Welcome to SoundBiteBlog.com. This website focuses mainly on providing Real Estate, Mortgage, and Local Area information for consumers and residents in Western Puget Sound, we also share our passions, expertise, and practical insights on Internet marketing and technology, including social media/networking, SEO, website design, and custom web applications. SoundBiteBlog is an award-winning joint venture between Mark Flanders of Pastik Design and Rich Jacobson of Keller William West Sound.

Within the pages of SoundBite is an eclectic collection of articles covering a wide variety of topics we hope you'll find interesting, engaging, and helpful. Rich is committed to relentlessly representing his client's best interests and empowering them to make informed decisions. Mark finally decided what he wanted to do when he grew up and gets excited when the code he's written solves a customer's problem with blinding efficiency!

Equity Acceleration Programs – Are they better for the borrower or the bank?

July 4th, 2007 by Mark Flanders

The need for speedThis is America where the Need for Speed is ingrained from childhood. As children, we want faster bikes and faster Playstations. In our teen years, it’s faster cars and faster computers. And, as adults we want faster promotions, quicker increases in our credit limits and quicker pay raises. Eventually, we all have a day when we decide what we want more than anything else is Faster Equity Accumulation in our home!

The Good

Enter Equity Acceleration Programs. These programs are a masterpiece of marketing. They target the American need for speed promising to shave years off your mortgage and saving you tens of thousands of dollars in the meantime. Both of these goals are worthwhile. And there is nothing wrong with effective advertising. This article is not meant to imply that Equity Acceleration Programs are all bad. They are not all bad. They are poorly explained and even more poorly understood. As with many of the articles on SoundBiteBlog, this article’s intent is to explain the risks (yes, there are significant risks) and expose that the average consumer can accomplish the same goals in the same amount of time, for less money by avoiding the most heavily promoted Acceleration Programs available today. In short, the goals are worthy, the sales pitch is suspect.

The Bad

Equity Acceleration Programs are often explained in a misleading fashion. Rarely is a consumer told boldly that they are trading their nice, safe fixed rate first mortgage for an Adjustable Rate Line of Credit! The reason for this deception is obvious. It’s old news that interest rates are rising. It’s old news that they are expected to continue to rise in the near future. This old news causes anxiety in many borrowers and because of that anxiety, many loan originators are glossing over the part about an Adjustable Rate, preferring to concentrate most of their explanation on the exciting prospect of paying off a loan in a shorter period of time regardless of how it is done.

Fuzzy math seems to play a big part in an Equity Acceleration presentation. I have listened to two of these presentations in the last couple of months. The more aggressive presentation spent considerable time attempting to convince me that my (imaginary) 6.125% Fixed Rate Mortgage, was actually costing me 65%! My questions about interest rates vs. A.P.R. and how RESPA regulations affect us all, were quickly bypassed and never answered. Shock tactics are normal from what I can see.

A cold dose of realityThe realities of these programs are these. You are going to trade your current mortgage (often an attractive fixed rate) for a new Line of Credit (also a mortgage) with an adjustable rate. You will then “deposit” your entire pay check into this “account” each pay period. Payment of all your normal bills is made from the “account” as you would normally pay them. Presto, abracadabra and your new mortgage will pay off years earlier than it would have! This mathematical magic was explained to me as follows. When you deposit your paycheck, you are temporarily reducing your mortgage balance. This temporary reduction reduces the amount of interest that is charged thereby making a drastic change in the overall amount of interest that accumulates on the loan.

The first flaw in the sales presentation for Equity Acceleration Programs is the fact they ignore how most of us pay our bills. Like my mother taught me to years ago, I pay my bills first on payday along with making my deposit to savings. The result of paying my bills immediately is that my new mortgage is only “temporarily reduced” for a very temporary time indeed. The amount of interest saved by reducing my mortgage balance by a few thousand dollars for 2 days is pretty insignificant. AND I had to trade my fixed rate mortgage for an adjustable rate to do it! The positive effect is more than offset by that fact as soon as interest rates rise and my new mortgage rises with them.

Another flaw is that because this is not an actual depository account, you will never be able to earn interest on your deposits. Remember, it’s a line of credit (a debt) not a savings account or a checking account that pays interest. Therefore, money that you could have accumulated by using the same theory with your existing accounts will be lost.

And the final flaw in these presentations becomes apparent when you consider how long it will take to recapture the cost of the new loan itself. You didn’t think these were loans without fees did you? No, like every other mortgage you have applied for, there are fees involved. Someone will need to appraise the home. Someone will need to do a Title Search and approve Title Insurance. And the list goes on. Each service includes a fee. All the normal mortgage fees will apply and they will add up to thousands of dollars. It will take a long time to save enough with the new mortgage to simply break even after these fees.

The Ugly

The biggest advantage to many Equity Acceleration Programs is to the Lender and the Loan Officer. Let’s be pragmatic for a moment. When was the last time you saw anyone advertising anything they were not going to profit from? These programs are no different. The Lender will be make a profit on each and every one and the Loan Originator will be paid for finding another client. There is nothing inherently wrong with that. Each time I have applied for a new mortgage, I knew that Loan Officer would get paid and the Lender would make a profit. Don’t forget, this is just another mortgage and it works like all the others. Loan Originators do not work for free. Lenders work for a profit. The market has gotten very difficult for Loan Originators and many are looking for new, creative ways to generate new loans. Lenders are rolling out “new” creative loan programs and dusting off old ones.

Caveat Emptor, “let the buyer beware”, is a phrase to keep in mind if you are tempted by a good sales pitch. Remember, you are buying a product. You may have just heard about the best product, or you may have just heard the best sales presentation.

The Do-It-Yourself Equity Accelaration Program

If you spend lots of time with a calculator in your hand like I do (occupational hazard), you get in the habit of running “What If” scenarios. It can be addicting to look at how much money we can save by tweaking the numbers in our personal finances. What if I move $2500 to this credit card account over here? What if I send an additional $125 each month in on my mortgage. What if I send that same $125 in on my car payment? You get the picture. This kind of thinking will drive some people to visions of Tequila and others chase the possibilities with all the fascination of a new video game.

What you will find running “What If” scenarios is that there are ways to shave years off your mortgage and save thousand of dollars without having to create a budjet that leaves you depressed for lack of fun money.

Here’s just one idea of many. Rather than opting for an Equity Acceleration Program that will cost you money, open a savings account or a checking account that pays interest. The last time I checked, Boeing Employees Credit Union was open to anyone living in Washington State and had a savings account that paid 5.5%. Now that makes all kinds of sense! Keep your nice, low interest rate, fixed rate mortgage alone. Open a high yield savings or checking account and follow the same principals as the Equity Programs. Deposit your paycheck into it and pay your bills out of it. Make some interest for yourself.

But don’t trade your fixed rate loan for an adjustable rate line of credit without understanding the risk you are taking. Very few Equity Acceleration Programs benefit the borrower as much as they benefit the Lender and the Loan Officer.

 

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Should I Tell My Loan Officer About The Loan That’s Not On My Credit Report?

April 24th, 2007 by Mark Flanders

Mortgage fraud article graphicIt doesn’t happen often, but occasionally credit reports are missing some information. What about child support from before your current marriage? That doesn’t show up at all on a credit report. Should you tell the loan officer or just keep it to yourself. If it’s not on the report it doesn’t count, right?

Your loan and your credibility are at risk

You can go to jail if you deliberately withhold information from your mortgage application. It is called fraud and it’s not worth the risk. If you have ever wondered whether or not you must let a loan officer know about something that isn’t on you credit report, now you have the answer. Everything you know about your debts or obligations, regardless of if it may be on your credit report, must be disclosed to your lender. The lender is considering lending you thousands of dollars and has the legal right to full information. If that lender makes a decision to loan you money and finds out later that you withheld pertinent information, you could still go to prison.

Think of it this way. If a friend of yours asked you for a loan, but didn’t tell you something financially critical like they just totalled their car after a hard night of partying and need to get another one as soon as possible. And they didn’t tell you until after you gave them money. You’d be pretty ticked off, wouldn’t you? I would be. Without a car, your friend probably can’t get to work. And no work means no money. So of course you are going to wonder how they’ll pay you back.

A mortgage lender is in exactly the same position. They are making a decision based on a lie of omission.

Here’s the good news

Your loan officer can probably get your loan approved anyway. There are so many creative loan programs available these days, your debt ratio may not be as bad as you think, to a lender. If the lender agrees to make a loan after you have told everything there is to tell about your debts, you have nothing at all to worry about. The lender knows what he needs to know and fraud is no concern of yours.

So, if you have ever wondered about that hidden obligation or been tempted to keep it all to yourself, go with the honest solution and let the loan officer do his or her job. It works better for everybody involved. The honest solution allows you to stay out of jail and live in a nice house. The other decision? Well…..visitors are allowed!

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Kevlar For WA Home Buyers: Three tips to keep you in control

April 15th, 2007 by Mark Flanders

Purchasing a home without representation is similar to driving down a straight road with a blindfold on. It might work out.

The process of purchasing real estate is pretty straight-forward, but the complexities of the legal paperwork are intimidating to say the least. Quite honestly, I wouldn’t think of doing this and I work with real estate transactions every day of the week! There is no better investment of my money, than the services of a well-trained and experienced Realtor®. 

If you have decided to do-it-yourself, here are three things to help you maintain some control of the transaction. These three contigencies will allow you some protection from the more common problems that arise between the time you find the home of your dreams, and the time you are handed the keys to it.

Kevlar for home buyers graphicStay In Control – Tip #1

Financing Contingency:  You want to insure that the financing happens the way that you need it to.  For example, you may want to place an offer based on  finding a mortgage with your specific terms. If you have decided that 6.50% is the highest interest rate you are willing to pay, yet 8.00% is the lowest available at the time, you will need a way to back out of the transaction without financial penalty.  If you do not find that mortgage, the deposit that you have made will be refunded to you. 

The best course of action is to have your financing in place before you go shopping. In that case you can still add a contingency for a specific time period in which to formalize you financing. 

Stay In Control – Tip #2
 

Inspection Contingency:  The next thing to insure your protection is a  home inspection contingency.  Because homes are such large investments and an emotional decision, you need to have your home professionally inspected.  This is no time to put your weekend-garage-warrior hat on thinking you can save a couple of hundred bucks. Let the professionals climb around in the attic and into the crawlspace. Listen to the inspector if he recommends calling in a licensed electrician because some seems amiss. And make sure you place a contingency in your offer that the inspections come back clean or the offer is voided.  If the home inspector does find any problems with your home, you can decide to back out of the home’s purchase altogether, or you can renegotiate for a lower price, based on the findings.
You should have a professional company come in and look at all of the major systems in the home including your heating, cooking, roof, windows and so on.  In addition, the home’s structure should be considered, the presence of any potential electrical, plumbing, water damage or pests in the home and much more. 

Stay In Control – Tip #3 

Appraisal Contingency: While many home buyers are willing to pay for the home of their dreams no matter what that cost, the bank that is giving you the loan for it is not likely be so nice about the process.  The lender will require that an appraisal be done on the home, and you should too.  You want to know that you are getting a home that is worth the cost you are paying for it.  You should place a contingency in your offer, then, that the home will appraise for at least the amount of the offer you are placing.

You will need to have an independent appraiser come out and do this work.  He or she will compare the home’s condition and property aspects to homes in the area that have the same or similar features and what their selling prices have been. If the appraisal comes in low, make sure you have the legal right to back out of the transaction or renegotiate the price.

If you are determined to play Russian Roulette with hundreds of thousands of dollars by representing yourself in the purchase of a home, at least take along some Kevlar. These three contingencies will give you a bare minimum of protection.

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Ten Commandments For Mortgage Applicants

March 20th, 2007 by Mark Flanders

Applying for a mortgage is stressfull under the best of circumstances. Even experienced borrowers feel a little twinge of anxiety at the thought of taking on hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of debt. There are things you can do to reduce the stress. Lists such as this one can be found on all mortgage websites, yet no real estate related site is complete without one. So here’s SoundBiteBlog’s list of Do’s and Don’ts.

The mortgage approval process is forgiving of many things, but these items will throw a serious wrench in the works. The following is a list of things that I see most often as a Loan Officer, that derail the process of getting approved for a mortgage loan.

Ancient scroll

 

 

  1. Don’t quit your job.
  2. Don’t pay your bills late.
  3. Don’t procrastinate getting stuff to the loan officer.
  4. Don’t lie to your loan officer.
  5. Don’t withhold information from the Loan Officer.
  6. Tell your loan officer in advance if you plan on making a large purchase.
  7. Don’t open any new credit card accounts.
  8. Do take your time. Make sure you understand everything that is happening.
  9. Do overestimate expenses and underestimate income. Be conservative.
  10. Do have fun!

 

 

On occasion, you might have to break one of the rules in this list. Life happens and there is just no way to make it a perfect one. When you simply must break one of the rules (with the exceptions of #4 and #5!), let your Loan Officer know about it right away. Let him or her know in advance it at all possible. There are ways to compensate for almost any sitution that can arise during the mortgage loan approval process. But it is much easier to anticipate a problem, than it is to pick up pieces after the fact.

 

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Is your ego hurting your credit score or your credit score hurting your ego?

March 18th, 2007 by Mark Flanders

ArtistWe all have different strengths. Some people are creative geniuses yet housekeeping disasters. Some people paint. Others can do complex mathematical equations in their heads. We all have things we do well. We also have things we don’t do well at all.

Many men are taught from childhood that being completley self-sufficient is a sign of manliness. Women seem to ask for help more easily and naturally. It seems they automatically know that ,as individuals, we can’t be great at everything and it only makes sense to collaborate. When it comes to building and maintaining really good credit, the “I don’t need anyone’s help” mentality can be a serious roadblock.

Play to your strengths and delegate the rest.

If one of your non-strengths (notice I didn’t call it a weakness) is in the area of consistency when it comes to bill paying, consider asking for help. With couples, one of partners will generally be good at this while the other partner is not. That’s great if you are in a commited relationship, but if you aren’t? It doesn’t mean you can’t use the same technique to advantage. Do you know someone you trust who is really good at budgeting and has the credit to prove it? This could be a brother or sister, it could be a close friend, it could even be an uncle or a grandparent. Be open minded about who you can approach to get help. I have several clients each year who are fisherman in Alaska but reside in Washington State. They all have someone in WA handling the chore of getting the bills paid while they are fishing for months at a time. It seems to work very well for all of them. Why can’t the same thing work for a non-fisherman?

HandymanHow do you pay them back?

How do you even up the scorecard if someone agrees to take on the task of managing your bills? Be creative and think about the old-fashioned idea of barter. When America was young, settlers had very little cash. They traded skills back and forth. The farmer traded grain for livestock. The blacksmith traded horseshoes for clothing. The same system can work vey well today. You probably have a skill that you are good at. Are you a roofer, or a handyman? Believe me, there are many folks who wouldn’t know where to begin tackling jobs like those. Trade what you are good at for the help of someone who is good at maintaining great credit. Do you have more money than time? Cash is always in demand.

Don’t let your ego trip you up.

If you have ever been in a management position you know that one of the most powerful tools a manager has is delegation. Important tasks are assigned to the employee who is best able to handle the task well. Approach your credit report as a manager, not as an employee. If someone else is better suited to handle that job, delegate it. When managers do this they are viewed as efficient, they are not viewed as lacking skill. You do not need to be great at everything to reap the benefits of a great credit report. That is your ego talking.

Don’t let your ego get in the way of a great credit score, or your credit score will end up hurting your ego.

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