Dr. Hess wrote:
I called Countrywide, my lender until the name change because of their failures, on a refi. All the extras tacked on make it a screw job. Why do I need title insurance on a refi? I know exactly who's name the title is in. I put it there. If the title insurance is to protect the lender, then let them pay for it. And $250 for "filing fee" is insane. Why should I pay someone $250 to walk across the street and hand the clerk a piece of paper and ten bucks?
The simple answer is that you are getting a new loan even if you are using the same lender. Because you aren't moving it doesn't feel like a new loan. The new lender knows nothing about what you've done to your title situation and besides the govt. requires it on any new loan they get involved in which includes all FHA, VA, USDA and most Conventional loans.
You could have caused several new liens to be placed on the property since you bought it. How would the lender know that without doing a title search?
The $250 isn't for someone to walk across the road to hand the clerk the piece of paper, the $250 is what the county charges to file that piece of paper.
As far as it being a screw job the closing costs are paying 3rd parties to do their job. They won't work for free so as I've said several times, you can shuffle around the costs, but you can't make them disappear. If getting paid to do their job is a screw job then screw job it is. You don't work for free do you?
The govt. requires all those jobs be done (and hence the fees) to ensure sellers have the legal capacity to sell the property, to ensure the property really is worth what you are paying, to ensure the new ownership is recorded properly so no one can take your house away from you or sell it again, plus the lender also wants to make sure the world knows of their claim to your property so you can't go out and borrow and reborrow much more money than the house is worth and then walk away from the loan.
Basically all these procedures and costs are to keep you from buying the Brooklyn Bridge - again.
Oh, and dyintorace, when the dust settles I think you will find the "A" lenders weren't doing anything wrong except following govt. guidelines. The guidelines were the culprit, most notably Clinton's 1999 change. The lenders had no choice but to follow the guidelines if they didn't then they would have been discriminating.
Now the "B" lenders have always been crooks. The whole "B" system is built upon the premise that the people have screwed up so badly they can't get a loan any other way so lets screw them. But before you start railing against them too much the Tote the Note car lots, pawn shops, etc. are much worse. It was and is an accepted business practice. You get penalized if you don't pay your bills. Clinton wanted it to be otherwise but history is showing us once again that is a valid concept. People who historically haven't paid their bills don't just wake up one morning and change their ways.
So don't blame the lenders, blame the govt regulations which are put in place by politicians instead of people who know what they are doing. Today's present set of politically instigated regulations is much worse than the old ones. The pendulum has swung and once again instead of stopping the middle it's gone way too far.
Were you aware that more than half of America can no longer get the low interest rates you see advertised due to the new regs on credit scores? Many can get loans, just not the good rates.
Did you know that the underwriting guidelines have changed so that they've cut about 25% of the good people out of getting a loan at all? I'm talking people with good jobs and who pay their bills, not dead beats. Heaven forbid you are self employed or have a commissioned income! That's another whole story.
Did you know that the appraisal system is about to be changed for the worse and will cause a massive value issue all across the country not just in the blighted areas? A law suit in NY state against one of the mega appraisal companies has somehow gotten twisted (by the politicians again) and caused ONLY the mega appraisal companies to be able to do appraisals soon. You can look forward to more of an area average for values rather than "your particular property is worth $X". People with the worst house in the neighborhood will like it but the guys with the better houses will hate it.
The new system does away with the old safeguards on appraisals whereby EVERY appraisal was checked to see if it fit values in the neighborhood and if a problem was found the appraiser had to provide further proof of value &/or a new appraisal had to be done. This new system makes it illegal to check the appraisal. If you get an obviously bad appraisal be it too high or too low you can't even tell/complain to the appraiser - that would be trying to influence the appraiser and he's required to report you to a special hot line they've set up just for these things. Mr. Seller don't even begin to think your house is worth more because you've painted it, added on, kept it up, have a nice yard, etc. cause the guy next door who has the junk cars up on the blocks now has a house that is legally worth as much as yours.
Lenders must use any and every appraiser on a rotational basis and you can't take an appraiser off the list for doing a crappy job. You can't reward the guys who do good work in a timely fashion by giving them more business than the guys who berkeley off all day long and don't really care if they do a good job or not. You can't fire an appraiser for anything less than an illegal act. Crappy appraisals aren't illegal.
And you can't get a 2nd appraisal to check the first guy. To get another appraisal you will have to change lenders and begin your process over again and pray the new appraiser does a better job than the first.
We have a lawsuit pending attempting to get a cease and desist on the appraisal, but we don't hold out much hope.
Don't get me started. Things have changed so much for the worse we have a huge housing problem developing that is so much worse than the little bubble we've come thru. This new one will not be economic related and could destroy most people value.