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   Mortgage Disclosure

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   Graduated Payment

Before You Apply

  What to do to prepare up to a year in

  advance of your mortgage application.

Can You Trust Your Loan Officer?

  Who does your loan officer really work

  for, and how do you find the best one?

Lender, Broker, or Bank?

  What type of loan Provider is right for

  you?

Types of Mortgage Loans

  The types of mortgage loans and

  their advantages and disadvantages.

Types of Documentation

  Your options for disclosing how much

  you make and where it comes from.

Underwriting

 What does an underwriter look for

  when analyzing your loan application?

Pre-Approval

  What it is and isn't and how it saves you

  time and heartache.

Credit

  What it is, and how it affects your life.

Income & Employment

  How much you need to make and for

 how long in order to qualify.

Assets/ Down Payments

  How much, where from, and what kind

  of money will work.

Down Payment Assistance

  Short on funds?  Learn about your

  options and explore these resources.

Processing

  What happens to your application after

  you sign it and before you close?

Title

  What is it, what does it mean, and how

  does it work?

Appraisals

  What is your home worth, why you

 should bother  to find out, and how

  does it affect your loan?

Alternate Financing

  Facing rejection?  Time to get creative.

FHA

  Low down payment, forgiving

  qualifications.  A great loan option.

 

 

 

Graduated Payment Mortgages (GPMs)

  Graduated payment mortgages have payments that start low

  and gradually increase at predetermined times. A lower

  initial payments allow you to qualify for a larger loan

  amount. The monthly payments will eventually be higher in

  order to catch upfrom the lower payments.  The loan will be

  negatively amortized during the early years of the loan, then

  will "graduate" to a higher payment to pay off the principal

  at an accelerated pace through the later years.

  Lenders offer different GPM payment plans, which vary in

  the rate of payment increases and the number of years over

  which the payments will increase. The greater the rate of

  increase or the longer the period of increase, the lower the

  mortgage payments in the early years.