home lenders refinance mortgage

January 7, 2009

3 Comments »

  1. CYRIL

    Not sure if you’re asking this from a consumer standpoint or a mortgage professional standpoint, but several of the criteria that you mentioned are not accurate.
    FannieMae loans still do not require reserves, verification of rent, tradelines, payment of collections or a debt ratio less than 45%.
    I recently got a loan closed where the borrower had no open tradelines, $24,000 in open collections, no rental history, and a debt ratio over 50% and the fixed 30 year rate was below 7%.
    So, while I agree that most lenders are tightening their standards, I haven’t seen it to that degree yet.
    The criteria that mentioned for bank statements has been around for awhile.

    While I appreciate the background information on FannieMae, I have been in the business for over 10 years and I’m familiar with who they are.
    99% of all “conforming” (read: good credit) loans are underwritten to their standards/guidelines through their automated underwriting system (Desktop Underwriter) and this system decides what is approved and what is not. FannieMae is not a lender – they’re a GSE (Government Sponsored Enterprise) and they purchase loans.

    Comment by Mr. Knowitall — January 8, 2009 @ 3:42 am

  2. ROYCE

    Most mortgage lenders should realize that a lot of companies pay now only by direct deposit, you have no other option. There are also a lot of people no longer carrying landlines, and just using a cell phone only. And you have no control over if your boss chooses to have his number listed in information or not.

    Comment by Katasha — January 8, 2009 @ 5:43 am

  3. RAUL

    Let me put it this way: good credit opens all the doors. The higher your credit the less you have to verify – and vise versa. Conventional loan qualifications have not tightened up for those with scores over 620 (which is slightly below average). 100% financing is still available for a purchase; you can still go to 90% LTV on refi’s with little trouble.

    It is the sub-prime market and Alt-A (sort of between sub-prime and conventional) markets that have been slammed by tightened approval qualifications.

    Comment by thinking-guru — January 9, 2009 @ 7:56 pm

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