Houston Real Estate | Houston Real Estate News | Houston Realtors

2M Realty is your has over 20-years experience in all aspects of the Houston real estate market. Whether you are buying, selling, renting or leasing property in Houston, we are knowledgeable Houston Realtors you can rely upon.

Search the Houston MLS to view over 50,000 Houston Properties for sale or lease. Find homes for sale, condominiums, townhomes, high rises, and homes for rent. Locate and research Houston commercial property, including retail centers, office buildings, industrial sites, warehouse space, commercial pad sites and other Houston land for sale.

The greater Houston Texas real estate market includes surrounding cities such as Baytown, Sugar Land, Galveston, Richmond, Katy, Missouri City, Pasadena, Kingwoood, Tomball, Cypress and the Conroe real estate market, as well as all areas encompassed by Harris County and the nine adjacent Texas Counties.

 

... Click here to search more Houston Texas Real Estate

Houston Condos, Houston Townhomes, Houston High-Rises
To search Houston Condos, Townhomes or High-Rises please Click Here or go to our Houston MLS search page and select your criteria.

Houston Homes for Rent
To search Houston Homes for Rent please Click Here or go to our Houston MLS search page and select your criteria.

Houston Commercial Real Estate
To search Houston Commercial Real Estate and other Houston Commercial Property please Click Here.

Contact 2M Realty

If you have any questions or need more detailed information, please feel free to contact us via phone at (888) 847-HOME or fill out the form to let us know how we can help with your real estate needs.

Office Location 2M Realty Advisors, LLC
23569 FM 1314
Porter, TX 77365
(888) 847-HOME Toll Free (281) 354-3500 Office
(281) 354-3100 Fax
support@2Mrealty.com

Valid mortgage price quotes do exist

June 25th, 2012 5:04am
Do you know where to look?

Jack Guttentag
Inman News®

"How many lenders must I shop to be certain I receive a competitive price?"

If you have access to valid price quotes, three is usually enough. If you don't have access to valid price quotes, you won't get a competitive price no matter how many lenders you solicit.

Valid prices are prices that the lender would be willing to commit itself to at the time the price is quoted. Differences in valid prices posted by different lenders are small, which is why you don't have to shop many lenders. The reason is that 95 percent of all new mortgages today are either sold to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, or insured by FHA or VA, so that the federal government assumes virtually all of the risk.

The residual risk to the originating lenders, that they might be required to buy back loans or, at an extreme, lose their right to originate, is small and does not result in large price differences between them. Some lenders are more efficient than others, but price differences from this source are also small.

The challenge faced by mortgage borrowers who want to shop is that most price quotes are not valid, and soliciting them is a waste of time. Invalid prices can be quoted to shoppers with impunity because shoppers can't say, "Yes, I'll take it," until the information upon which the price is based has been confirmed, by which time the market will have changed.

Valid mortgage price quotes meet all of the following conditions:

They come from the internal pricing system of the lender, which I call their "posted prices," with no intermediation from loan officers. Loan officers are not bound to quote posted prices, and it is common for them to quote prices below the posted price, called "lowballing," in order to induce shopping borrowers to commit to them.

They are fully adjusted for all loan features that affect the price, such as credit score, type of property, purpose of loan, down payment, etc. The list is a long one. If anything that affects the price is left out, the lender assumes whatever generates the lowest price, which may or may not hold up.

For example, many lenders price loans without asking whether the borrower wants to escrow taxes and insurance. If in fact the borrower does not want to escrow, the price will have to be raised.

They include all price components. This means not only the interest rate and points but also other lender fees that are often left out of price quotes.

They are current as of the time of the quote, not as of the day before. The borrower shopping several lenders must do so on the same day, and to be safe within the same hour of the day, since prices are sometimes adjusted during the day.

Valid price quotes are available on the Internet if you know where to look. Every mortgage lender has a website, but few provide valid prices on them. Most are designed to entice shoppers to identify themselves so that they can be contacted by a loan officer who will give them a sales pitch.

But some lenders provide valid prices on their sites while allowing shoppers to remain anonymous until such time as the shopper elects to contact the lender. These include the seven Upfront Mortgage Lenders that I identify on my website. Shopping them is doable, if a bit of a chore, because each site is programmed differently and the shopper must visit each on the same day to extract the desired price data.

Much the better way to shop is on a multilender website where the site maintains valid prices for multiple lenders, which it presents in one single format for easy comprehension and comparison. There are three of those: mortgagemarvel.com; zillow.com; and mtgprofessor.com, which is mine.

Don't confuse multilender sites with lead generation sites, such as lendingtree.com and lowermybills.com, which do business with hundreds of lenders. These sites do not collect price data from lenders. Rather, they collect financial information including Social Security numbers from shoppers, which they sell as leads to lender clients.

These lead generation sites first identify the lenders who have indicated an interest in the particulars of a lead, and they sell the lead to the three or four lenders who will pay the most for it. The shopper then gets sales pitches from three or four loan officers who are under strong pressure to lowball the price because that is often the way to win the deal.

The writer is professor of finance emeritus at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. Comments and questions can be left at www.mtgprofessor.com.

Contact Jack Guttentag:
Email Email Letter to the Editor Letter to the Editor

My Account

Log in, to view your saved searches and add to your favorite listings.

Sign Up Here For Your FREE Account

... So You Can:

  • View detailed property information
  • Print detailed property flyers
  • Save your searches & favorite homes
  • Inquire about a private showing
  • Map individual property locations
  • Share your favorite homes with friends