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Archive for the ‘Real Estate Tips’ Category

Protect Yourself. Protect Your Identity.

Posted by welovedeercreek on July 13, 2007

WHAT HAPPENS AFTER YOUR MORTGAGE ORIGINATOR PULLS YOUR CREDIT REPORT?

1. Your mortgage originator pulls your credit report from the credit bureaus to obtain your credit score and process your loan application.

2. The credit bureaus may place your personal information on a prescreened list (also called a trigger list).

3. Within hours the credit bureaus may sell the list to hundreds of companies. Your mortgage originator does not authorize the sale of your personal information and cannot stop it. Only you have the ability to stop this practice.

4. Within hours you begin to receive phone solicitations for mortgage products from numbers and companies you don’t recognize.

5. Within days you begin to receive mail solicitations for mortgage products.

WHAT TO LOOK OUT FOR

1. The “bait-and-switch” scheme. This scheme is run by companies who get business by luring consumers in with low rates and then switching the loan product.

2. Solicitations (phone and mail) that appear to be from your current mortgage company. Always confirm who you are speaking with.

3. Solicitations asking for pin numbers, passwords, your mother’s maiden name and/or your social security number.

4. If you believe you have been the target of one of these deceitful practices or some other abuse of the system, please report the incident to the Federal Trade Commission at 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261.

WHAT YOU CAN DO

1. Opt-Out of prescreened offers.

2. Register with the Do-Not-Call Registry, www.donotcall.gov.

3. Contact the Federal Trade Commission.

4. Contact Congress.

5. Stop other forms of direct marketing by visiting the Direct Mail Association’s Web site at: www.dmaconsumers.org/consumerassistance.html.

Worried? Want To Do More To Protect Your Information?

Voice your concerns by calling your Congressional Representative at 202-224-3121.

FAQs

WHAT IS A PRESCREENED OFFER OF CREDIT OR INSURANCE?

A firm offer of credit or insurance is defined as any offer of credit or insurance to a consumer that will be honored if the consumer is determined, based on the consumer’s credit report, to meet the specific criteria used to select the consumer for the offer, subject to certain confirmation requirements.

WHAT IS OPT-OUT?

Opting-Out refers to the process of removing your name from lists supplied by the Consumer Credit Reporting Companies, Equifax, Experian, Innovis and TransUnion (“Credit Bureaus”), to be used for firm (pre-approved /prescreened) offers of credit or insurance. Your rights as a consumer under the Fair Credit Reporting Act include the right to “Opt-Out” for 5 years or permanently.

HOW TO OPT-OUT

You can opt-out by visiting www.optoutprescreen.com or through the toll-free telephone number, 888-567-8688. When you call or visit the website, you’ll be asked to provide personal information, including your home telephone number, name, Social Security number, and date of birth. The information you provide is confidential and will be used only to process your request to opt out.

DOES EXERCISING MY RIGHT TO OPT-OUT AFFECT MY ABILITY TO APPLY FOR CREDIT OR INSURANCE?

No, removing your name from these lists does not affect your ability to apply for or obtain credit or insurance.

DOES OPTING-OUT IMPROVE MY CREDIT SCORE?

No, since inquiries for firm offers for credit or insurance are not used in calculating credit scores, Opting-Out does not improve your credit score. Similarly, inquiries for firm offers for credit or insurance do not reduce your credit score.

HOW DO I CONTACT THE FTC?

Federal Trade Commission

Consumer Response Center

Room 130600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.

Washington, D.C. 20580

www.ftc.gov/credit/

Posted in Agent's Advice, Buying Real Estate, First Time Buyer, General Interest, Local Interest, Mortgage & Financing, Real Estate, Real Estate Tips, Tips on Buying A Home, Tips On Selling Your Home | Leave a Comment »

Don’t Let Your Lender Run Away With Your Equity!

Posted by welovedeercreek on July 13, 2007

Say you, as the Borrower, fall behind on your Mortgage. You need to catch your delinquent mortgage amount up to ward off going into default and eventually foreclosure.

Did you know that before foreclosure occurs, a repayment plan can be proposed to your mortgage holder/lender to satisfy the amount owed?

A Loss Mitigation Specialist can propose several plans or strategies to the lender to put the loan back in good standing.

Lenders always want to avoid the foreclosure process when at all possible. It’s much more equitable if a “meeting of the minds” can occur and an agreement made on a repayment strategy in which you, the homeowner and your lender can benefit.

Loss Mitigation can prevent your home from going to foreclosure. This solution to your mortgage problem is based on your ability to pay, not your credit score.

KEEP READING>>>>

Posted in Agent's Advice, Economic Focus, Foreclosure, Mortgage & Financing, Negotiation, Real Estate, Real Estate Tips | Leave a Comment »

Buyer’s Best Interest . . . Rates That Is!

Posted by welovedeercreek on July 13, 2007

In researching the market, it may be a wise move for all you Buyers take a few minutes to have lenders re-qualify them. In the last few weeks we have seen mortgage rates jump as much as .75%. This can change a Buyers whole financial picture by greatly diminishing his borrowing power.

Re-qualifying is a great way to ensure you aren’t disappointed once you fine a home that you could have afforded last week; but this week’s interest rate has priced you out of the market for!

If you’re out looking to buy a home, securing a rate lock commitment from your lender is vital.

  • Identify when your rate will expire
  • Close timely
  • Request an extension

Rates locked two weeks ago are golden in today’s market. Be sure the mortgage professional you are working with is keeping a close eye on the bond market. A bond-savvy mortgage professional can spot price changes before lenders announce them. Locking ahead of an interest rate hike can save you thousands of dollars over the life of your loan.

Posted in Agent's Advice, Buying Real Estate, Economic Focus, First Time Buyer, Investment, Mortgage & Financing, Negotiation, Real Estate, Real Estate Tips, Tips on Buying A Home | Leave a Comment »

Value Range Marketing – How it Works

Posted by welovedeercreek on July 13, 2007

The summer season is the time when more homeowners list their property for sale and more homebuyers purchase than any other time in the year. As these homeowners prepare their home to sell in the coming months, one question will rise above the rest: where should our home be priced?
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That’s where value range marketing comes in! Instead of listing the home at a fixed price, the seller allows the buyers to see the range that they would be willing to sell into. This would allow people to see the home who might normally miss it because it would otherwise be out of their price range. For example: A value range property that is priced between $500,000-$550,000 will show up in a search of a buyer who searches between $475,000-$520,000. If a the seller prices their home at a fixed price at $535,000, the property would not come up in the buyers search. As more buyers view and preview the value range properties, the added attention will generate more exposure to that property in comparison to comparable fixed priced listings.
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It is likely you have seen a home using the value range price strategy. The technique calls for a property to be sold using a low and a high price, while the seller entertains offers between the range. The process encourages open negotiations with a seller who will come down in price and a buyer who will go up. In order to create the range, instead of including your appliances and other extras with the sale you can sell them elsewhere which would enable you to lower the overall price of the property.
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The additional exposure has the potential to generate more offers and since competing buyers legally cannot know the price of competing offers, the presence of an offer, even a low one, may act as the catalyst in achieving a price above the prevailing rate. The Seller benefits by generating offers he may not have received due to the limitations of fixed pricing.

Posted in Agent's Advice, Negotiation, Real Estate, Real Estate Tips, Selling Real Estate, Tips On Selling Your Home | Leave a Comment »