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Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Eight Tips for Hiring a Real Estate Agent


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Once you’ve decided to work with a realtor who specializes in working with a senior clientele, it’s time to compile a shortlist of candidates and begin scheduling interviews. Let’s consider eight essential rules of thumb that you’ll want to keep in mind for these next crucial steps in the hiring process.

1. Ask someone who works with seniors if they know a great real estate agent.

There are two reasons for this. First, real estate agents cannot give or get kickbacks for referrals. Because of this, the only reason real estate agents get referrals from other professionals is because they’ve earned a reputation for doing a great job. Second, professionals who work with seniors are a wonderful resource because they know firsthand how the needs of a senior can differ from the needs of the general public. It’s very important for the real estate agent who gets referred to a senior client to do a great job; otherwise, both the senior professional and the referral look bad.

2. Get to know the real estate agents you’re considering for the job—and interview at least two of them!

While you may expect to find some big differences between brokerages, keep in mind that real estate agents are independent businesspeople. As such, you may find two agents from the same brokerage who do things very differently. It’s worth spending the time to get to know the professionals whom you’re asking to handle the sale of one of your largest assets. Ask whether the person you’re considering is a full-time agent, who will be your main point of communication, and ask for references from past clients. Don’t forget: work with someone you like!

3. Get to know the brokerage firm.

Although the brokerage you go with isn’t as important as the real estate agent with whom you choose to work, there are certain factors that may influence your decision. Here are a few questions to consider: How long have they been in business? What are their hours of operation? (They should be open seven days a week for your potential buyer.) Are they local and reputable? What is their market share in the neighborhood where you live?

4. Understand the marketing plan.

Creating the marketing plan is one of the most important things your listing agent will do for you. It should identify who’s the most likely buyer for your home, how your buyer usually shops and how your buyer will be targeted. Depending on the kind of home you have and where it’s located, you may want ads in the paper, print ads in real estate magazines, open houses, mailings, Internet advertising or a combination of these marketing efforts. Your listing agent should make information about your house available seven days a week, twenty-four hours a day. By the way: get the marketing plan in writing.

5. Establish how you’ll get updates on the market and on feedback from showings.

One of the biggest complaints consumers have is that they don’t hear from their real estate agents often enough. Ask your agent how you’ll be informed about the market in general and how many times your home was seen on the Internet, feedback from open houses and realtor open houses, and feedback from buyers’ real estate agents.

6. Stay in the driver’s seat.

A good real estate agent knows the local real estate market and stays on top of the most recent technology to market your home effectively. A great agent knows how to show you information about the local market and the most recent trends in marketing so you’re in a position to make informed decisions about your home. If your real estate agent makes recommendations and you’d like more information, just ask. For example, “I understand your recommendation. On what information are you basing that recommendation?” Never be afraid to ask why something is or is not being done to sell your home. You are the client, and you are in charge.

7. Ask whether your agent offers any other services to simplify your move.

Real estate agents run their own small business, so you’ll find some, particularly those who specialize in working with seniors, who offer additional services. These services could include staging your home, helping you find a senior housing community, and hiring movers or an electrician, plumber or handyperson to get your home ready for market. If your real estate agent does offer these additional services, ask whether they cost extra or are included in the commission.

8. Ask about commissions—but consider all the factors before making your decision!

Many consumers who are shopping for an agent make the mistake of comparing them solely on the basis of what they charge for commission. For example, if Rick Realtor charges 8% and Sally Seller charges 3%, you may decide Sally is a much better option. But what if Rick pays the buyer’s agent 4%, and Sally pays the buyer’s agent just 1%? What if Sally is a part-time agent and her office is only open on Wednesdays and Thursdays from noon until 3:00? Is it still a “good deal”? Make sure you understand how long the listing agent wants to have you under contract, how much he or she will pay the buyer’s agent, and what will be done for you from the time the home is listed until the home clears escrow.

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Why Jumbo Mortgages Are So Cheap

Jumbo mortgage rates are at 25-year lows , beating interest rates on traditional, conforming loans. At first glance, that doesn't make sense because jumbo loans are for expensive homes.
Why would a bank give a lower loan rate to someone who wants to buy an expensive home? If they can afford a higher priced home, can't they afford a higher loan rate? Why help the rich get richer?
The answer is simple economics, along with some greed to attract more wealthy clients.
"The rates on jumbo loans are a symptom of the overall credit markets," says Bennie Waller, a professor of finance and real estate at Longwood University in Farmville, VA. "Lenders are very conservative in the lower- and middle-priced home markets. Such borrowers need a high credit score and an above average amount of capital. That is, lenders are focusing on the most highly qualified borrowers."
In other words, the loans offer banks low risk and high return.

How jumbo loans work

Recent jumbo loan interest rates for a 30-year fixed at Wells Fargo were 3.875 percent, while a conforming loan for the same term was 4 percent.
Jumbo loans traditionally have higher interest rates than conforming loans, and are meant to help highly qualified borrowers afford expensive homes. Jumbo loans are for more than $417,000 -- or $625,500 in Hawaii and Alaska -- the limits set by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as conforming loan limits.
To qualify for such high loans, jumbo loan borrowers are often required to have lower debt-to-income ratios, higher credit scores of 700 or better, larger down payments of at least 20 percent, and higher reserve funds than conforming loan borrowers.
Jumbo loans aren't sold to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, so banks have more flexibility to down payment and debt-to-income ratios, says Travis Saling, a mortgage loan officer at Sierra Pacific Mortgage in San Diego, CA. Fannie and Freddie charge specific fees called "guarantee fees" to help guard against defaulted loan exposure. Jumbo loans are cheaper, in part, because they don't have such fees, Saling says.

Go where the money is

By making jumbo loans appealing to high-wealth customers, banks can use the loans as an opportunity to cross sell auto loans, credit cards, home improvement loans, lines of credit, checking accounts and other bank services, says Norman Koenigsberg, president of First Choice Loan Services, Inc., in East Brunswick, N.J.
"It creates a client for life relationship," Koenigsberg says. "It's been a strategy for many, many years."
More affluent customers will likely have more equity in their property, partly because jumbo loans require down payments of at least 20 percent, and the home will be a better piece of collateral for the bank to have, he says.
"This has allowed the larger lenders to reach an audience that would have been harder to reach without this," Koenigsberg says.
Some lenders give a 0.25 percentage point jumbo loan discount to borrowers who open a checking or savings account with them and sign up for automatic mortgage payment, says Van Tran, vice president of The Federal Savings Bank in Chicago and owner of My VA Rates, a website that helps veterans get VA jumbo loans.
"If you have a mortgage with them and they can see all your assets, then they're going to call you from time to time and try to sell you services," Tran says of banks going after clients who are worth millions.

Investors seeking mortgages

Another reason jumbo loans are cheap is because investors want them and there isn't much supply, says Casey Fleming, president of the Silicon Valley chapter of the California Association of Mortgage Professionals. Historically the spread between conventional conforming loans and non-conforming jumbo loans is 0.50 to 1 percentage points, though on many days in today's market there's no difference at all, Fleming says.
Almost all mortgage loans are packaged into pools and sold to investors, he says. "The investors then replenish their cash by raising money, usually by issuing debt in the form of bonds, secured by the cash flow from the mortgages in the pool," Fleming says.
But worldwide unrest and financial uncertainty is increasing demand for U.S. bonds, but supply is down, he says. New mortgage originations are at a 20-year low, and competition among bond buyers and low supply drive the price up and the interest rate down, Fleming says.
Jumbo mortgage rates should go up within the next five years, Koenigsberg says, which could cause potential harm to banks holding such loans for 30 years that are collecting historically low interest rates.
Lastly, jumbo rates are low because banks are offering very low yields on their customers' deposits, often less than 1 percent on a savings account, Saling says. Having a borrower pay around 4 percent interest on a jumbo loan for 30 years leads to healthy returns that banks want to keep on their books instead of selling them on the secondary market, he says.
"Smaller companies that don't have the luxury to hold the loans are having no issues selling them as the big banks are eager to take on these clients," Saling says. "The underwriting standards are still very tight so the banks see these clients who are able to obtain jumbo loans as extremely safe investments."
Aaron Crowe is a freelance journalist who specializes in personal finance topics. Follow him on Twitter @AaronCrowe or find his website at AaronCrowe.net.
First published on MortgageLoan.com at: https://www.mortgageloan.com/why-jumbo-mortgages-are-so-cheap-9797