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Conference 7.286::dcu

Title:DCU
Notice:1996 BoD Election results in 1004
Moderator:CPEEDY::BRADLEY
Created:Sat Feb 07 1987
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1041
Total number of notes:18759

127.0. "Looking for a good mortgage company..." by KELVIN::WAKIM () Tue Oct 11 1988 16:43

  I will be buying a house soon so I am shopping around for a mortgage company.
  So far, I have found DCU to have the lowest interest rates.  But, from what
  I read in the Notes files (this one as well as Real_Estate Notes file),
  about all the problems and the hassles people are having with DCU, I am
  not so sure anymore that I would want to go with DCU.

  Has anybody been having the same types of problems from other mortgage
  companies or banks, or just from DCU?

  Also, I have read many places that DCU's rates are higher than other banks.
  Can anybody list some banks that have lower rates? (I have not found any)

  I would appreciate any input about good/bad experience with DCU,
  or other mortgage companies.

  Thanks,
  Mona
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127.1Homeowners Fed Savings OKULTRA::KINDELBill Kindel @ BXB1Tue Oct 11 1988 18:1646
    Mortgage lenders (in general) are only as nice as they feel they need
    to be to get your business.  At times when they've got lots of money
    and few customers, interest rates will drop and so will the amount of
    hassle one has to endure.  When the converse is true, lenders will
    become VERY picky.
    
    I've refinanced my home twice since I bought it in 1981 and had to go
    through widely varying ordeals.  In 1981, interest rates were sky high
    (17.5%!) on 30-year fixed mortgages.  Qualifying was a real problem for
    mere mortals, and there was virtually no flexibility in the percentage
    rules because lenders were reselling mortgages on the secondary market
    rather than holding them in their own portfolios.  Having been turned
    down by a couple of banks, we were able to find financing through
    Malmart Mortgage Co. (which has since fallen on hard times).
    
    A year later, interest rates had dropped dramatically and my employer
    (which had been providing a 6% interest differential payment) exercised
    its right to request me to refinance.  I used my VA entitlement to get
    what may be the only VA mortgage Homeowners Federal Savings has written
    in the last decade.  (A word to the wise, DON'T BE A PIONEER!  It took
    three months to get a commitment letter and another year before all the
    paperwork was satisfactory to the V.A.)  Homeowners was a bit nicer
    than Malmart had been, but they were also basically inept.
    
    Interest rates dropped again in 1987 and lenders actually started
    scrambling for business.  This time, Homeowners sent me a letter with
    an offer I couldn't refuse.  They would guarantee 5-working-day
    turnaround on the application (to commitment letter or refusal), AND
    the documentation requirement was greatly simplified (my most recent
    pay stub, plus the last two months' bank statements), AND I could lock
    in the interest rate at application.  (This last feature was even
    better than I'd expected.  I thought it would cost me 1% to guarantee
    my rock-bottom 8.625% rate, but it turned out that the 1% was counted
    as part of my closing costs so the guarantee only cost me the INTEREST
    on the 1%.)
    
    I have no serious complaints with Homeowners, and I would do business
    with them again.  Bankers tend to be one-dimensional thinkers, so it's
    worth your while to make sure you've anticipated their every desire.
    For instance, don't overvalue your estimate of your home's value.  The
    commitment letter could be conditional upon it appraising to the value
    you give rather than the value they REALLY need it to be worth to
    satisfy the ratios.  (I fell into this one by estimating my home at
    $275K on a loan of $73K; when the appraisal came in at $250K, there was
    a real possibility that they'd reneg on the commitment because the home
    wasn't valuable enough.  I trust you get the gist.) 
127.2if you really WANT to find out what people think...BINKLY::WINSTONJeff Winston (Hudson, MA)Tue Oct 11 1988 21:429
Though I'm sure you will find an incomplete rehash here over time, 
this topic has already been discussed in detail, in other notes in 
this file (dir/title=mortgage) and, more generally, in 
TALLIS::REAL_ESTATE.  My impressions as a long time reader of these 
files are that you can always do better than DCU.  Two (of many) 
well-recommended places are coop bank of concord and northern mortgage 
in boylston.  the differences between banks and mortgage companies are 
also discussed in detail in REAL_ESTATE