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Financing Vocabulary
The Financing Industry has its own vocabulary.
Knowing what the different terms mean can go a long way towards
helping you understand what is happening when you are getting
a real estate loan. Many borrowers will pay “points,”
but don’t understand what they are doing. Below is a list
of financing vocabulary that will help you get through this process
with a greater awareness of what is occurring.
Discount Fee
Also called the Loan Discount or Discount Points.
The most common type of point(s). Used to allow the lender to
charge a lower interest rate without lowering the amount of profit
they make on the loan. While it may require the buyer to pay more
cash up front, it will allow the buyer to qualify for a larger
loan (and therefore buy a more expensive house), and over the
life of the loan will save the buyer money. See also “Point.”
Fannie Mae
The common nickname for what was originally
called the Federal National Mortgage Association (FNMA). This
is the oldest and largest secondary market institution. Most lenders
will try to follow Fannie Mae guidelines, as these are the most
stringent guidelines out of all the secondary market institutions.
Following these guidelines will generally allow the loan to be
sold to any of the other institutions.
Ginnie Mae
Another secondary market institution. Originally
called the Government National Mortgage Association (GNMA). As
an agency of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
(HUD), they only purchase government backed loans (FHA and VA
loans).
Mortgage
A document used to pledge a property as security
for a loan. Although in common usage, the term is used interchangeably
with the term “loan,” it is actually only one part
of the loan agreement, and is what the borrower gives the lender
in exchange for the loan. The borrower in a mortgage is referred
to as the mortgagor and the lender is referred to as the mortgagee.
Point
Equivalent to one percent of the actual loan
amount (not the sale price). A fee used by the lender to cover
their costs of preparing the loan, or to make the loan as profitable
as it would be if they charged a higher interest rate. The two
most common types of point to the average borrower are the origination
fee (loan origination) and the discount fee (discount point, loan
discount).
Secondary Market
The “market” where existing loans
are bought and sold. Many loans are sold by the original lender,
either to another lender, or to institutions that are set up specifically
to buy loans from lending institutions.
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