| Mortgage
Brokers Vs. Mortgage Bankers: Which Do You Choose?
by David Reed
Can your
mortgage broker get you the best interest rate on the planet?
Or will you use a mortgage banker to provide your residential
financing? Maybe your credit union could offer the best rates.
Doesn't anyone get their mortgage from their own bank, anymore?
According
to the Mortgage Bankers Association, in 1999 9.7 million mortgages
were issued for properties with one to four units. While the
most recent figures are unavailable, in 1997 says the mortgage
banking group 56 percent of all loans were originated by mortgage
companies, 25 percent came from commercial banks, and 18 percent
were from thrifts, largely savings and loan associations.
So-called "others" (including credit unions) were
responsible for less than 1 percent of all loan originations.
These
numbers have changed over the years. While thrifts once dominated
the home mortgage market, their share of loan activity has
fallen from almost 50 percent in 1980 to 18.3 percent in 1997.
The big winners have been mortgage companies which now dominate
the marketplace.
Okay,
so what's the difference between a mortgage broker and a mortgage
banker?
In general
terms, the distinctions look like this:
A mortgage
broker, says the National Association of Mortgage Brokers,
is "an independent real estate financing professional
who specializes in the origination of residential and/or commercial
mortgages." There are, says NAMB, approximately 20,000
mortgage banking firms nationwide.
In essence,
mortgage brokers know where the money is. Rather than lending
their own funds, they lend money from other sources such as
banks, pension funds, insurance companies, and savings and
loan associations. They attempt to find competitive mortgage
pricing from various mortgage companies, insert their markup,
and ask for that profit at closing. The theory is that because
a mortgage broker has access to multiple lenders, they have
the ability to shop for the best rates.
A mortgage
banker is different. A mortgage banker, says the Mortgage
Bankers Association of America, is "an individual, firm
or corporation that originates, sells and/or services loans
secured by mortgages on real property." In other words,
there are cases where a mortgage banker lends its own money,
and other cases where it acts like a mortgage broker and lends
money from other sources.
I have
experience from both sides of the aisle.
I learned
the residential lending business in 1989 as a mortgage broker
in Southern California while for the last 6 years I've worked
as a mortgage banker.
As a broker,
I would receive an endless stream of rate sheets from various
wholesale lenders, each offering rates for given mortgage
products. Every day, I would pore through the rate sheets
and determine who had the best rate. I soon determined that
most lenders, while not having the exact same rates, were
still very close -- sometimes within 1/100th of a percent
of one another.
Now, as
a mortgage banker, I watch my pricing every day, and I'm always
going to be competitive. Most lenders are. They have to be
to stay in business. The difference here is that the mortgage
will be issued from my company's bank account.
So, okay,
I know the question you want to ask: Is it better to get a
loan from a mortgage broker or a mortgage banker? Fess up
David, which is better?
My answer
is, all things being equal, there is no difference.
If you
can obtain the same loan at the same rate with the same fees,
it really doesn't matter if your loan is brokered or not.
It's not important that someone uses their own money to fund
your loan or if they get it elsewhere as long as you get what
you were promised.
Which
to choose? Just go on the Internet or pick up the phone and
contact mortgage brokers, mortgage bankers, commercial banks,
S&Ls, credit unions, and any other financing source you
can find. See who has the best program for you and see how
rates and terms compare.
In the
past few years we've seen that mortgage bankers, banks, S&Ls,
and credit unions often act as mortgage brokers. Conversely,
many mortgage brokers now carry their own bank lines of credit
to act as a mortgage bankers. When they make mortgage, they
will then immediately sell the loan to another mortgage company,
many times right at your closing table.
What's
happening is that the distinctions among traditional lending
sources are beginning to blur, and it matters not where you
get your mortgage, just as long as you get what's best for
you.
Source:
Realty Times
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