a month. But he offers her a new loan with a payment of only $995 a month and she happily signs on the bottom line.

Why Is this a Bad Idea?

Great Aunt Martha only had five years of paying on her mortgage before it would have been gone forever. And now she has a new 30 year mortgage. But that's not the worst of it. Her new rate is 10%! Go ahead, put that into a mortgage calculator and you'll see. And that's not all -- that scoundrel charged her $10,000 to get the loan -- that's ten points! So now she has a $110,000 30-year mortgage at 10%. He stripped$10,000 of equity. And that's mild. Predators look for older homeowners with poor credit because they are unlikely to shop around for their home loans and more likely to have home equity that can be stolen.

So What Should You Be Doing for the Great Aunt Marthas in Your Life?

If Aunt Martha is really strapped for cash, look into a Home Equity Conversion Mortgage with her. It's regulated by HUD, and she doesn't need income or even good credit to qualify. An HECM can pay off her current mortgage and maybe even give her some extra cash too. Reverse mortgage counselors can help her determine if that's her best option, or if something like a home equity line would be a better choice.

What Can Strippers Teach the Rest of Us?

Never take out a mortgage without seeing a Good Faith Estimate and a Truth-in-Lending disclosure. Always shop with several lenders, and never go with one who makes unsolicited offers. Shopping online is a great way to make sure that you aren't being targeted by preditors.

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Older Borrowers Have Different Experiences with Lenders

If you're an older homeowner with bad credit and a lot of home equity, you are probably being bombarded with junk mail, phone calls, and email solicitations from salespeople trying to get you to refinance your mortgage. Be very careful dealing with these people--they may be practicing a predatory lending technique called equity stripping. They'll be doing the stripping, but it's you who ends up naked.

Look Out for Strippers

Equity stripping involves refinancing with ridiculous fees and costs that the homeowner may not be aware of. Here's how it works. Say, you have a bad credit mortgage and are paying an interest rate of 12%. It was a $200,000 loan, but you only owe $100,000 on it and your home has appreciated and is now worth $400,000. Some guy you don't know comes banging on your door and claims that he can get you an 8% interest rate. Your payment drops by about $2,200 a month! Sounds pretty good, doesn't it? You can't wait to sign on the dotted line.

What a Lower Rate Costs if You Have Bad Credit

But there's a catch. You only owed $100,000 on your mortgage. The new loan is for $125,000, and a lot of that payment reduction comes from starting your loan over for another 30 years. And $25,000 in loan fees on a $100,000 loan is criminally high. All you notice is the lower payment--you don't see how much it's costing you to get it. There have been documented cases of seniors refinancing several times in just a few years, over and over until they have no home equity left, can't afford the payments, and end up in foreclosure.

The Solution? Take Mortgage Financing into Your Own Hands

According to a study by AARP, seniors who respond to solicitations rather than contacting lenders themselves are more likely to end up with bad deals. Those who rely on a mortgage broker to find the "best loan" for them are also less likely to end up with a satisfactory mortgage experience. You should therefore shred and toss that junk mail, delete the emails (c'mon, they're probably coming from the same folks who claim they can help you lose 10 pounds in 2 days), and screen your phone calls. Look for lenders on your own terms--it's easy to do online, even if you have bad credit.

Try a Reverse Mortgage: Bad Credit Okay

If you have enough home equity to attract the equity strippers, you should really consider a reverse mortgage. Find a lender approved by HUD to fund Home Equity Conversion Mortgages (HECMs). The fees on these loans are limited by HUD. You will see a reverse mortgage counselor to determine if a reverse home loan is a good solution for you. Best of all, people with bad credit don't pay any more than people with good credit. Because you don't repay the mortgage until you die, sell the property, or move out, your income and credit history are irrelevant.

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About Mortgage Credit Problems

Specializing in Bad Credit Mortgages… Because Life Doesn’t Always Turn Out Like You Planned. A sick child, a few late bills, or an unexpected expense can easily get you off track and your credit may suffer, but we don't think you should miss out on the opportunities available to everyone else.

Gina Pogol

Gina Pogol

About the Author:

Gina Pogol writes for an online media company about mortgage and finance. In addition to a decade in mortgage lending, she formerly consulted for Experian and other credit bureaus, and worked as a tax accountant for Deloitte. She has a BS in Financial Management from the University of Nevada.

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