Credit Help For Mortgage
Financing:
Beware Of Predatory
Lenders
Jeanette Joy Fisher
In November 2005, Montgomery County,
Maryland's county council enacted legislation to expand the
categories of discriminatory lending activities associated with
discriminatory housing practices and increased the maximum fine
for such activities from $5,000 to $500,000. The council sited
practices such as charging inordinate amounts for prepayment
penalties, points, and fees; steering borrowers toward more
expensive mortgages; and refinancing existing mortgages with
new ones that borrowers won't be able to repay based on their
income or credit.
Predatory lenders typically target what’s
known as the nonprime mortgage market, where people with
blemished credit records try to borrow money for homes in less
desirable neighborhoods, which means that it's often minority
groups, such as African-Americans and Latinos, who are the
victims of predatory lending practices.
However, February 2006, the American
Financial Services Association (AFSA), challenged the ruling,
contending that only the state has the power to enact
legislation regarding mortgage lending practices--although the
AFSA went on record as opposing discriminatory and abusive
lending practices. The new law was supposed to take effect the
second week in March, but mortgage lender lawyers persuaded a
judge to delay the new law, pending a hearing. So it's yet to
be determined if the Montgomery County law will remain on the
books.
Regardless of the outcome in Montgomery
County, however, predatory lending practices are illegal in
most states. The Center for Responsible Lending describes a
number of such practices on their website. Some of them include
loan flipping, in which the borrower is forced to refinance a
loan, sometimes several times, solely for the purpose of
generating new fees for the lending institution. Another common
practice is insisting that borrowers also purchase such things
as credit life insurance or other products--again, primarily
designed to generate more income for the lender.
The bottom line is that there are lending
institutions that make a great deal of money by charging extra
fees to those borrowers who can least afford them, thereby
either depriving those borrowers of the American dream of home
ownership or, worse yet, setting them up for eventual
foreclosure.
As the real estate market slows down and
interest rates creep up, it's more important than ever to
become a knowledgeable consumer. Learn the basics of mortgage
lending, so you'll know when you're being charged too much for
a loan or for things you don't need. Shop around to see what's
available, and then make sure you're comfortable with your loan
payment, because you'll be paying that amount for many
years.
|