| January 8, 2001 |
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If you're like most homebuyers, you'd rather undergo a root canal than be painfully interrogated by the lender when applying for a mortgage loan. What IS the lender trying to uncover and why is it any of his business? While many of the questions may appear abstract and invasive, each question has a meaning to its madness. For example, uncovering your assets (including personal property) shows that you've been disciplined enough to accumulate items of value and wealth. And if you've received wage increases each time you've changed employers, its another positive that you've bettered yourself financially in your chosen profession. But what about lender requirements asking you to provide true and original copies of your tax return (signed, of course) or a letter from your CPA on original letterhead mean? Do requests like these have anything to do with your character or financial ability as a buyer? Perhaps not, but they do have a role in curtailing mortgage fraud. Increases in mortgage fraud are, in part, due to the fact that it has become much easier to perpetrate. One example, as offered by an Indiana company last year, was the ability to provide you with a new identity for less than twenty dollars! It would provide you with a new name, social security number, picture ID and a major credit card. Additionally, new and creative forms of financing, coupled with automated underwriting can potentially compromise due diligence. Add this to low-cost computer equipment, printers and copy machines that produce state-of-the-art copies, and you've got a 21st century recipe for mortgage fraud. Lenders look for mortgage application red flags in four major areas:
So keep in mind that when lenders ask you to provide tax returns, your mother's maiden name or even show your birthmark, they're just helping control mortgage fraud which should, in turn, save you money on your mortgage! |
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