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Back The Mortgage Minute >> I Am a Boring Lender

I Am a Boring Lender

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When I first began working as a mortgage broker the more lenders you were signed up with the more rate sheets you received. A rate sheet is a PDF document from the lender you signed up with - Chase, Wells Fargo or Bank of America, etc. These rate sheets used to be 8 or 10 pages long. There were a variety of transactions and way too many options and programs. To be honest, I don't think the loan officers or brokers even knew what some of the programs were. There was a day when account reps would come to your office about every two or three weeks or so to talk about new programs.
 
Again, I think that was - and it has been proven - the demise of some of our mortgage industry because with those programs, when their risk category got too aggressive some of those ARM (Adjustable Rate Mortgages) programs were just not as attractive for anybody - the mortgage market or the homeowners. Now when I get rate sheets, they are between two and four pages long. I think it is great! It has gone back to the days of "would you like a 30 yr. fixed or a 20 yr fixed or a 15 yr fixed?' Rarely do I talk about ARMS unless I have a client who is buying a home for an investment property and might sell. Or perhaps my client is going to graduate school or they have a contracted job for only a 3 year term. Then that program might be a viable option.
 
To recap, the mortgage industry has become pretty boring! As Dave Ramsey says, he would much prefer that you come in with 20% down and do a 15 year fixed but some of us do not have that capability. We also are not certain that we will not be moving, so why get a 15 year fixed when you can spread those payments out and make it a little cheaper each month. If you look at the amortization of that loan over 15 and 30 years and see the difference in the finance charges over the life of the loan, the benefit of doing a 15 year fixed becomes pretty obvious.
 
I'd like to close with one of my favorite stories. When NASA first sent astronauts into space, they realized that a ball point pen would not work in zero gravity. A million dollar investment and two years of research resulted in a pen that could write in space on almost any surface and at temperatures ranging from well below freezing to over 300 degrees Celsius. When confronted with the same problem, the Russians used a pencil.
 
Sometimes we can make things just a little too complicated when the easy side is where we need to stay! My thanks to my former boss at Specialized Bicycle for the gift of a Russian space pen and the story!  I had no idea you could buy the Russian Space Pencil.