Archive for the 'Conforming Wholesale Mortgage Rates' Category
Interday Mortgage Rate Pricing for the Worse
July 11th, 2008 Categories: Conforming Wholesale Mortgage Rates, General
Tipped off by my friend Dan Green (via Twitter @lifeinqueencity) about 30 mins ago, there was an inter day pricing for the worse in the mortgage market today:
The bottom fell out of the mortgage market in the past 2 hours. Rates spiked — just in time for all of the weekend house hunters.
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This morning I threw a post up showing today’s wholesale direct mortgage rates…below is the screen shot from that post showing where 30 Yr Fixed rates and pricing were at ~9am PST:
After getting Dan’s twit I repriced the identical scenario on RateSpeed at ~12:30pm PST and received the following results:
Boy was Dan right, the bottom did fall out this afternoon!
6.125% was paying 1.256% in YSP this morning, this afternoon it’s only paying .395%. On a $400,000 Loan Amount, that’s a $3444.00 difference! You could have locked 5.875% this morning for almost the same price that 6.125% is going for this afternoon.
It’s a turbulent market folks…the Mortgage Backed Security market is experiencing similar volitility to its equity market counterpart. Fun times.
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Wholesale Conforming Mortgage Rates and Pricing 7/11/08
July 11th, 2008 Categories: Conforming Wholesale Mortgage Rates
Conforming Mortgage Rates and Pricing for 7/11/08
Rates and Pricing Provided by RateSpeed…
Risk Based Pricing Variables:
- Primary Residence
- Purchase
- Single Family Residence
- <80%LTV
- 720 FICO score
- DTI <42%
- 400,000 Loan Amount
- Fully Documented Income and Assets
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Real Time Wholesale Direct Mortgage Interest Rates for 6/16/08
June 16th, 2008 Categories: Conforming Wholesale Mortgage Rates
What you see above is a screen shot from a results page generated by RateSpeed at 1:41pm on 6/15/08.
The risk based credit, financial and property criteria used to generate the above quote is as follows:
Purchase, Primary Residence, Single Family Residence, Fully Documented income, Debt to Income <39%, Loan To Value <80%, $400k Loan Amount, 700 FICO score.
Don’t believe what you see? Try it out yourself.
Shortly, RateSpeed will be enrolling 25 mortgage professionals as beta testers. Stay tuned to see how you can be one of the early adopters in the transparent mortgage revolution.
Defining the fields and columns above:
Conf 30 Yr Fixed.
This is the term of the mortgage program. In this case the program is a traditional conforming 30 year fixed mortgage product.
Rate.
This is the interest rate of the loan.
APR, in this alpha rendition, will only account for the Broker/Banker Fee. Traditionally it will (and should) include all closing costs. IMO APR is confusing and manipulatable.
Loan Amount.Self explanatory, the dollar amount of the mortgage.
Monthly Payment.
How much you would pay the mortgage provider each month. Includes principle and interest.
Price.
This is the % cost or rebate that the given interest rate yields in the wholesale market. The Loan Amount is multiplied against the Price to equal the dollar ($) amount in cost or YSP credit.
YSP Credit.
RateSpeed is about choice and displays five levels of Price, one Price below Par (a Par rate is the lowest interest rate a borrower qualifies for, given by the wholesale lender) and four above Par. The higher Rate one chooses above Par the more YSP Credit (or cash rebate) the consumer may receive and apply toward closing costs (Broker/Banker Fee and 3rd Party fees, i.e. appraisal, title, escrow, home inspection etc). An interest rate below Par will cost a consumer to acquire, often times called ‘buying down’ an interest rate.
In the above 30 Yr Fixed, $400k Loan Amount example:
6.25% would yield $1084.00 in cash from the wholesale lender to the consumer to be applied toward closing costs.
6.625% would yield $5844.00 in cash from the wholesale lender to the consumer to be applied toward closing costs. The first $2000 would pay the Broker/Banker fee and the rest may be applied toward 3rd party closing costs (in this scenario).
Broker/Banker Fee.
This is the (negotiable) flat fee the mortgage professional is charging to close this loan. It is completely up to the mortgage professional what this fee ultimately is, RateSpeed does not mandate what a mortgage professional can charge.
$2000 is what we chose to represent as the Broker/Banker fee in this example and should not be interpreted as what all licensed mortgage professionals may charge who offer RateSpeed to their clients. The fee may be more or less, completely dependent on the mortgage professional, but always disclosed up-front.
Net Cost.
Net Cost = Broker/Banker Fee minus (plus) YSP Credit (cost).
Using the same qualifying information, compare and contrast the rates and pricing you see above to other mortgage websites and similar applications and you will quickly see the difference between a transparent mortgage professional who offers RateSpeed and those who don’t…unabated access to real time, best-case wholesale mortgage rates and pricing.RateSpeed: Enabling mortgage consumers and professionals to make smarter decisions with better information.
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