Posted:Jan. 04, 2008
01:05 AM
Mortgage yield spread premium is responsible for up to two thirds of the revenue earned on every mortgage. Yet most Americans have no knowledge of mortgage yield spread premium or how to avoid it.
Posted:Jan. 03, 2008
12:01 PM
Locating the yield spread premium rip-off is virtually impossible except at closing on the settlement statement known as the HUD1 Settlement Statement. Of course, by then it’s too late!
Other non settlement statement mortgage disclosures specifically the Good Faith Estimate (the mortgage application disclosure) are useless for discovering yield spread premium overcharging since most brokers either never disclose or obfuscate the disclosure as you’ll see below.
Posted:Dec. 22, 2007
10:20 AM
A Good Faith Estimate is a legally required mortgage document showing costs, rate, and payment. Believing the Good Faith Estimate reflects truthful, accurate, and guaranteed figures is folly.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
The Good Faith Estimate is manipulated by the loan officer low balling the costs and rate morphing it from a mortgage disclosure into a selling tool. It does not reflect real mortgage rates or actual closing costs.
Posted:Jun. 26, 2007
02:44 AM
There is a new FTC study being quoted by bloggers all over the web and reported in major newspapers like the LA Times and Washington Post by real estate columnist Kenneth R. Harney who I must say when it comes to mortgage issues is more often wrong than right.
The study (if true) makes some amazingly ominous claims: