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Balloon Mortgage
A mortgage loan that requires
the remaining principal balance be paid
at a specific point in time. For example,
a loan may be amortized as if it would
be paid over a thirty year period, but
requires that at the end of the tenth
year the entire remaining balance must
be paid.
Balloon Payment
The final lump sum payment that is
due at the termination of a balloon
mortgage.
Bankruptcy
By filing in federal bankruptcy court,
an individual or individuals can restructure
or relieve themselves of debts and
liabilities. Bankruptcies are of various
types, but the most common for an
individual seem to be a Chapter 7
No Asset bankruptcy which relieves
the borrower of most types of debts.
A borrower cannot usually qualify
for an A paper loan for a period of
two years after the bankruptcy has
been discharged and requires the re-establishment
of an ability to repay debt.
Basis Point
A basis point is one one-hundredth
of one percentage point. For example,
the difference between a home loan
at 4.25 percent and one at 4.38 percent
is 13 basis points.
Bill of Sale
A written document that transfers
title to personal property. For example,
when selling an automobile to acquire
funds which will be used as a source
of down payment or for closing costs,
the lender will usually require the
bill of sale (in addition to other
items) to help document this source
of funds.
Biweekly Mortgage
A mortgage in which you make payments
every two weeks instead of once a
month. The basic result is that instead
of making twelve monthly payments
during the year, you make thirteen.
The extra payment reduces the principal,
substantially reducing the time it
takes to pay off a thirty year mortgage.
Note: there are independent companies
that encourage you to set up bi-weekly
payment schedules with them on your
thirty year mortgage. They charge
a set-up fee and a transfer fee for
every payment. Your funds are deposited
into a trust account from which your
monthly payment is then made, and
the excess funds then remain in the
trust account until enough has accrued
to make the additional payment which
will then be paid to reduce your principle.
You could save money by doing the
same thing yourself, plus you have
to have faith that once you transfer
money to them that they will actually
transfer your funds to your lender.
Bond Market
Usually refers to the daily buying
and selling of thirty year treasury
bonds. Lenders follow this market
intensely because as the yields of
bonds go up and down, fixed rate mortgages
do approximately the same thing. The
same factors that affect the Treasury
Bond market also affect mortgage rates
at the same time. That is why rates
change daily, and in a volatile market
can and do change during the day as
well.
Bridge Loan
Not used much anymore, bridge loans
are obtained by those who have not
yet sold their previous property,
but must close on a purchase property.
The bridge loan becomes the source
of their funds for the down payment.
One reason for their fall from favor
is that there are more and more second
mortgage lenders now that will lend
at a high loan to value. In addition,
sellers often prefer to accept offers
from buyers who have already sold
their property.
Broker
Broker has several meanings in different
situations. Most Realtors are agents
who work under a broker. Some agents
are brokers as well, either working
form themselves or under another broker.
In the mortgage industry, broker usually
refers to a company or individual
that does not lend the money for the
loans themselves, but broker loans
to larger lenders or investors. (See
the Home Loan Library that discusses
the different types of lenders). As
a normal definition, a broker is anyone
who acts as an agent, bringing two
parties together for any type of transaction
and earns a fee for doing so.
Buydown
Usually refers to a fixed rate mortgage
where the interest rate is bought
down for a temporary period, usually
one to three years. After that time
and for the remainder of the term,
the borrower's payment is calculated
at the note rate. In order to buy
down the initial rate for the temporary
payment, a lump sum is paid and held
in an account used to supplement the
borrower's monthly payment. These
funds usually come from the seller
(or some other source) as a financial
incentive to induce someone to buy
their property. A lender funded buydown
is when the lender pays the initial
lump sum. They can accomplish this
because the note rate on the loan
(after the buydown adjustments) will
be higher than the current market
rate. One reason for doing this is
because the borrower may get to qualify
at the start rate and can qualify
for a higher loan amount. Another
reason is that a borrower may expect
his earnings to go up substantially
in the near future, but wants a lower
payment right now.
Buyer's Agent
A person with a state/provincial license
to represent a buyer or a seller in
a real-estate transaction in exchange
for commission. Most agents work for
a real-estate broker or realtor.
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