Additional Principal: Additional
principal occurs when the monthly payments cover only part of the interest
then due. The interest cost that is not covered is added to the unpaid
principal balance. This additional amount is additional principal. It
may also be called “negative amortization”.
Adjustable Rate Mortgage (ARM): A mortgage that permits
the lender to adjust its interest rate periodically on the basis of changes
in a specified index.
Agreement of Sale: The legal contract between buyer
and seller of a property including the sale price, settlement date, and
all conditions and terms of the sale.
Amortization Schedule: A timetable for payment of a
mortgage showing the amount of each payment applied to interest and principle
and the balance remaining.
Annual Percentage Rate (APR): The total yearly cost
of a mortgage stated as a percentage of the loan amount; includes such
items as the base interest rate, primary mortgage insurance and loan origination
fee (points).
Appraisal: A professional opinion of the market value
of a property.
Appreciation: An increase in the value of a property
due to changes in market conditions or other causes.
Assessed Value: The valuation placed upon property by
a public tax assessor for purposes of taxation.
Assumable Mortgage: A mortgage that can be taken over
by the buyer when a home is sold.
Balloon Mortgage: A type of mortgage loan where monthly
payments are made until a certain date when the remaining balance becomes
payable in full.
Binder: A preliminary agreement, secured by the payment
of earnest money, under which a buyer offers to purchase real estate.
Buy-Down: A procedure which the seller or builder of
a property permanently or temporarily reduces the amount of interest they
buyer will have to pay by paying points to the mortgage lender at closing.
Cap: A provision of an ARM limiting how much the interest
rate or mortgage payments may increase or decrease.
Cash Reserve: A requirement of some lenders that buyers
have sufficient cash remaining after closing to make the first two monthly
mortgage payments.
Certificate of Occupancy: A certificate issued by a
local building department to a builder or renovator, stating that the
building is in proper condition to be occupied and stating the legally
permissible use.
Closing: The meeting during which the title to property
actually changes hands, documents are executed and the sale of the property,
and/or the loan is completed. It is usually attended by the buyer, the
seller, a bank representative, each party’s attorney and the title
company representative.
Closing Costs: Costs associated with securing a mortgage
and the sale and purchase of property. These expenses are usually paid
on the day the title to the property is formally transferred from the
seller to the buyer.
Commitment Letter: Written agreement detailing the terms
and conditions by which the bank will lend and the borrower will borrow
funds to finance a home.
Condominium: A structure of two or more units, the interior
space of which are individually owned.
Conforming Loan: The Fannie Mae (FNMA) established maximum
loan amount based on the property’s legal number of units (1 family,
2 families, etc.). Loan amounts up to this maximum dollar amount are considered
“conforming loans”.
Contract of Sale: The written contract signed by both
parties in which the seller agrees to sell and the buyer agrees to buy
under certain specific terms and conditions.
Convertible ARM: An adjustable-rate mortgage that can
be converted to a fixed-rate mortgage under specified conditions.
Cooperatives (Co-ops): A structure of two or more units
in which the right to occupy a unit is obtained by the purchase of stock
in the corporation which owns the building.
Counter Offer: An offer to extend credit on different
terms than the applicant originally requested.
Covenant: Generally, almost any promise set forth in
a written agreement. Most commonly, assurances set forth in a deed by
the grantor or implied by law.
Deed: A legal document conveying title (ownership) to
real property from one individual to another.
Easement: The right to enter or use a portion of the
land of another for a specific purpose.
Encroachment: Construction, such as a wall, fence, building,
etc. on the property of another.
Equity: A homeowner’s financial interest in a
property. Equity is the difference between the fair market value of a
property and the amount still owed on the mortgage.
Escrow: The funds held by the lender, set aside for
payment of taxes and possible property and mortgage insurance and other
recurring charges against real property. (Monthly mortgage payments usually
include principal, interest and escrow amounts).
FHLMC (Freddie Mac) Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation:
A federal agency purchasing first mortgages, both conventional and federally
insured, from members of the Federal Reserve System and the Federal Loan
Bank System.
Federal Housing Authority (FHA): A part of the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development which offers mortgage loan
insurance programs to buyers of qualifying properties.
FHA Mortgage: A mortgage loan insured by the Federal
Housing Administration open to qualified home purchasers.
FNMA (Fannie Mae): A quasi-government agency, now publicly
owned, which purchases mortgages from the original mortgage lenders.
Finance Charge: The total dollar amount your loan will
cost you. It includes all interest payments during the term of the loan,
any interim interest paid at closing, your origination fee and any other
charges paid to the lender or to a third party or an incident or a condition
of the extension of credit. Certain charges like the appraisal, credit
report and the title search charges are not included in the finance charge
calculation.
Fixed Rate Mortgage: A mortgage having a rate of interest
which remains the same for the life of the mortgage.
Flood Insurance: Insurance indemnifying against loss
by flood damage, required by lenders in areas designated (federally) as
potential flood areas.
Foreclosure: The legal remedy used by a mortgage lender
to assume ownership of a property when the required loan payments are
not made.
Good Faith Estimate: An estimate of charges which a
borrower is likely to incur in connection with a settlement.
Hazard Insurance: Insurance protecting against loss
to real estate caused by fire, some natural causes, vandalism, etc., depending
upon the terms of the policy.
Housing Ratio: The ratio of the monthly housing payment
(PITI) to total gross monthly income. Also called Payment-to-Income Ratio
or Front-End-Ratio.
HUD: The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Index: A published interest rate not controlled by the
lender to which the interest rate on an Adjustable Rate Mortgage (ARM)
is tied. The index and the interest rate linked to it may increase or
decrease.
Interest: A share or right in some property. Also, money
charged for the use of money (principal).
Lien: An encumbrance against property for money due,
either voluntary or involuntary.
Life of Loan Cap (or Lifetime Cap): The maximum interest
rate that can be charged during the life of the loan. Also called Life
Cap of Life Rate.
Loan-to-Value (LTV): The ratio of the amount of your
loan to the value of the home.
Lock-in: A written agreement guaranteeing the homebuyer
a specified interest rate provided the loan is closed within a set period
of time. The lock-in also usually specifies the number of points to be
paid at closing.
Margin: The number of percentage points a lender adds
to the index value to calculate the ARM interest rate at each adjustment
period.
Mortgage: A legal document that pledges a property to
the lender as security for payment of a debt.
Mortgage Disability Insurance: A disability insurance
policy which will pay the monthly mortgage payment in the event of a covered
disability of an insured borrower for a specified period of time.
Mortgage Insurance: Insurance written by an independent
mortgage insurance company (MIC) protecting the mortgage lender against
loss incurred by a mortgage default.
Mortgage Life Insurance: A term life insurance policy
that covers the declining balance of a loan secured by a mortgage, and
is payable upon death of a covered borrower.
Mortgagee: The person or company who receives the mortgage
as a pledge for repayment of the loan.
Mortgagor: The mortgage borrower who gives the mortgage
as a pledge to repay.
Non-Conforming Loan: Conventional home mortgages not
eligible for sale and delivery to either Fannie Mae (FNMA) or Freddie
Mac (FHLMC) because of various reasons, including loan amount, loan characteristics
or underwriting guidelines. Non-conforming loans usually incur a rate
and origination fee premium.
Note: A written agreement containing a promise of the
signer to pay to a named person, or order, or bearer, a definite sum of
money at a specified date or on demand.
Origination Fee: A fee imposed by a lender to cover
certain processing expenses in connection with making a real estate loan.
Usually a percentage of the amount loaned, such as one percent.
Owner Financing: A property purchase transaction in
which the property seller provides all or part of the financing.
Planned Unit Developments (PUD): A subdivision of five
or more individually owned lots with one or more other parcels owned in
common or with reciprocal rights in one or more other parcels.
PITI: Principal, interest, taxes and insurance –
the components of a monthly mortgage payment.
Points: The charges levied by the mortgage lender and
usually payable at closing. One point represents 1% of the face value
of the mortgage loan.
Prepaids: Those expenses of property which are paid
in advance of their due date and will usually be prorated upon sale, such
as taxes, insurance, rent, etc.
Prepayment Penalty: A charge imposed by a mortgage lender
on a borrower who wants to pay off part or all of a mortgage loan in advance
of schedule.
Principal: Amount of debt, not including interest; the
face value of a note or mortgage.
Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI): The insurance provided
by non-government insures that protects lenders against loss if a borrower
defaults. Fannie Mae generally requires private mortgage insurance for
loans with loan-to-value (LTV) percentages greater than 80%.
Qualifying Ratios: The ratio of your fixed monthly expenses
to your gross monthly income, used to determine how much you can afford
to borrow.
Rate Cap: A limit on how much the interest rate can
change, either at each adjustment period or over the life of the loan.
Rate Lock-In: A written agreement in which the lender
guarantees the borrower a specified interest rate, provided the loan closes
within a set period of time.
Refinancing: The process of paying off one loan with
the proceeds from a new loan using the same property as security.
Residential Mortgage Credit Report: A report requested
by your lender that utilizes information from at least two of the three
national credit bureaus and information provided on your loan application.
Seller –Take-Back: An agreement in which the owner
of a property provides financing, often in combination with an assumed
mortgage.
Survey: A print showing the measurements of the boundaries
of a parcel of land, together with the location of all improvements on
the land and sometimes its area and topography.
Tenants-By-Entirety: A form of ownership in which husband
and wife are co-owners with rights of survivorship.
Tenants-In-Common: An undivided interest in property
taken by two or more persons; the interest need not be equal. Upon death
of one or more persons, there is no right of survivorship.
Title: The evidence one has of right to possession of
land.
Title Insurance: Insurance against loss resulting from
defects of title to a specifically described parcel of real property.
Title Search: An investigation into the history of ownership
of a property to check for liens, unpaid claims, restrictions or problems,
to prove that the seller can transfer free and clear ownership.
Total Debt Ratio: Monthly debt and housing payments
divided by gross monthly income. Also known as Obligations-to-Income Ratio
or Back-End Ratio.
Truth-In-Lending Act: A federal law requiring a disclosure
of credit terms using a standard format. This is intended to facilitate
comparisons between the lending terms of different financial institutions.
Veterans Administration (VA): A government agency guaranteeing
mortgage loans with no down payment to qualified veterans.
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