Mortgage Glossary
- Adjustable rate mortgage (ARM)
- Is a mortgage in which the interest rate is
adjusted periodically based on a pre-selected index. Also
sometimes known as the re negotiable rate mortgage, the
variable rate mortgage or the Canadian rollover mortgage.
- Adjustment interval
- On an
ARM, the time
between changes in the interest rate and/or monthly payment,
typically one, three or five years, depending on the index.
- Amortization
- refers to loan payment by equal periodic
payment calculated to pay off the debt at the end of a fixed
period, including accrued interest on the outstanding balance.
- Annual percentage rate (A.P.R.)
- Is an interest rate reflecting the cost of
a mortgage as a yearly rate. This rate is typically higher
than the stated note rate or advertised rate on the mortgage
loan, because it takes into account point and other credit
cost. The APR allows home buyers to compare different types of
mortgages based on the annual cost for each loan.
- Appraisal
- An estimate of the value of property, made
by a qualified professional called an "appraiser."
- Assessment
- A local tax levied against a property for a
specific purpose, such as a sewer or street lights.
- Assumption
- The agreement between buyer and seller
where the buyer takes over the payments on an existing
mortgage from the seller. Assuming a loan can usually save the
buyer money since this is an existing mortgage debt, unlike a
new mortgage where closing cost and new, probably higher,
market-rate interest charges will apply.
-
Balloon Mortgage
- Usually a short-term
fixed rate loan which
involves small payments for a certain period of time and one
large payment for the remaining amount of the principal at a
time specified in the contract.
Bi-weekly Mortgage A mortgage with payments made every two weeks instead of monthly.
Since a bi-weekly has 26 payments per year -- the equivalent of 13
monthly payments -- the loan is paid off much sooner typically in 18 -
20 years as opposed to monthly payments for 30 years. The early payoff
saves substantial amounts of interest.
- Blanket Mortgage
- A mortgage covering at least two pieces of
real estate as security for the same mortgage.
- Borrower
- One who applies for and receives a loan in
the form of a mortgage with the intention of repaying the loan
in full.
-
Bridge Loan
A loan used to finance the down payment on a new home purchase before the
previous property is sold. Previously commonly available, bridge loans are
hard to find and are expensive.
-
- Broker
- An individual in the business of assisting
in arranging funding or negotiating contracts for a client buy
who does not loan the money himself. Brokers usually charge a
fee or receive a commission for their services.
- Buy-down
- When the lender and/or the home builder
subsidized the mortgage loan by lowering the interest rate
during the first few years of the loan. While the payments are
initially low, they will increase when the subsidy expires.
- Certificate of Eligibility
- The document given to qualified veterans
which entitles them to VA guaranteed loans for homes,
business, and mobile homes. Certificates of eligibility may be
obtained by sending DD-214 (Separation Paper) to the local VA
office with VA form 1880 (request for Certificate of
Eligibility).
- Certificate of Reasonable Value
(CRV)
- An appraisal issued by the Veterans
Administration showing the property's current market value.
- Certificate of veteran status
- The document given to veterans or
reservists who have served 90 days of continuous active duty
(including training time). It may be obtained by sending DD
214 to the local VA office with form 26-8261a (request for
certificate of veteran status). This document enables veterans
to obtain lower down payments on certain FHA insured loans.
- Closing
- The meeting between the buyer, seller and
lender or their agents where the property and funds legally
change hands. Also called settlement. Closing costs usually
include an origination fee, discount points, appraisal fee,
title search and insurance, survey, taxes, deed recording fee,
credit report charge and other costs assessed at settlement.
The costs of closing usually are about 3 percent to 6 percent
of the mortgage loan amount.
- Commitment
- A promise by a lender to make a loan on
specific terms or conditions to a borrower or builder. A
promise by an investor to purchase mortgages from a lender
with specific terms or conditions. An agreement, often in
writing, between a lender and a borrower to loan money at a
future date, subject to the completion of paperwork or
compliance with stated conditions.
-
Conforming loan
- A New Home loan with a set of standards
that must be met for the loan amount and the down payment
amount. The maximum you can borrow with a conforming loan is
$359,600 for a single-family house in the continental U.S.
The benefit to applying for a conforming loan is that you will
qualify for lower interest rates and better financing options.
If you need to borrow more than the conforming loan standard
allows you to, you should apply for a non-conforming or
jumbo loan.
- Construction loan
- A short term interim loan to pay for the
construction of buildings or homes. These are usually designed
to provide periodic disbursements to the builder as he
progresses.
- Contract sale or deed
- A contract between a purchaser and a seller
of real estate to convey title after certain conditions have
been met. It is a form of installment sale.
- Credit Report
- A report documenting the credit history and
current status of a borrower's credit standing.
- Debt-to-Income Ratio
- The ratio, expressed as a percentage, which
results when a borrower's monthly payment obligation on
long-term debts is divided by his or her gross monthly income.
See housing expenses-to-income ratio.
- Deed
- The written document conveying real
property. Once recorded at the Courthouse, the original piece
of paper is not needed to convey title in the future.
- Deed of Trust
- A voluntary lien to secure a debt deeding
the property to Trustees who foreclose, sell the property at
public auction, in the event of default on the Note the Deed
of Trust secures. In many states, this document is used in
place of a mortgage to secure the payment of a note.
- Default
- Failure to meet legal obligations in a
contract, specifically, failure to make the monthly payments
on a mortgage loan.
- Deferred interest
- When a mortgage is written with a monthly
payment that is less than required to satisfy the note rate,
the unpaid interest is deferred by adding it to the loan
balance. See negative amortization.
- Discount Point
- See point.
- Down Payment
- Money paid to make up the difference
between the purchase price and the mortgage amount.
- Due-on-Sale-Clause
- A provision in a mortgage or deed of trust
that allows the lender to demand immediate payment of the
balance of the mortgage if the mortgage holder sells the home.
- Earnest Money
- Money given by a buyer to a seller as part
of the purchase price to bind a transaction or assure payment.
- Entitlement
- The VA home loan benefit is called
entitlement. Entitlement for a VA guaranteed home loan. This
is also known as eligibility.
- Equal Credit Opportunity Act
(ECOA)
- Is a federal law that requires lenders and
other creditors to make credit equally available without
discrimination based on race, color, religion, national
origin, age, sex, marital status or receipt of income from
public assistance programs.
- Equity
- The difference between the fair market
value and current indebtedness, also referred to as the
owner's interest. The value an owner has in real estate over
and above the obligation against the property.
- Escrow
- An account held by the lender into which
the home buyer pays money for tax or insurance payments. Also
earnest deposits held pending loan closing.
- Fannie Mae
- Farmers Home Administration
(FmHA)
- Provides financing to farmers and other
qualified borrowers who are unable to obtain loans elsewhere.
- Federal Home Loan Bank Board
(FHLBB)
- The former name for the regulatory and
supervisory agency for federally chartered savings
institutions. Agency is now called the Office of Thrift
Supervision.
- Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation (FHLMC) also called
"Freddie Mac"
- A quasi-governmental agency that purchases
conventional mortgages from insured depository institutions
and HUD-approved mortgage bankers.
- Federal Housing Administration
(FHA)
- A division of the Department of Housing and
Urban Development. Its main activity is the insuring of
residential mortgage loans made by private lenders. FHA also
sets standards for underwriting mortgages.
- Federal
National Mortgage Association
(FNMA) also know as "Fannie Mae"
- A tax-paying corporation created by
Congress that purchases and sells conventional residential
mortgages as well as those insured by FHA
or guaranteed by VA. This institution, which provides funds
for one in seven mortgages, makes mortgage money more
available and more affordable.
- FHA loan
- A loan insured by the
Federal Housing Administration open to all qualified home
purchasers. While there are limits to the size of FHA loans
($208,800 maximum, depending on location), they are generous
enough to handle moderately-priced homes almost anywhere in
the country.
- FHA mortgage insurance
- Requires a fee (up to 2.25 percent of the
loan amount) paid at closing to insure the loan with FHA. In
addition, FHA mortgage insurance requires an annual fee of up
to 0.5 percent of the current loan amount, paid in monthly
installments. The lower the down payment, the more years the
fee must be paid.
- Firm Commitment
- A promise by FHA to insure a mortgage loan
for a specified property and borrower. A promise from a lender
to make a mortgage loan.
-
Fixed Rate Mortgage
- The mortgage interest rate will remain the
same on this type of mortgage throughout the term of the
mortgage for the original borrower.
- FNMA
- The Federal National Mortgage Association
is a secondary mortgage institution which is the largest
single holder of home mortgages in the United States. FNMA
buys VA, FHA, and conventional mortgages from primary lenders.
Also known as "Fannie Mae."
- Foreclosure
- A legal process by which the lender or the
seller forces a sale of a mortgaged property because the
borrower has not met the terms of the mortgage. Also known as
a repossession of property.
- Freddie
Mac
- See Federal Home
Loan Mortgage Corporation.
- Ginnie Mae
- See Government National Mortgage
Association.
- Government National Mortgage
Association (GNMA)
- also known as "Ginnie Mae",provides sources
of funds for residential mortgages, insured or guaranteed by
FHA or VA
- Graduated Payment Mortgage
(GPM)
- A type of flexible-payment mortgage where
the payments increase for a specified period of time and then
level off. This type of mortgage has negative amortization
built into it.
- Guaranty
- A promise by one party to pay a debt or
perform an obligation contracted by another if the original
party fails to pay or perform according to a contract.
- Hazard Insurance
- A form of insurance in which the insurance
company protects the insured from specified losses, such as
fire, windstorm and the like.
- Housing Expenses-to-Income Ratio
- The ratio, expressed as a percentage, which
results when a borrower's housing expenses are divided by
his/her gross monthly income. See debt-to-income ratio.
- Impound
- That portion of a borrower's monthly
payments held by the lender or servicer to pay for taxes,
hazard insurance, mortgage insurance, lease payments, and
other items as they become due. Also known as reserves.
- Index
- A published interest rate against which
lenders measure the difference between the current interest
rate on an adjustable rate mortgage and that earned by other
investments (such as one- three-, and five-year U.S. Treasury
security yields, the monthly average interest rate on loans
closed by savings and loan institutions, and the monthly
average costs-of-funds incurred by savings and loans), which
is then used to adjust the interest rate on an adjustable
mortgage up or down.
- Interim Financing
- A construction loan made during completion
of a building or a project. A permanent loan usually replaces
this loan after completion.
- Investor
- A money source for a lender.
-
Jumbo Loan
- A loan which is larger (more than $359,600)
than the limits set by the Federal National Mortgage
Association and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation. Because jumbo loans cannot be funded by
these two agencies, they usually carry a higher interest rate.
- Lien
- A claim upon a piece of property for the
payment or satisfaction of a debt or obligation.
- Loan-to-Value Ratio
- The relationship between the amount of the
mortgage loan and the appraised value of the property
expressed as a percentage.
- Margin
- The amount a lender adds to the index on an
adjustable rate mortgage to establish the adjusted interest
rate.
- Market Value
- The highest price that a buyer would pay
and the lowest price a seller would accept on a property.
Market value may be different from the price a property could
actually be sold for at a given time.
- MIP (Mortgage Insurance Premium)
- It is insurance from FHA to the lender
against incurring a loss on account of the borrower's default.
- Mortgage Insurance
- Money paid to insure the mortgage when the
down payment is less than 20 percent. See private mortgage
insurance, FHA mortgage insurance.
- Mortgagee
- The lender.
- Mortgagor
- The borrower or homeowner.
- Negative Amortization
- Occurs when your monthly payments are not
large enough to pay all the interest due on the loan. This
unpaid interest is added to the unpaid balance of the loan.
the danger of negative amortization is that the home buyer
ends up owing more than the original amount of the loan.
- Net Effective Income
- The borrower's gross income minus federal
income tax.
- Non Assumption Clause
- A statement in a mortgage contract
forbidding the assumption of the mortgage without the prior
approval of the lender. Note: The signed obligation to pay a
debt, as a mortgage note.
- Non Conforming Loan
- New Home loans that allows you to borrow
over a certain amount set by the Federal National Mortgage
Association or the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation.
- Origination Fee
- The fee charged by a lender to prepare loan
documents, run credit checks, inspect and sometimes appraise a
property; usually computed as a percentage of the face value
of the loan.
- Permanent Loan
- A long term mortgage, usually ten years or
more. Also called an "end loan."
- PITI
- Principal, Interest, Taxes and Insurance.
Also called monthly housing expense.
- Pledged Account Mortgage
(PAM):
- Money is placed in a pledged savings
account and this fund plus earned interest is gradually used
to reduce mortgage payments.
- Points
(loan discount points)
- Prepaid interest assessed at closing by the
lender. Each point is equal to 1 percent of the loan amount
(e.g., two points on a $100,000 mortgage would cost $2,000).
- Power of Attorney
- A legal document authorizing one person to
act on behalf of another.
- Prepaid Expenses
- Necessary to create an escrow account or to
adjust the seller's existing escrow account. Can include
taxes, hazard insurance, private mortgage insurance and
special assessments.
- Prepayment
- A privilege in a mortgage permitting the
borrower to make payments in advance of their due date.
- Prepayment Penalty
- Money charged for an early repayment of
debt. Prepayment penalties are allowed in some form (but not
necessarily imposed) in many states.
- Primary Mortgage Market
- Lenders making mortgage loans directly to
borrower's such as savings and loan associations, commercial
banks, and mortgage companies. These lenders sometimes sell
their mortgages into the secondary mortgage markets such as to
FNMA or GNMA, etc.
- Principal
- The amount of debt, not counting interest,
left on a loan.
- Private Mortgage Insurance(PMI)
- In the event that you do not have a 20
percent down payment, lenders will allow a smaller down
payment - as low as 5 percent in some cases. With the smaller
down payment loans, however, borrowers are usually required to
carry private mortgage insurance. Private mortgage insurance
will usually require an initial premium payment and may
require an additional monthly fee depending on your loan's
structure.
- Realtor
- A real estate broker or an associate
holding active membership in a local real estate board
affiliated with the National Association of Realtors.
- Recording Fees
- Money paid to the lender for recording a
home sale with the local authorities, thereby making it part
of the public records.
-
Refinance
- Obtaining a new mortgage loan on a property
already owned. Often to replace existing loans on the
property.
- Renegotiable Rate Mortgage
- A loan in which the interest rate is
adjusted periodically. See
adjustable rate mortgage.
- RESPA
- Short for the Real Estate Settlement
Procedures Act. RESPA is a federal law that allows consumers
to review information on known or estimated settlement cost
once after application and once prior to or at a settlement.
The law requires lenders to furnish the information after
application only.
- Reverse Annuity Mortgage
(RAM)
- A form of mortgage in which the lender
makes periodic payments to the borrower using the borrower's
equity in the home asSatisfaction of Mortgage: The document
issued by the mortgagee when the mortgage loan is paid in
full. Also called a "release of mortgage."
- Rural Housing Service
(RHS)
- An agency within the Department of
Agriculture, which operates principally under the Consolidated
Farm and Rural Development Act of 1921 and Title V of the
Housing Act of 1949. This agency provides financing to farmers
and other qualified borrowers buying property in rural areas
who are unable to obtain loans elsewhere. Funds are borrowed
from the U.S. Treasury.
-
Second Mortgage
- A mortgage made subsequent to another
mortgage and subordinate to the first one.
- Secondary Mortgage Market
- The place where primary mortgage lenders
sell the mortgages they make to obtain more funds to originate
more new loans. It provides liquidity for the lenders
security.
- Servicing
- All the steps and operations a lender
performs to keep a loan in good standing, such as collection
of payments, payment of taxes, insurance, property inspections
and the like.
- Settlement/Settlement Costs
- See closing/closing costs.
- Shared Appreciation Mortgage
(SAM)
- A mortgage in which a borrower receives a
below-market interest rate in return for which the lender (or
another investor such as a family member or other partner)
receives a portion of the future appreciation in the value of
the property. May also apply to mortgage where the borrowers
shares the monthly principal and interest payments with
another party in exchange for part of the appreciation.
- Simple Interest
- Interest which is computed only on the
principle balance.
- Survey
- A measurement of land, prepared by a
registered land surveyor, showing the location of the land
with reference to know points, its dimensions, and the
location and dimensions of any buildings.
- Sweat Equity
- Equity created by a purchaser performing
work on a property being purchased.
- Title
- A document that gives evidence of an
individual's ownership of property.
- Title Insurance
- A policy, usually issued by a title
insurance company, which insures a home buyer against errors
in the title search. The cost of the policy is usually a
function of the value of the property, and is often borne by
the purchaser and/or seller. Policies are also available to
protect the lender's interests.
- Title Search
- An examination of municipal records to
determine the legal ownership of property. Usually is
performed by a title company.
- Truth-In-Lending
- A federal law requiring disclosure of the
Annual Percentage Rate to home buyers shortly after they apply
for the loan. Also known as Regulation Z.
- Two-Step Mortgage
- A mortgage in which the borrower receives a
below-market interest rate for a specified number of years
(most often seven or 10), and then receives a new interest
rate adjusted (within certain limits) to market conditions at
that time. the lender sometimes has the option to call the
loan due with 30 days notice at the end of seven or 10 years.
also called "Super Seven" or "Premier" mortgage.
- Underwriting
- The decision whether to make a loan to a
potential home buyer based on credit, employment, assets, and
other factors, and the matching of this risk to an appropriate
rate and term or loan amount.
- USURY
- Interest charged in excess of the legal
rate established by law.
- VA Loan
- A long-term, low-or no-down payment loan
guaranteed by the Department of Veterans Affairs. Restricted
to individuals qualified by military service or other
entitlements.
- VA Mortgage Funding Fee
- A premium of up to 1-7/8 percent (depending
on the size of the down payment) paid on a VA-backed loan. On
a $75,000 fixed-rate mortgage with no down payment, this would
amount to $1,406 either paid at closing or added to the amount
financed.
- Variable Rate Mortgage
(VRM)
- See adjustable rate mortgage.
- Verification of Deposit
(VOD)
- A document signed by the borrower's
financial institution verifying the status and balance of
his/her financial accounts.
- Verification of Employment
(VOE)
- A document signed by the borrower's
employer verifying his/her position and salary.
- Warehouse Fee
- Many mortgage firms must borrow funds on a
short term basis in order to originate loans which are to be
sold later in the secondary mortgage market (or to investors).
When the prime rate of interest is higher on short term loans
than on mortgage loans, the mortgage firm has an economic loss
which is offset by charging a warehouse fee.
- Wraparound Mortgage
- Results when an existing assumable loan is
combined with a new loan, resulting in an interest rate
somewhere between the old rate and the current market rate.
The payments are made to a second lender or the previous
homeowner, who then forwards the payments to the first lender
after taking the additional amount off the top.