Don't
Be A Victim Of Mortgage Loan Fraud
Protect
Yourself from Predatory Mortgage Lenders
Buying or refinancing your home may
be one of the most important and complex
financial decisions you'll ever make.
Many lenders, appraisers, and real estate
professionals stand ready to help you
get a nice home and a great loan. However,
you need to understand the home buying
process to be a smart consumer. Every
year, misinformed home buyers, often
first-time purchasers or seniors, become
victims of predatory lending or loan
fraud.
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Don't let this happen to you!
11 Tips On Being A Smart
Consumer
- Before you buy a home, attend a home ownership
education course offered by the U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)-approved,
non-profit counseling agencies.
- Interview several real estate professionals
(agents), and ask for and check references
before you select one to help you buy or sell
a home.
- Get information about the prices of other
homes in the neighborhood. Don't be fooled
into paying too much.
- Hire a properly qualified and licensed
home inspector to carefully inspect the property
before you are obligated to buy. Determine
whether you or the seller is going to be responsible
for paying for the repairs. If you have to
pay for the repairs, determine whether or
not you can afford to make them.
- Shop for a lender and compare costs. Be
suspicious if anyone tries to steer you to
just one lender.
- Do NOT let anyone persuade you to make
a false statement on your loan application,
such as overstating your income, the source
of your down payment, failing to disclose
the nature and amount of your debts, or even
how long you have been employed. When you
apply for a mortgage loan, every piece of
information that you submit must be accurate
and complete. Lying on a mortgage application
is fraud and may result in criminal penalties.
- Do NOT let anyone convince you to borrow
more money than you know you can afford to
repay. If you get behind on your payments,
you risk losing your house and all of the
money you put into your property.
- Never sign a blank document or a document
containing blanks. If information is inserted
by someone else after you have signed, you
may still be bound to the terms of the contract.
Insert "N/A" (i.e., not applicable)
or cross through any blanks.
- Read everything carefully and ask questions.
Do not sign anything that you don't understand.
Before signing, have your contract and loan
agreement reviewed by an attorney skilled
in real estate law, consult with a trusted
real estate professional or ask for help from
a housing counselor with a HUD-approved agency.
If you cannot afford an attorney, take your
documents to the HUD-approved housing counseling
agency near you to find out if they will review
the documents or can refer you to an attorney
who will help you for free or at low cost.
- Be suspicious when the cost of a home improvement
goes up if you don't accept the contractor's
financing.
- Be honest about your intention to occupy
the house. Stating that you plan to live there
when, in fact, you are not (because you intend
to rent the house to someone else or fix it
up and resell it) violates federal law and
is a crime.
What is Predatory Lending?
In communities across America, people are losing
their homes and their investments because of
predatory lenders, appraisers, mortgage brokers
and home improvement contractors who:
- Sell properties for much more than they
are worth using false appraisals.
- Encourage borrowers to lie about their income,
expenses, or cash available for down payments
in order to get a loan.
- Knowingly lend more money than a borrower
can afford to repay.
- Charge high interest rates to borrowers
based on their race or national origin and
not on their credit history.
- Charge fees for unnecessary or nonexistent
products and services.
- Pressure borrowers to accept higher-risk
loans such as balloon loans, interest only
payments, and steep pre-payment penalties.
- Target vulnerable borrowers to cash-out
refinances offers when they know borrowers
are in need of cash due to medical, unemployment
or debt problems.
- "Strip" homeowners' equity from
their homes by convincing them to refinance
again and again when there is no benefit to
the borrower.
- Use high pressure sales tactics to sell
home improvements and then finance them at
high interest rates.
What Tactics Do Predators
Use?
- A lender or investor tells you that they
are your only chance of getting a loan or
owning a home. You should be able to take
your time to shop around and compare prices
and houses.
- The house you are buying costs a lot more
than other homes in the neighborhood, but
isn't any bigger or better.
- You are asked to sign a sales contract or
loan documents that are blank or that contain
information which is not true.
- You are told that the Federal Housing Administration
insurance protects you against property defects
or loan fraud - it does not.
- The cost or loan terms at closing are not
what you agreed to.
- You are told that refinancing can solve
your credit or money problems.
- You are told that you can only get a good
deal on a home improvement if you finance
it with a particular lender.
Remember
If a deal to buy, repair or refinance a house
sounds too good to be true, it usually is!
Housing counselors working at HUD-approved
agencies can help you be a smart consumer.
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