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Florida
Mortgages and Florida Home Loans
Types of
Mortgage Lenders
It used to be
fairly easy to put a term to a lender that accurately
described them and the types of mortgages they originated.
Time, the S&L problems more than a decade ago, and a
maturing marketplace have served to "blend" those
differences. Some old adjectives barely apply now and
are rarely used.
Mortgage Bankers
A true
Mortgage Banker is a lender that is large enough to
originate loans and create pools of loans which they sell
directly to Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae, jumbo loan
investors, and others. Any company that does this is
considered to be a mortgage banker. They can very
greatly in size. Some may service the loans they
originate, but not all of them will. Most true
mortgage bankers have wholesale lending divisions.
Examples of
two of the largest mortgage bankers are Countrywide Home
Loans and Wells Fargo Mortgage. One is
associated with a bank and the other is not, but both are
most correctly classified as mortgage bankers.
A lot of
companies call themselves mortgage bankers and some deserve
the title. For others, it is mostly marketing.
Mortgage Brokers
Mortgage
Brokers are companies that originate loans with the
intention of brokering them to wholesale lending
institutions. A broker has established relationships with
these companies. Underwriting and funding takes place
at the wholesale lender. Many mortgage brokers are also
correspondents, which is why many of them also claim to be
mortgage bankers.
Mortgage
brokers deal with lending institutions that have a wholesale
loan department.
Wholesale Lenders
Most mortgage
bankers and portfolio lenders also act as wholesale lenders,
catering to mortgage brokers for loan origination. Some
wholesale lenders do not even have their own retail
branches, relying solely on mortgage brokers for their
loans.
These
wholesale divisions offer loans to mortgage brokers at a
lower cost than their retail branches offer them to the
general public. The mortgage broker then adds on his fee.
The result for the borrower is that the loan costs
about the same as if he obtained a loan directly from a
retail branch of the wholesale lender. |