Glossary
A
- Abstract (of
Title)
- A historical
summary of all the recorded transactions
that affect the title to the property.
An attorney or a title company will
review an abstract of title to determine
if there are any problems affecting the
title to the property. All such problems
must be cleared before the buyer can be
issued a clear and insurable title.
- Abutting
- Bordering upon or
next to; the joining or touching of
adjoining land; sharing a common
boundary.
- Acceleration
Clause
- A loan provision
giving the lender the power to declare
all sums owing lender immediately due
and payable upon the violation of a
specific loan provision, such as the
sale of the property, or the failure to
make loan payments on time. Example :
John sells his property to Mary who
takes over John's mortgage payments.
They do not notify the lender of this
transaction. The lender finds out that
the title to the property has
transferred and calls the loan, since
the loan documents state that the loan
is due on the sale of the property. John
is now liable to pay his lender in full.
- Acceptance
- An offeree’s
consent to enter into a contract and be
bound by the terms of the offer. In a
real estate transaction an offer is made
from the buyer to the seller. If the
seller accepts the offer within the
prescribed time limit, it becomes a
binding contract. In this case
Acceptance is documented by the Seller
signing and delivering the signed
document.
- Accretion
- The addition to
land through natural forces like wind or
water.
- Example: Soil
carried by a river then deposited on
land.
- Acknowledgment
- Formal
declaration before a public official
(typically a Notary Public) that one has
signed a document. Required before
recording real estate legal documents,
such as a deeds of trust.
- Acre
- A measure of land
equal to 43,560 square feet.
- Additional
Principal Payment
- A payment by a
borrower of more than the scheduled
principal amount due in order to reduce
the remaining balance on the loan.
- Adjustable Rate
Mortgage (ARM)
- Also known as a
variable rate mortgage. The interest
rate on these mortgages changes
periodically.
- Adjusted Basis
- The adjusted
basis figure is the value used to
determine capital gains when you sell
real property. The original cost of a
property plus the value of any capital
expenditures for improvements to the
property minus any depreciation taken.
- Adjustment Period
- The length of
time for which the interest rate is
fixed on an adjustable. If the
adjustment period is six months, then
the interest rate will remain fixed for
six months, after which time it will
adjust.
- Affordability
Analysis
- A detailed
analysis to determine whether you can
afford the purchase of a home. An
affordability analysis takes into
consideration your income, liabilities,
and available funds, along with the type
of mortgage you plan to use, the area
where you want to purchase a home, and
the closing costs that you might expect
to pay.
- Agreement of Sale
- A written signed
agreement between the seller and the
purchaser in which the purchaser agrees
to buy certain real estate and the
seller agrees to sell upon terms of the
agreement. Also known as contract of
purchase, purchase agreement, offer and
acceptance, earnest money contract or
sales agreement.
- Amenity
- A feature of real
property that enhances its
attractiveness and increases the
occupant’s or user’s satisfaction,
although the feature is not essential to
the property’s use. Natural amenities
include a pleasant or desirable location
near water, scenic views of the
surrounding area, etc. Human-made
amenities include swimming pools, tennis
courts, community buildings, and other
recreational facilities.
- Amortization
- A gradual paying
off of a debt by periodic installments
which pay principal and interest.
- Annual Percentage
Rate (APR)
- The effective
rate of interest for a loan per year.
This rate is typically higher than the
note rate because it takes into account
closing costs. This is one way to
compare loan programs offered by
different lenders. Caution : the APR is
sometimes computed differently by
different lenders and can be misleading.
- Application
- A form used to
apply for a mortgage loan and to record
pertinent information concerning a
prospective mortgagor and the proposed
security.
- Appraisal
- An opinion or
estimate of the value of a property at a
given date.
- Appreciation
- An increase in
the value of a property due to changes
in market conditions or for other
reasons, such as additions and
renovations. Opposite of depreciation.
- Arm's length
transaction
- A transaction
among parties each of who acts in his or
her own best interest.
- Example: A
transaction between a father and his son
would NOT be an Arm's length
transaction.
- Assessed Value
- The valuation
placed on property by a public tax
assessor for purposes of taxation.
- Assessment
- The process of
placing a value on property for the
strict purpose of taxation. May also
refer to a levy against property for a
special purpose, such as a street or
traffic light or sewer assessment.
- Assessment Rolls
- The public record
of taxable property.
- Assessor
- A public official
who establishes the value of a property
for taxation purposes.
- Assignment
- The transfer of a
mortgage from one person to another.
- Asset
- Anything with a
dollar value that you own. Banks
consider your assets when determining
how much you can borrow.
- Assumable
Mortgage
- A mortgage loan
which allows a new home buyer to take
over the obligation of making loan
payments with no change in the terms of
the loan. Assumable loans do not have a
due-on-sale clause. The lender has to be
notified and agree to the assumption.
The lender may require the buyer to
qualify for the loan and may charge an
assumption fee. The seller should obtain
a written release from the lender
stating clearly that he/she is no longer
liable to make mortgage payments. See
also "Subject To."
- Attorney In Fact
- One who is
authorized to act for another under a
power of attorney which may be general
or limited in scope.
- Example: John
wants to sell his house but has to be
out of the country for four months. John
gives authorization to Mary to sign the
grant deed to sell the property to a
buyer. Mary becomes John's Attorney In
Fact.
B
- Back-end ratio,
or debt ratio
- The amount you
pay in monthly debt (car payments,
credit cards, student loans, etc.)
divided by your gross monthly income.
- Balloon (Payment)
Mortgage
- Usually a
short-term fixed-rate loan which
involves small payments for a certain
period of time and one large payment for
the remaining amount of the principal at
a time specified in the contract.
Example : A balloon mortgage for $25,000
has interest only payments for 5 years
at 12 percent ($250 per month), with the
full principal of $25,000 due and
payable after five years
- Bankruptcy
- The financial
inability to pay one's debts when due.
The debtor surrenders his assets to the
bankruptcy court. An individual
typically files for Chapter 7 (all debts
wiped out) or Chapter 13 (establishes a
payment plan to pay off debts). A
bankruptcy stays on an individual's
credit report for seven years.
- Beneficiary
- The person who
receives or is to receive the benefits
resulting from certain acts.
- Example : The
lender is named as the beneficiary on a
mortgage loan.
- Example : John
has a life insurance policy for $100,000
with Jane as his beneficiary. Should
John die, Jane will receive the benefits
in the amount of $100,000.
- Betterment
- An improvement
that increases property value as
distinguished from repairs or
replacements that simply maintain value.
- Bill of Sale
- A written
document that transfers title to
personal property.
- Binder
- 1. A title
insurance binder is the written
commitment of a title insurance company
to insure title to the property subject
to the conditions and exclusions shown
on the binder.
- 2. Preliminary
agreement, normally secured with earnest
money, between a buyer and a seller as
an offer to purchase real estate.
- Biweekly Mortgage
- A mortgage which
requires half the normal monthly payment
every two weeks. Over the course of the
year, twenty-six half payments are made
which is equivalent to thirteen full
mortgage payments. As a result of this
extra payment the loan amortizes much
faster than a loan with normal monthly
payments
- Blanket Insurance
Policy
- A single policy
that covers more than one piece of
property (or more than one person).
- Blanket Mortgage
- A mortgage
covering more than one piece of
property.
- Example : A
developer subdivides a tract of land
into lots and obtains a blanket mortgage
on the whole tract.
- Bond
- 1. A debt
instrument in the capital markets. The
U.S. government, corporations and
municipalities use bonds to raise money.
Bonds can also be backed by mortgages.
The best known bond is the 30-yr.
treasury bond issued by the U.S.
government.
- 2. A sum of money
given to a court to guarantee against a
loss. For example if there is a lien on
a property, the owner may remove the
lien by posting a bond.
- Borrower
(mortgagor, trustor)
- One who applies
for a loan secured by real estate and is
responsible for repaying the loan
(mortgage).
- Breach
- To break or
violate an agreement.
- Bridge Loan
- An interim loan
typically used when the buyer is unable
to sell his/her house but needs money to
close the transaction on the house
he/she is buying. The bridge loan is
made on the buyer's current residence to
finance the buyer's new residence. The
loan is paid off when the buyer's
current residence is sold.
- Broker
- See Real Estate
Broker or Mortgage Broker.
- Browser
- Short for Web
browser, a software application used to
locate and display Web pages. The two
most popular browsers are Microsoft
Internet Explorer and Netscape
Navigator.
- Building Code
- Local regulations
that control design, construction, and
materials used in construction. Building
codes are based on safety and health
standards.
- Building Line or
Setback
- Distances from
the ends and/or sides of the lot beyond
which construction may not extend. The
building line may be established by a
filed plat of subdivision, by
restrictive covenants in deeds or
leases, by building codes, or by zoning
ordinances.
- Buydown
- Obtaining a lower
interest rate (buying down the rate) by
paying additional points to the lender.
The lower rate may apply for the full
duration of the loan or for just the
first few years. A buydown may be used
to qualify a borrower who would
otherwise not qualify since a buydown
results in lower payments.
- Example : A very
popular buydown is the 2-1 buydown. If
the interest rate on the note is 9
percent, the buydown results in the rate
being 7 percent (9 percent minus 2
percent) for the first year, 8 percent
(9 percent minus 1 percent) for the
second year, and 9 percent thereafter.
- Buyer's Broker
- An agent hired by
a buyer to locate a property for
purchase. The broker represents the
buyer and negotiates with the seller's
broker for the best possible deal for
the buyer.
- Buyer's Market
- Market conditions
that favor the buyer. I.e., a market in
which there are more sellers than
buyers. As a result, a buyer has an
excess supply of homes from which to
choose and can negotiate a lower price.
A buyer's market may be caused by an
economic slump or overbuilding.
- Buying Your Home:
Settlement Costs and Information (HUD
guide)
- A booklet that
provides an overview of the lending
process and is required to be given to
consumers after the loan application is
completed.
- Bylaws
- A set of
regulations by which an organization
conducts its business.
- Example : A
condominium association prepares bylaws
that state the minimum number of owners
to conduct a meeting to decide policies.
C
- Call Option
- A clause in the
mortgage that gives the lender the right
to "call" the mortgage due and payable
at the end of a given length of time,
for whatever reason.
- Capital
Expenditure
- The cost of an
improvement made either to extend the
life of a property or to increase its
value.
- Capital Gains
- When you sell a
capital asset at a profit, such as real
estate, the difference between the
amount you sell it for and your basis,
which is usually what you paid for it,
is a capital gain.
- Capital
Improvement
- Any item,
structure or addition that is a
permanent improvement to the property.
- Caps (interest)
- Limits on the
amount that the interest rate on an ARM
can change per year and/or during the
life of the loan. Payment caps limit the
amount that monthly payments for an ARM
may change.
- Cash Flow
- The amount of
cash derived over a certain period of
time from an income-producing property.
The cash flow should be large enough to
pay the expenses of the income producing
property (mortgage payment, maintenance,
utilities, etc.).
- Caveat Emptor
- A legal term
meaning "let the buyer beware." The
buyer must examine the property and buy
at his/her own risk.
Example : A property may be offered in
an "as is" condition with no expressed
or implied guarantee of quality or
condition.
- CC&R's -
Covenants, conditions, and restrictions.
- The basic rules
establishing the rights and obligations
of owners of real property within a
condominium, townhouse, PUD, subdivision
or other tract of land. An association
is organized for the purpose of
operating and maintaining property
commonly owned by the individual owners.
The association is normally made up of
property owners.
- Certificate of
Deposit
- A certificate
from a bank stating that the named party
has a specified sum on deposit, usually
for a given period of time at a fixed
rate of interest.
- Certificate of
Eligibility
- The document
issued by the Department of Veterans
Affairs to those who qualify for a VA
loan which may be used to buy a house
with zero down. Certificates of
eligibility may be obtained by sending
the form DD-214 to the local VA office
along with VA form 1880.
- Certificate of
Occupancy
- Document issued
by a local governmental agency that
states a property meets the local
building standards for occupancy and is
in compliance with public health and
building codes. This document is
normally required by a lender prior to
closing the loan.
- Certificate of
Reasonable Value (CRV)
- An appraisal
performed by a VA approved appraiser
which establishes the property's current
market value. This value establishes the
ceiling on the maximum VA mortgage loan
principal.
- Certificate of
Title
- An opinion
rendered by an attorney as to the status
of title to a property, according to the
public records. This certificate does
not the same level of protection as
title insurance.
- Certificate of
Veteran Status
- The document
given to veterans or reservists who have
served 90 days of continuous active duty
(including training time). This document
enables veterans to obtain lower down
payments on certain FHA-insured loans.
- Chain of Title
- The chronological
order of conveyance of a parcel of land
from the original owner to the present
owner.
- Example: An
abstractor can research title to
property going back to the date that the
property was granted to the United
States.
- Chattel
- Personal
property.
- Clear Title
- A marketable
title, free of clouds and disputed
interests. Most lenders require a clear
title prior to closing.
- Closing
- The final meeting
between the buyer, seller and lender (or
their agents) at which the property and
funds legally change hands.
- Closing Costs
- Expenses incurred
by the buyer and seller in a real estate
or mortgage transaction. There are two
types of costs: recurring and
non-recurring.
- Non-recurring
costs are one time transactional costs
which include
- Discount and
origination points
- Lender fees:
underwriting, processing, document
preparations, flood certificate, tax
service, wire transfer, courier, etc
- Title
insurance fees
- Escrow,
attorney or closing agent fees
- Recording
fees
- Inspection
and appraisal fees
- Real estate
brokerage commissions
- Recurring fees
are costs associated with owning the
property and they recur month after
month. These costs may include hazard
insurance, interest, property taxes,
mortgage insurance (PMI), and
association fees. A pro-rated amount of
these fees may have to be paid at
closing including
- Pre-paid
interest - interest charges from the
date of closing to the end of the
month
- Property
taxes if due
- Hazard
insurance, fire insurance or
homeowners insurance has to be paid
for one year
- Mortgage
insurance (PMI) may be required if
the loan amount is more than 80
percent of the value of the
property. In the past a whole year
of PMI had to be paid up-front,
however in recent years many PMI
companies only require on to two
months up-front. Mortgage insurance
premiums are normally paid every
month with the loan payment
- Impound
account may need money to be set up
for future payments
- Closing Statement
– HUD1
- A detailed
written summary of the financial
settlement of a real estate transaction,
showing all charges and credits made,
all cash received and paid.
- Cloud on Title
- An outstanding
claim or encumbrance that, if valid,
would affect or impair the owner's
title. Compare with clear title.
- COFI
- A monthly
cost-of-funds index (COFI) reflecting
the average interest rate paid by 11th
Federal Home Loan Bank District savings
institutions for savings and checking
accounts. The 11th district covers
Arizona, California and Nevada. The
index is published on the last day of
the month and reflects the cost of funds
for the prior month. This rate is used
by lenders to determine the index rate
for some of their variable rate loan
products.
- Collateral
- An asset (such as
a car or a home) that guarantees the
repayment of a loan. The borrower risks
losing the asset if the loan is not
repaid according to the terms of the
loan contract.
- Collection
- The efforts used
to bring a delinquent mortgage current
and to file the necessary notices to
proceed with foreclosure when necessary.
- Co-Maker
- A person who
signs a promissory note along with the
borrower. A co-maker's signature
guarantees that the loan will be repaid,
because the borrower and the co-maker
are equally responsible for the
repayment. See endorser.
- Commission
- The fee charged
by a broker or agent for negotiating a
real estate or loan transaction. A
commission is generally a percentage of
the price of the property or loan.
- Commitment
- A written
document provided by a lender to
agreeing to make a loan on specific
terms to a borrower or builder.
- Common Area
Assessments
- Levies against
individual unit owners in a condominium
or planned unit development (PUD)
project for additional capital to defray
homeowners' association costs and
expenses and to repair, replace,
maintain, improve, or operate the common
areas of the project.
- Common Areas
- Those portions of
a building, land, and amenities owned
(or managed) by a planned unit
development (PUD) or condominium
project's homeowners' association (or a
cooperative project's cooperative
corporation) that are used by all of the
unit owners, who share in the common
expenses of their operation and
maintenance. Common areas include
swimming pools, tennis courts, and other
recreational facilities, as well as
common corridors of buildings, parking
areas, means of ingress and egress, etc.
- Common Law
- An unwritten body
of law based on general custom in
England and used to an extent in the
United States.
- Community Home
Improvement Mortgage Loan®
- An alternative
financing option that allows low- and
moderate-income home buyers to obtain 95
percent financing for the purchase and
improvement of a home in need of modest
repairs. The repair work can account for
as much as 30 percent of the appraised
value.
- Community Land
Trust Mortgage Loan
- An alternative
financing option that enables low- and
moderate-income home buyers to purchase
housing that has been improved by a
nonprofit Community Land Trust and to
lease the land on which the property
stands.
- Community
Property
- In some western
and southwestern states, a form of
ownership under which property acquired
during a marriage is presumed to be
owned jointly unless acquired as
separate property of either spouse.
- Community
Seconds®
- An alternative
financing option for low- and
moderate-income households under which
an investor purchases a first mortgage
that has a subsidized second mortgage
behind it. The second mortgage may be
issued by a state, county, or local
housing agency, foundation, or nonprofit
organization. Payment on the second
mortgage is often deferred and carries a
very low interest rate (or no interest
rate at all). Part of the debt may be
forgiven incrementally for each year the
buyer remains in the home.
- Comparables
- An abbreviation
for "comparable properties"; used for
comparative purposes in the appraisal
process. Comparables are properties like
the property under consideration; they
have reasonably the same size, location,
and amenities and have recently been
sold. Comparables help the appraiser
determine the approximate fair market
value of the subject property.
- Compound Interest
- Interest paid on
the original principal balance and on
the accrued and unpaid interest.
- Comps,
Comparables
- Comparable
properties; properties in close
proximity which have sold recently and
are about the same size with similar
amenities, used to determine the value
of a property by comparison.
- Condemnation
- The determination
that a building is not fit for use or is
dangerous and must be destroyed; the
taking of private property for a public
purpose through an exercise of the right
of eminent domain.
- Conditional
Commitment
- A written
document provided by a lender agreeing
to make a loan provided certain
conditions are met prior to closing.
- Conditional Sales
Contract (Land Contract)
- A real estate
sales contract in which she seller
(vendor) agrees to convey title to the
buyer (vendee) after certain conditions
have been met and transfer is not
required within one year.(installment
selling arrangement whereby the buyer
may use and occupy land, but no deed is
given by seller until the sales price
has been paid.
- Condominium
- A real estate
project in which each unit owner has
title to a unit in a building, an
undivided interest in the common areas
of the project, and sometimes the
exclusive use of certain limited common
areas.
- Condominium
Conversion
- Changing the
ownership of an existing building
(usually a rental project) to the
condominium form of ownership.
- Condominium Hotel
- A condominium
project that has rental or registration
desks, short-term occupancy, food and
telephone services, and daily cleaning
services and that is operated as a
commercial hotel even though the units
are individually owned.
- Construction loan
- A short term loan
to pay for the construction of buildings
or homes. These loans typically provide
periodic disbursements to the builder as
each stage of the building is completed.
When construction is completed a
take-out or permanent loan is used to
pay off the construction loan.
- Consumer
Reporting Agency (or bureau)
- An organization
that prepares reports that are used by
lenders to determine a potential
borrower's credit history. The agency
obtains data for these reports from a
credit repository as well as from other
sources. Experian, TransUnion and
Equifax are the 3 main repositories.
- Consideration
- Anything of value
given to induce another to enter into a
contract. Earnest money deposit on a
sales contract is consideration.
- Contingency
- The requirement
that a particular event occur before a
contract is binding. For example: The
sale of a home can be contingent upon
the buyer obtaining financing.
- Contract
- An agreement
between competent parties to do or not
do certain things for consideration.
- To have a valid
contract for the sale of real estate
there must be:
- an offer
- an acceptance
- competent
parties
- consideration
- legal purpose
- written
documentation
- description
of the property
- signatures by
principals or their attorney-in-fact
- Contract of Sale
- See Agreement of
Sale
- Conventional Loan
- Any mortgage loan
other than a VA or an FHA loan. A
convention loan may be conforming or
non-conforming.
- Convertibility
Clause
- A clause in some
ARMs which allows the buyer (borrower)
to change to a fixed-rate mortgage at a
specified time.
- Condemnation
-
- Taking
private property for a public use
with compensation to the owner under
eminent domain. Used by governments
to acquire land for streets,
schools, freeways, etc. and by
utilities to acquire necessary
property.
- Declaring a
structure unfit for use because of
violations in housing codes or other
reasons.
- Conveyance
- The transfer of
title of real property from one party to
another.
- Covenant
- A clause in a
mortgage that obligates or restricts the
borrower and that, if violated, can
result in foreclosure.
- Cooperative
(Co-op)
- See Stock
Cooperative.
- Convertible
Adjustable Rate Mortgage (ARM)
- Some variable
loans come with options to convert to a
fixed loan based on a pre-determined
formula, during a given time period. For
example the 1 Year T-Bill ARM may be
converted to a fixed rate during the
first five years on the adjustment date.
One could convert during the thirteenth,
twenty-fifth, thirty-seventh,
forty-ninth or sixty-first month of the
loan.
- Credit Life
Insurance
- A type of
insurance often bought by mortgagors
because it will pay off the mortgage
debt if the mortgagor dies while the
policy is in force.
- Credit Report
- A report
detailing a borrower's credit and
payment history including: revolving and
installment accounts; public records
such as tax liens and judgments.
- Credit Repository
- An organization
that gathers, records, updates, and
stores financial and public records
information about the payment records of
individuals who are being considered for
credit. Experian, TransUnion and
Equifax.
- Credit Score
- A credit score is
a snapshot of a person’s credit risk at
a particular point in time. It is used
by lenders to help determine if a
borrower qualifies for a loan. There are
three main credit reporting companies
that issue these credit scores. Experian
calls it the FICO score, TransUnion
calls it Empirica, and Equifax calls it
the Beacon.
- Creditor
- A person or
entity (a bank or other lender) who
funded the loan and to whom a debt is
owed.
- Cul-de-sac
- A dead-end street
with a turn-around space at the end.
These are attractive to some homeowners
because the ending street cuts down on
"thru" traffic, speeding, etc.
D
- Debt Ratio
- This is a loan
qualifying ratio used by lenders to
determine if a borrower qualifies for a
loan. The debt (-to-income) ratio is
calculated by taking the borrower’s
monthly debts, including house payments,
credit cards and personal loans, and
dividing it by the monthly income.
- Deed
- A written
document by which title to real property
is transferred from one owner to
another. The deed should contain an
accurate description of the property
being conveyed, should be signed and
witnessed according to the laws of the
State where the property is located, and
should be delivered to the buyer at
closing.
- Deed-in-lieu
- A deed given by a
mortgagor (homeowner) to the mortgagee
(lender) to satisfy a debt and avoid
foreclosure. Also called a "voluntary
conveyance." This avoids the foreclosure
process, however it may still be
considered a negative mark on your
credit and affect your credit scores.
- Deed of Trust
- A security
instrument (document describing the
rights and duties of the lender and
borrower) used in real estate
transactions in many states. The parties
to a deed of trust are: trustee (third
party), trustor (borrower), beneficiary
(lender).
- Deed Restriction
- A clause in a
deed that limits the use of land.
Example : A deed might require that a
road cannot be built on the land.
- Default
- Failure to meet
legal obligations in a contract, such as
the failure to make the monthly mortgage
payment.
- Defective Title
- Any recorded
instrument that would prevent a
grantor/seller from giving a clear
title.
- Example: The
seller has a contractor lien on the
property that was filed when he/she
failed to pay the contractor for the
kitchen remodel. The seller may obtain
clear title by paying the contractor and
removing the lien.
- Deferred Interest
- Unpaid interest
added to the loan balance. This is
common in a negative amortized or option
arm loan program. The minimum payment is
less than the interest charges. The
interest that is not paid is added to
the balance.
- Deficiency
Judgment
- Personal claim
against the debtor when the sale of
foreclosed property does not yield
sufficient proceeds to pay off the
mortgages, accrued interest, legal fees,
etc.
- Delinquency
- Failure to make
payments on time. A Notice of Default
and foreclosure process usually takes
place after you are delinquent for more
than a few months.
- Depreciation
- When related to
the appraisal of property, depreciation
is the decrease in value from any cause.
When related to taxation, "book
depreciation" is a steady decrease
(calculated using mathematical formulas
or schedules) in the owner's tax basis.
- Department of
Veterans Affairs (VA)
- An independent
governmental agency which guarantees
long-term, low- or no-money-down
mortgages to eligible veterans.
- Discount Points
- Fees paid to a
lender to reduce the interest rate.
- Documentary Tax
Stamps
- Stamps affixed to
a deed showing the amount of transfer
tax.
- Dower
- The rights of a
widow or child to part of a deceased
husband's or father's property.
- Downpayment
- The amount paid
for the purchase of a property in
addition to the mortgage, but not
including any closing costs.
- Example : John
buys a house for $100,000 and obtains a
loan for $80,000. His downpayment is
$20,000.
- Dragnet Clause
- A provision in a
mortgage that pledges several properties
as collateral. A default in the mortgage
could lead to foreclosure proceedings on
any of the properties in the dragnet.
- Due on Sale
Clause
- A clause in the
Deed of Trust or Mortgage that states
that the entire loan is due upon the
sale of the property.
E
- Earnest Money
- A deposit made by
a buyer of real estate towards the down
payment to evidence good faith. This
money is typically held by the real
estate brokers or the escrow company.
- Easement
- The right to use
the land of another for a specific
purpose. Easements may be temporary or
permanent. Example: The utility company
may need an easement to run electric
lines.
- Eminent Domain
- The right of the
government or a public utility to
acquire property for necessary public
use by condemnation, with proper
compensation to the owner.
- Encroachment
- A building, part
of a building, or an obstruction (e.g.,
a fence or wall) that physically
intrudes upon or overlaps the property
of another.
- Encumbrance
- Any interest or
right in real property possessed by a
stranger to the title, which affects the
owner's property value, but does not
prevent the owner from transferring
title. Encumbrances may affect title, or
condition or use of the property.
- Entitlement
- VA home loan
benefits are known as entitlement and/or
eligibility.
- Equal Credit
Opportunity Act (ECOA)
- A federal law
that requires lenders and other
creditors to make credit equally
available without discrimination based
on race, color, religion, national
origin, age, sex, marital status, or
receipt of income from public assistance
programs.
- Equity
- The market value
of real property, less the amount of any
liens. Equity is often expressed as a
percentage of the property value.
- Equity Sharing
- Joint ownership
of a property between the owner/occupant
and the owner/investor, that results in
tax advantages for both parties. Upon
sale of the property the joint owners
split profits based on the percentage
they own.
- Escheat
- The reversion of
property to the state in the event that
the owner dies without leaving a will
and has no legal heirs.
- Escrow
- 1. Delivery of a
deed by a grantor to a third party for
delivery to the grantee upon the
occurrence of a conditional event.
- 2. Calif. Civil
Code Sec.1057: "A grant may be deposited
by the grantor with a third person, to
be delivered on the performance of a
condition, and, on delivery by the
depositary, it will take effect. While
in the possession of the third person,
and subject to condition, it is called
an escrow."
- Escrow Account
- The account in
which a mortgage servicer holds the
borrower’s escrow payments prior to
paying property expenses.
- Estate
- The ownership
interest of an individual in real
property. The sum total of all the real
property and personal property owned by
an individual at time of death.
- Eviction
- The lawful
expulsion of an occupant from real
property. The legal process of eviction
is different in each state.
- Examination of
Title
- The report on the
title of a property from the public
records or an abstract of the title.
- Exclusive Listing
- A written
contract that gives a licensed real
estate agent the exclusive right to sell
a property for a specified time, but
reserving the owner’s right to sell the
property alone without the payment of a
commission.
- Executor (Executrix?feminine
for Executor)
- A person named in
a will to carry out its provisions for
the disposition of the estate.
F
- Fair Credit
Reporting Act
- A consumer
protection law that regulates the
disclosure of consumer credit reports by
consumer/credit reporting agencies and
establishes procedures for correcting
mistakes on one's credit record.
- Fair Market Value
- The highest price
that a buyer, willing but not compelled
to buy, would pay, and the lowest a
seller, willing but not compelled to
sell, would accept.
- Fannie Mae-Backed
Security rates
- Fannie Mae pools
large quantities of mortgages, creates
securities with them, and sells them as
Fannie Mae-backed securities. The rates
on these securities influence mortgage
rates very strongly.
- Farmer's Home
Administration (FmHA)
- An agency, within
the U.S. Department of Agriculture, that
administers assistance programs for
purchasers of homes and farms in small
towns and rural areas.
- Fed
- Federal Reserve
Bank
- Federal Discount
Rate
- The rate that the
New York Fed charges for loans to member
banks.
- Federal Funds
Rate
- The Rate banks
charge each other for overnight loans.
- Federal Home Loan
Bank Board (FHLBB)
- Provides
financing to farmers.
- Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC, Freddie
Mac)
- Freddie Mac
maintains a nationwide secondary market
primarily for conventional loans
originated by banks, thrift institutions
and other HUD-approved lenders. Freddie
Mac finances most of its operations
through the sale of mortgage
Participation Certificates.
- Federal Housing
Administration (FHA)
- An agency within
the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD). FHA offers mortgage
insurance programs to protect the lender
in the event of default. Because lenders
are insured against loss, they can make
affordable financing available to
borrowers who would not otherwise
qualify.
- Federal National
Mortgage Association (FNMA, Fannie Mae)
- Provides a
secondary market for FHA, VA and
conventional loans. Fannie Mae issues
mortgage-backed securities and
guarantees timely payment their
principal and interest to investors.
- Federal Reserve
System
- The central
federal banking system that regulates
and provides services to member
commercial banks. Also has the
responsibility for conducting federal
monetary policy.
- Fee Simple (Fee
Absolute or Fee Simple Absolute)
- Absolute
ownership of real property; owner is
entitled to the entire property with
unconditional power of disposition
during the owners life and upon his
death the property descends to the
owner's designated heirs.
- Fico
- Fair Isaac
Corporation. This credit score is
reported on your Experian (formerly TRW)
credit report. A FICO score is a
snapshot of a person’s credit risk at a
particular point in time.
- Fidelity Bond
- An assurance,
generally purchased by an employer, to
cover employees who are entrusted with
valuable property or funds.
- Example : A
landlord employs a clerk who collects
rents. To safeguard these funds during
the collection process, the landlord
purchases a fidelity bond the clerk.
- Fiduciary
- A person in a
position of trust or responsibility with
specific duties to act in the best
interest of a client. A real estate
broker is a fiduciary for his/her
clients.
- Finance Charge
- Interest charged
by a lender.
- Firm Commitment
- A lender’s
agreement to make a loan to a specific
borrower on a specific property. This is
usually given as a written loan approval
from a lender.
- First Mortgage
- A mortgage that
has priority as a lien over all other
mortgages. In the case of a foreclosure
the first mortgage will be satisfied
before other mortgages. See also second
mortgage.
- Fixture
- Personal property
attached to the land in such a way as to
be considered part of the real property.
- Flood Insurance
- An insurance
policy that covers property damage due
to natural flooding. Flood insurance may
be required on properties in a flood
zone.
- Foreclosure
(Repossession)
- A legal process
in which the right, title and interest
of a mortgagor or trustor in real
property are terminated by selling the
property and applying the proceeds to
satisfy liens of creditors.
- Framed Page
- In HTML, refers
to dividing the browser display area
into separate sections, each of which is
really a different Web page.
- Free and clear
- A property that
has no liens.
- Freddie Mac,
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC)
- A
quasi-governmental agency that purchases
conventional mortgage loans from insured
depository institutions (savings and
loans) and HUD-approved mortgage
bankers.
- Forfeiture
- The loss of
money, property, rights, or privileges
due to a breach of legal obligation.
- Front-end Ratio
- Monthly mortgage
payments (PITI, principal, interest,
taxes and insurance) divided by your
gross monthly income. This comes out to
a percentage, and a lender uses this
percentage to get an idea of how much of
your income will be going towards paying
your loan. Most programs require a
maximum ratio of 28-33%. A low ratio is
better.
- FSBO
- For sale by
owner. A property for sale that is not
listed with a real estate broker.
- Fully indexed
rate
- A fully indexed
rate is the value of an index plus a
margin. See adjustable loans.
G
- General Warranty
Deed
- A deed in which
the grantor (seller) agrees to the
protect the grantee (buyer) against any
other claim to title of the property.
See also warranty deed.
- Good Faith
Estimate (GFE)
- The form that
lists the settlement charges the
borrower must pay at closing. The lender
is obligated to provide the borrower
this form within three business days of
receiving the loan application.
- Government
National Mortgage Association (GNMA,
Ginnie Mae)
- A government
corporation which guarantees
mortgage-backed securities issued by
approved lenders. GNMA mortgage-backed
securities are considered by many to be
as safe as Treasury securities.
- Grantee
- That party in the
deed who is the buyer or recipient.
- Graduated Payment
Mortgage (GPM)
- A trust deed or
mortgage requiring increasingly higher
payments during the life of the loan.
Negative amortization may occur under
some circumstances.
- Grandfather
Clause
- The clause in a
law permitting the continuation of a
use, business, etc., which was
permissible but because of a change in
the law is now no longer permissible.
- Grantor
- That party who is
the seller or the giver.
H
- Hazard Insurance
(Fire Insurance, Homeowners insurance)
- A type of real
estate insurance providing protection
against loss due to fire and other
risks.
- Home Equity
Conversion Mortgage (HECM)
- A special type of
mortgage that enables older home owners
to convert the equity they have in their
homes into cash, using a variety of
payment options to address their
specific financial needs. Unlike
traditional home equity loans, a
borrower does not qualify on the basis
of income but on the value of his or her
home. In addition, the loan does not
have to be repaid until the borrower no
longer occupies the property. This is
commonly known as a reverse mortgage.
- Home Equity Line
of Credit
- A mortgage loan,
which is usually in a subordinate
position, that allows the borrower to
obtain multiple advances of the loan
proceeds at his or her own discretion,
up to an amount that represents a
specified percentage of the borrower's
equity in a property.
- Home Inspection
- A thorough
inspection that evaluates the structural
and mechanical condition of a property.
A satisfactory home inspection is often
included as a contingency by the
purchaser. Contrast with appraisal.
- Home KeeperSM
- Fannie Mae's
adjustable-rate conventional reverse
mortgage, which allows older homeowners
to borrow against the value of their
homes and receive the proceeds according
to the payment option they select. The
amount available is based on the number
of borrowers and their ages and the
adjusted property value. Anyone 62 years
or older who either owns his or her own
home free and clear or has very low
mortgage debt is eligible.
- Home Page
- The main page of
a web site. This is usually the first
page that comes up on the computer
screen. Typically, the home page serves
as an index or table of contents to
other documents available at the site.
It is also referred to as the Index
page.
- Home Warranty
Plan
- Insurance that
covers appliances, heating systems, etc.
Typically purchased at the time of
closing.
- Homeowners
Association
- An association of
homeowners in a particular subdivision,
planned unit development (PUD), or
condominium organized to manage the
common area of the development and to
enforce the association rules and
regulations.
- Homestead
- Status provided
to a homeowner's principal residence
that protects the home against certain
types of judgments.
- Homestead
Exemption
- A statutory
exemption shielding real homestead
property against the rights of certain
creditors. Regarding taxation: an
exemption reducing the assessed value of
a principal residence for the purposes
of calculating property tax. E.g.,
John's principal residence is assessed
at $100,000 and the homestead exemption
is $7,000. His property taxes will be
based on $93,000.
- Housing and Urban
Development
- A U.S. government
agency established to implement certain
federal housing and community
development programs.
- Housing Code
- A local
government ordinance that sets minimum
standards of safety and sanitation for
existing residential buildings.
- HTML
- Short for Hyper
Text Markup Language,
the authoring language used to create
documents on the World Wide Web
- HUD 1
- A closing
document required by HUD that outlines
the settlement cost of a loan. The
closing agent prepares this document and
sends it to the buyer upon closing.
- Hypothecate
- To pledge a
property as security without having to
give up possession of it.
I
- Impound Account
- That portion of a
borrower's monthly payments held by the
lender or servicer to pay for taxes,
hazard insurance, mortgage insurance,
lease payments, and other items as they
become due. Also known as reserves.
- Improvements
- Additions to raw
land such as buildings, streets, etc.
that add value to the land.
- Income
(Capitalization) Approach
- An appraisal
method used for the valuation of
income-producing property in which net
income is capitalized.
- Income Property
- Real estate that
generates rental income. Examples:
apartment buildings, office buildings
and shopping centers.
- Index
- A statistic that
indicates some current economic of
financial condition. Indexes are used to
make adjustments in variable rate loans.
- Inflation
- In economics,
inflation is an increase in the general
level of prices of a given kind. General
inflation is a fall in the market value
or purchasing power of money within an
economy, and is referred to as a rise in
the general level of prices.
- Ingress and
Egress
- The right to pass
through a piece of property. See
Easements.
- Installment Sale
- 1. Re. Taxation:
When selling real property and receiving
one or more payments in subsequent
years, the taxpayer may report the sale
as an installment sale. This allows the
taxpayer to defer the recognition of
gain over many years and save taxes.
- 2. Installment
sale land contract. See Conditional
Sales Contract.
- Interest Only
- An interest-only
loan program is a loan program that has
an interest-only payment option. The
loan can be a fixed rate or variable
rate program. The interest only monthly
payment is the amount of the interest
rate times the original loan amount
divided by twelve. No principal is paid,
and the loan balance does not decrease.
You may pay the interest only payment
amount or pay the fully amortized
payment amount. The interest only
payment option is only available in the
initial years of the loan term.
Conforming loan programs have the
interest only term for ten to fifteen
years. Jumbo programs vary from three
years up to ten years.
- ISP
- Internet
Service Provider, a
company that provides access to the
Internet. For a monthly fee, the service
provider gives you a software package,
username, password and access phone
number. You can then log on to the
Internet and browse the World Wide Web,
and send and receive e-mail.
J
- Joint and Several
Liability
- A creditor can
demand full repayment from any and all
of those who have borrowed. Each
borrower is liable for the full debt,
not just the prorated share.
- Joint Tenancy
- Ownership of a
property by two or more people, each of
whom has an undivided interest with the
right of survivorship.
- Example: John and
Mary own a house in joint tenancy. Each
owns half of the entire (undivided)
property. If John dies, Mary will own
the entire property and vice versa.
- Judgment
- The decision of a
court of law stating that one individual
is indebted to another and fixing the
amount of indebtedness. Judgments, when
recorded, become a lien on real property
owned by the defendant.
- Judgment Lien
- The claim on the
property of a debtor resulting from a
judgment.
- Judicial
Foreclosure
- A type of
foreclosure proceeding used in some
states that is handled as a civil
lawsuit and conducted entirely under the
auspices of a court.
- Jumbo Loan
- Loan size that is
larger than the conforming loan limit
established by the Fannie Mae or Freddie
Mac.
- Junior Mortgage
- A mortgage
subordinate to another mortgage. In the
case of a foreclosure a senior mortgage
will be paid prior to a junior mortgage.
K
- Kicker
- A payment
required by a mortgage in addition to
normal principal and interest. Sometimes
known as a participation loan.
L
- Land Contract
- See Conditional
Sales Contract
- Late Charge
- The penalty a
borrower must pay when a payment is made
a stated number of days (usually 15)
after the due date.
- Lease
- A written
agreement between the property owner and
a tenant that stipulates the conditions
under which the tenant may possess the
real estate for a specified period of
time and rent.
- Leasehold Estate
- Tenant's right of
possession for a specific period of time
under a lease agreement.
- Lease with Option
to Purchase
- A lease under
which the lessee has the right to
purchase the property. The option may
run for a portion or for the full length
of the lease
- Legal Description
- Legally
acceptable identification of real estate
by one of the following:
- the
government rectangular survey
- metes and
bounds
- recorded plat
(lot and block number)
- Lessee
- A person to whom
property is rented under a lease.
(Tenant)
- Lessor
- A person who
rents property to another under a lease.
(Landlord)
- Libor
- London Interbank
Offered Rates. Average London Eurodollar
rates. The Libor Index rate is used in
many variable loan programs.
- Life Estate
- An estate in real
property for the life of a living
person. The estate then reverts back to
the grantor or to a third party.
- Lien
- A claim against
the property for the payment of a debt,
judgment, mortgage or taxes.
- Example : Unpaid
contractors may file a mechanic's lien.
- Line of Credit
- An agreement by a
commercial bank or other financial
institution to extend credit up to a
certain amount for a certain time to a
specified borrower. See home equity line
of credit.
- Lis Pendens
- Latin for
"lawsuit pending." Recorded notice that
litigation is pending on a property.
Most lenders will require the clearance
of the Lis Pendens prior to closing.
- Listing
- Real Estate
properties for sale are usually
considered listed when a real estate
agent is contracted to sell the
property, using a listing agreement, and
the property is posted in the multiple
listing service, MLS, for that local
region. It can also be in an Internet
listing service online, which can be
done directly by the homeowner.
- Liquid Asset
- A cash asset or
an asset that is easily converted into
cash.
- Loan Application
- A document
required by a lender prior to loan
approval. The application includes
detailed information about the borrower
and the property.
- Loan Origination
Fee or Points
- Charge by a
lender or broker connected with
originating a loan. This is different
from discount points which are used to
buy down the rate of interest.
- Loan Servicing
- The act of
collecting loan payments, handling
property tax and insurance escrows,
foreclosing on defaulted loans and
remitting payments to the investors.
- Loan to Value
Ratio (LTV)
- The loan amount
divided by the value of the property.
- Lock-in
- A written
agreement in which the lender guarantees
a specified interest rate if a mortgage
goes to closing within a set period of
time. The lock-in also usually specifies
the number of points to be paid at
closing.
- Lock-in period
- The time period
during which the lender has guaranteed
an interest rate to a borrower. See
lock-in.
M
- Margin
- A fixed number
added to the index to compute the rate
on an adjustable rate mortgage.
- Marketable Title
- Title that is
free of liens, clouds and other legal
defects and hence is readily acceptable
by a buyer.
- Market Value
- The highest price
that a buyer would pay and the lowest
price a seller would accept on a
property. Market value may be different
from the price a property could actually
be sold for at a given time.
- Master
Association
- A homeowners'
association in a large condominium or
planned unit development (PUD) project
that is made up of representatives from
associations covering specific areas
within the project. In effect, it is a
"second-level" association that handles
matters affecting the entire
development, while the "first-level"
associations handle matters affecting
their particular portions of the
project.
- Mechanics Lien
- The right of an
unpaid contractor or subcontractor to
file a lien against property to recover
the amount due to him/her.
- Merged Credit
Report
- A credit report
that contains information from three
credit repositories. When the report is
created, the information is compared for
duplicate entries. Any duplicates are
combined to provide a summary of your
credit.
- Modification
- The act of
changing any of the terms of the
mortgage.
- Mortgage
- A written
instrument that creates a lien upon real
estate as security for the payment of a
specified debt.
- Mortgage Backed
Security (MBS)
- A bond or other
financial obligation secured by a pool
of mortgage loans.
- Mortgage Banker
- Specializes in
originating and servicing loans. They
generally sell their loans to investors,
but may continue to service them.
- Mortgage Broker
- Arranges
financing for a borrower by placing
loans with lenders. Mortgage brokers are
paid a fee by the borrower or the lender
when a loan closes.
- Mortgage Life
Insurance
- A type of term
life insurance often bought by
mortgagors. The amount of coverage
decreases as the principal balance
declines. In the event that the borrower
dies while the policy is in force, the
debt is automatically satisfied by
insurance proceeds.
- Mortgagee
- The lender.
- Mortgagor
- The borrower.
- Mortgage
Insurance
- See private
mortgage insurance (PMI)
- Mortgage Note
- A written
agreement to repay a loan. The agreement
is secured by a mortgage, serves as
proof of an indebtedness, and states the
manner in which it shall be paid. The
note states the actual amount of the
debt that the mortgage secures and
renders the mortgagor personally
responsible for repayment.
- Multidwelling
Units
- Properties that
provide separate housing units for more
than one family, although they secure
only a single mortgage.
- Multifamily
Mortgage
- A residential
mortgage on a dwelling that is designed
to house more than four families, such
as a high-rise apartment complex.
N
- Negative
Amortization
- An increase in
principal balance which occurs when the
monthly payments do not cover all of the
interest cost. The interest cost which
is not covered by the payment is added
to the unpaid principal balance.
- Net Effective
Income
- The borrowers
gross income minus federal income tax.
- No-Doc Loan
- A loan requiring
very little loan documentation. These
loans usually require large (25%) down
payments.
- Nonconforming
loan
- Loans that do not
comply with Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac
guidelines.
- Notary Public
- One authorized to
take acknowledgments of certain types of
documents, such as deeds, contracts, and
mortgages.
- Note
- The Note is a
promissory note, which is signed with
loan documents and states the loan
amount, interest rate and loan terms.
- Notice of default
- A letter sent to
the defaulting party as a reminder of
the default.
O
- Offer
- An expression of
willingness to purchase a property at a
specified price.
- Offeree
- One who receives
the offer. When the buyer makes an offer
to the seller the seller is an offeree.
- Offeror
- One who makes the
offer. When the buyer makes an offer to
the seller the buyer is an offeror.
- Office of
Comptroller Currency
- The oldest
federal financial regulatory body that
oversees the nation's federally
chartered banks.
- Office of Thrift
Supervision
- The OTS charters
federal thrift institutions and is the
primary regulator of all federal and
many state-chartered thrift
institutions.
- Open-end Mortgage
- A mortgage
permitting the mortgagor to borrow
additional money under the same
mortgage, with certain conditions.
- Open House
- A method of
showing a home for sale to prospective
buyers where the home is left open for
inspection by those who may be
interested in making a purchase.
- Option Arm
- The Option Arm
loan program, commonly referred to as
the negative amortized loan, has a low
starting payment rate. Typically the
starting rate is 1 to 2 percent. The
initial monthly loan payment is
calculated based on the starting rate,
but the note rate will adjust to the
Index plus the Margin after the first
one to three months. The payment remains
the same for the entire year, and is
only adjusted yearly on the anniversary
date. Since the interest charges may
exceed the monthly payment, the interest
that is not paid is added to the loan
balance. This increases the loan amount,
rather than decreasing the loan balance
as in a fully amortized loan. Thus we
have a negative amortization, or
increasing loan balance, during the
initial years of this loan.
- Optionee
- One who receives
or purchases an option.
- Optionor
- One who gives or
sells an option.
- Oral Contract
- A verbal
agreement. Verbal agreements for the
sale or use of real estate are normally
unenforceable.
- Origination Fee
- See Loan
Origination Fee.
- Owner Financing
- A property
purchase transaction in which the
property seller provides all or part of
the financing.
- Owner of Record
- The individual
named on a deed that has been recorded
at the county recorders office.
- Owner Occupant
- A tenant of a
residence who also owns the property.
P
- Package Mortgage
- Mortgage covering
both real and personal property.
- Paper
- A mortgage, deed
of trust or land contract provided in
lieu of cash.
- Partial Release
- A provision in a
mortgage that allows some of the
property secured to be freed from
serving as collateral.
- Participation
Mortgage
- A mortgage that
allows the lender to share in part of
the income or resale proceeds.
- Pass-through
Certificates
- Interests in a
pool of mortgages sold by mortgage
bankers to investors. Money collected as
monthly mortgage payments is distributed
to those who own certificates.
- Permanent Loan or
Mortgage
- A mortgage for a
long period of time. Often referred to
as the mortgage that pays off a
construction loan on a completed
property.
- Permit
- A document issued
by a government regulatory authority
that allows the bearer to take some
specific action. An occupancy permit
allows the owner of a building to occupy
or rent the building.
- Phishing
- Email phishing,
also referred to as brand spoofing or
carding, is a variation on “fishing,”
the idea being that bait is thrown out
with the hopes that while most will
ignore the bait, some will be tempted
into biting. An example of receiving
this kind of spam email is “We have been
trying to contact you regarding your
loan request. Your loan is approved.
Click here to complete your loan
application.” Another example is a
request for information using a bank’s
website header, so it looks like it’s
coming from the bank, but is actually a
fake.
- PITI
- Principal,
Interest, Taxes and Insurance.
Your mortgage loan payment usually
includes the principal and interest
amounts. When you borrow more than 80
percent of the value of your home,
lenders usually require that you also
pay the taxes and insurance payments
with your loan payment.
- Planned Unit
Development (PUD)
- A zoning
classification that allows flexibility
in the design of a subdivision. PUD's
include individually owned units as well
as some common space that is jointly
owned.
- Plat
- A plan or map of
a specific land area.
- Plat Book
- A public record
containing maps of land, showing the
division of the land into streets,
blocks, and lots and indicating the
measurements of the individual parcels.
- Pledged Account
Mortgage (PAM)
- When the borrower
places money in a pledged savings
account, and these funds, plus interest
earned, are gradually used to reduce
mortgage payments.
- Points
- Fees paid to
lenders. 1 point = 1 percent of the loan
amount. On a $100,000 loan 1 point is
$1000. Points may be further classified
into origination points or discount
points.
- Portfolio Loan
- A loan that is
held as an investment by a bank or
savings and loan, and NOT sold on the
secondary market to investors.
- Power of Attorney
- A written
document authorizing a person to act on
the behalf of another person. That
person does not have to be an attorney.
See Attorney-In-Fact.
- Prepaid Interest
- Prepaid interest
is the interest charged to borrowers at
closing to pay for the cost of borrowing
for a balance of the month. For example,
if a loan closes on the 19th of the
month and the first payment is due on
the 1st of the following month, the
lender will charge 12 days of prepaid
interest.
- Prepayment
- Full or partial
payment of the principal before the due
date. This might occur if the borrower
makes extra payments, sells the
property, or refinances the existing
loan.
- Prepayment
Penalty
- Fees paid by the
borrower if they pay the loan before its
due date.
- Pre-Qualification
- The process of
determining how much money a prospective
home buyer will be eligible to borrow
before he or she applies for a loan.
- Primary Mortgage
Market
- Companies that
originate and service mortgage loans
(banks, savings & loans, credit union,
mortgage bankers, institutional lenders)
make up the primary mortgage market. See
also secondary mortgage market.
- Prime Rate
- The rate offered
to a bank's best customers.
- Principal
- The outstanding
balance on a loan.
- Private Mortgage
Insurance (PMI)
- In the event that
you do not have a 20 percent down
payment, lenders will allow a smaller
down payment - as low as 2 percent in
some cases. With the smaller down
payment loans, however, borrowers are
usually required to carry private
mortgage insurance. Private mortgage
insurance payments are normally made
annual or monthly. An impound account
may be required.
- Probate
- Court process to
establish the validity of the will of a
deceased person.
- Property Tax
- A government levy
based on the market value (as assessed
by the county assessor's office) of the
property.
- Public Sale
- An auction of
property with notice to the general
public.
- Purchase
Agreement
- A real property
agreement between a buyer and seller
specifying the price and terms of the
sale.
- Purchase Money
Mortgage
- A mortgage used
to finance the purchase of a property.
Q
- Qualification
Rate
- Rate of interest
used to calculate whether or not a
borrower qualifies for a mortgage.
- Qualification
Requirements
- Guidelines used
by lenders to decide whether to loan
money to an applicant.
- Qualified
Acceptance, Conditional Acceptance
- Acceptance for a
loan (or other contract) provided that
certain conditions are met.
- Qualified Buyer
- A person who has
been pre-approved for a mortgage loan.
- Qualifying Ratios
- Calculations that
are used in determining whether a
borrower can qualify for a mortgage.
They consist of two separate
calculations: a housing expense as a
percent of income ratio and total debt
obligations as a percent of income
ratio.
- Quiet Title
(Action)
- A court action to
settle a title dispute.
- Quit Claim Deed
- A deed which
transfers whatever interest the maker of
the deed may have in the particular
parcel of land. A quitclaim deed is
often given to clear the title when the
grantor's interest in a property is
questionable. By accepting such a deed
the buyer assumes all the risks. Such a
deed makes no warranties as to the
title, but simply transfers to the buyer
whatever interest the grantor has.
R
- Radon
- A radioactive gas
which seeps up from the ground and can
cause health problems. A radon test is
often part of the home inspection.
- Real Property
- Land and
appurtenances, including anything of a
permanent nature such as structures,
trees, minerals, and the interest,
benefits, and inherent rights thereof.
- Realtor ®
- A real estate
professional who is a member of the
National Association of Realtors.
- Real Estate
Broker
- An individual who
often owns a real estate company or is
in a management position, and who is
licensed to represent a buyer or a
seller in a real estate transaction.
- Real Estate
Settlement Procedure Act (RESPA)
- A law that states
how mortgage lenders must treat those
who apply for real estate loans on
property with one to four units.
- Example : A
lender is required to provide a good
faith estimate of closing costs within
three days of an application being
filed.
- Recapture tax
- Some government
sponsored or insured programs, like HUD
Low Income Housing programs, require
that the buyer occupy the property and
retain ownership for a specific period
of time. If the buyer sells the property
and in some cases moves out of the
property, the tax benefits or subsidies
received are recaptured, meaning charged
to the homeowner. This is a penalty
assessed for selling the house too
early.
- Recession
- A recession is
usually defined as a fall of a country’s
real Gross National Product in two or
more successive quarters of a year. A
recession may also involve falling
prices, which can lead to a depression.
In a free market economy, recessions
come and go at fairly regular intervals,
often five to ten years, in what is
known as the business cycle.
- Reconveyance
- When a mortgage
is paid in full, the lender conveys the
property back to the owner.
- Recording
- The act of
entering into a book of public records
instruments affecting title to the real
property. A lender requires that a deed
of trust or a mortgage be recorded to
evidence the debt against the property.
- Recording Fees
- Money paid to the
lender for recording a home sale with
local authorities, making it public
record.
- Recision
- The cancellation
of a contract. When refinancing a
mortgage on a principal residence the
law gives the homeowner three days to
cancel the contract.
- Recourse
- The right of the
holder of a note secured by a mortgage
or deed of trust to claim money from the
borrower in default in addition to the
property pledged as collateral.
- Redlining
- The practice of
refusing to provide loans or insurance
in a certain neighborhood.
- Refinance
- Obtaining a new
mortgage loan on a property already
owned, often to replace existing loans.
- Regulation Z (Reg
Z)
- A federal
regulation requiring creditors to
provide full disclosure of the terms of
a loan including the terms of the loan
and the annual percentage rate (APR).
- Real Estate
Investment Trusts (REIT)
- A trust that uses
investors' money to purchase and manage
real estate. Investors realize some of
the tax advantages in owning real
estate.
- Restrictive
Covenants
- Private
restrictions limiting the use of real
property. Restrictive covenants are
created by deed and may "run with the
land," binding all subsequent purchasers
of the land, or may be "personal" and
binding only between the original seller
and buyer.
- Reverse Annuity
Mortgage (RAM)
- A mortgage in
which the lender makes periodic payments
to the borrower using the borrower's
equity in the home as collateral.
- Reverse Mortgage
- A mortgage used
by the elderly that provides income as
long as they live in exchange. Payments
made cause the loan principal to
increase.
- Right of First
Refusal
- A portion of an
agreement that requires a property owner
to give one party the opportunity to buy
or lease the property before the
property is made available to other
potential buyers.
- Right of Ingress
or Egress
- The right to
enter or leave designated premises.
- Right of
survivorship
- The right of a
surviving joint tenant to acquire the
interest of a deceased joint owner.
- Rollover Loan
- A loan that is
amortized over a long period of time
(e.g., 30 yrs) but the interest rate is
fixed for a short period (e.g., 5 yrs).
The loan may be extended or rolled over,
at the end of the shorter term, based on
the terms of the loan.
S
- Sales Agreement
or Sales Contract
- See Agreement of
Sale.
- Savings & Loan
- Depository
institutions that specialize in
originating, servicing and holding
mortgage loans primarily on owner
occupied residential property.
- Second Home
- Also known as a
vacation home. This home is different
from an investment property as it is not
rented, but used occasionally by the
owners.
- Second Mortgage
- A subordinated
lien, created by a mortgage loan, over
the amount of a first mortgage. Second
mortgages generally carry a higher rate
than a first mortgage since they
represent a higher risk for an investor.
- Secondary
Mortgage Market
- The market where
banks, savings & loans and mortgage
bankers can sell mortgages to investors
like Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.
- Section 1031
- The section of
the IRS that deals with tax free
exchanges of certain property. General
rules for tax free exchanges are
- The properties
must be :
- Exchanged
- Similar
- Used for
business or as an investment
- Section 8 Housing
- Privately owned
rental units participating in the
low-income rental assistance program.
Landlords receive subsidies on behalf of
qualified low-income tenants, allowing
the tenants to pay a limited proportion
of their incomes toward the rent.
- Security
- Property that
serves as collateral for a debt.
- Servicer
- An organization
that collects principal and interest
payments from borrowers and manages
borrowers’ escrow accounts. The servicer
often services mortgages that have been
purchased by an investor in the
secondary mortgage market.
- Servicing
- The act of
billing, collecting payment, filing
reports, managing impound accounts and
handling defaults on a mortgage.
- Settlement Cost
(HUD guide)
- See Buying Your
Home: Settlement Costs and Information
(HUD guide)
- Settlement
Statement
- See HUD 1
- Shared
Appreciation Mortgage
- A residential
loan with a fixed, below-market interest
rate in which the lender is entitled to
a specified share of property
appreciation during an agreed upon time
period.
- Sheriff's Deed
- A deed given at
the sheriff's sale in the foreclosure of
a mortgage.
- Simple Interest
- Interest which is
computed only on the principal balance.
- Single Family
Home (SFR)
- A type of
residential structure designed to
include one dwelling. E.g., town home,
detached unit.
- Example : Town
houses, detached units.
- Soft Market
- A market where
houses aren't selling much or quickly,
so the sales price is likely to be
significantly lower than the asking
(listing) price. It's a good time for
buyers to buy, but not the best time for
prospective sellers to sell.
- Spec House
- A single family
dwelling constructed by a builder in
anticipation of finding a buyer.
- Special
Assessment
- A special tax
imposed on property, individual lots or
all property in the neighborhood to pay
for improvements - street lights,
sidewalks, etc.
- Special Warranty
Deed
- The grantor does
not warrant against title defects
arising from conditions that existed
before he/she owned the property. The
seller warrants that he/she has done
nothing to impair title.
- Specific
Performance
- A legal action in
which the court requires a party to a
contract to perform their obligations
under the terms of the agreement.
- Stock Cooperative
- A common interest
development in which a corporation holds
title. Stock and exclusive right to
occupancy are given to individual
members (stock holders) of the stock
cooperative.
- Standard Uniform
Loan Application (Form 1003)
- A standard loan
application widely used in the mortgage
industry.
- Subdivision
- A tract of land
divided into lots suitable for home
building purposes.
- Subject To Clause
- A clause stating
that the grantee takes title "subject
to" an existing mortgage or trust deed.
The original mortgagor remains
responsible for any deficiency in the
event of foreclosure. See Assumable
Mortgage.
- Subordinate
Financing
- Any mortgage or
other lien that has a priority that is
lower than that of the first mortgage.
- Subordination
- A loan in a lower
priority, for example a second mortgage
is subordinate to a first.
- Subsidized Second
Mortgage
- An alternative
financing option known as the Community
Seconds® mortgage for low- and
moderate-income households. An investor
purchases a first mortgage that has a
subsidized second mortgage behind it.
The second mortgage may be issued by a
state, county, or local housing agency,
foundation, or nonprofit corporation.
Payment on the second mortgage is often
deferred and carries a very low interest
rate (or no interest rate). Part of the
debt may be forgiven incrementally for
each year the buyer remains in the home.
- Survey
- Map made by a
licensed surveyor who measures land and
charts its boundaries, improvements and
relationship to the property surrounding
it.
- Sweat Equity
- Value added to a
property due to improvements made
personally by the owner.
T
- Takeout Financing
- A commitment to
provide permanent financing upon
completion of construction. The take out
loan normally pays off the construction
loan.
- Tax Lien
- Lien for
nonpayment of taxes.
- Tax Sale
- Public sale of a
property at an auction by a government
authority as a result of non-payment of
taxes.
- Teaser Rate
- A low initial
interest rate on a mortgage.
- Tenancy at
Sufferance
- Tenancy
established when a person who had been a
lawful tenant wrongfully remains in
possession of property after expiration
of a lease.
- Tenancy at Will
- A license to use
or occupy land and buildings at the will
of the owner. The tenant may decide to
leave the property at any time or must
leave at the landlords will.
- Tenancy by the
Entirety
- A form of
ownership by husband and wife whereby
each owns the entire property. In event
of the death of one, the survivor owns
the property without probate.
- Tenancy for Years
- Created by a
lease for a fixed term, such as 6
months, 2 years, etc.
- Tenancy in Common
- Ownership of a
property by 2 or more persons, each of
whom has an undivided interest, without
the right of survivorship. Upon the
death of one of the owners, the
ownership share of the deceased is
inherited by the beneficiary designated
on the owner's will.
- Tenancy in
Severalty
- Ownership of
property by one person.
- Time Share
- A form of
property ownership under which a
property is held by a number of people,
each with the right of possession for a
specified time interval. Time sharing is
used mostly for vacation properties.
- Time is of the
Essence
- Legal phrase in a
contract requiring all references to
specific dates and times noted in the
contract be interpreted exactly.
- Title
- Evidence that the
owner of the property is in lawful
possession. Evidence of ownership.
- Title Insurance
- An insurance
policy which protects the insured
against loss arising from defects in
title. Title insurance policies are
typically obtained for the buyer and the
lender.
- Title Report
- A document
indicating the current state of title.
The report includes information on the
current ownership, outstanding deeds of
trust or mortgages, liens, easements,
covenants, restrictions, and any
defects.
- Title Search
- An examination of
the public records to determine the
ownership and encumbrances affecting the
property.
- Total Expense
Ratio
- Total obligations
as a percentage of gross monthly income.
The total expense ratio includes monthly
housing expenses plus other monthly
debts.
- Town House
- Residence which
normally has 2 or more floors and is
attached to other similar units. Town
houses are commonly found in planned
unit developments (PUDs) and
condominiums.
- Tract
- A parcel of land,
generally held for subdividing.
- Trade Equity
- Equity that
results from a property purchaser giving
his or her existing property (or an
asset other than real estate) as trade
as all or part of the down payment for
the property that is being purchased.
- Transfer Tax
- Tax paid to the
city, county, state or other government
entity upon sale of a property.
- Transfer of
Ownership
- Any means by
which the ownership of a property
changes hands. Lenders consider all of
the following situations to be a
transfer of ownership: the purchase of a
property "subject to" the mortgage, the
assumption of the mortgage debt by the
property purchaser, and any exchange of
possession of the property under a land
sales contract or any other land trust
device. In cases in which an inter vivos
revocable trust is the borrower, lenders
also consider any transfer of a
beneficial interest in the trust to be a
transfer of ownership.
- Treasury Bill
- Treasury bills
are short-term debt instruments used by
the U.S. Government to finance their
debt. Commonly called T-bills they come
in denominations of three months, six
months and one year. Each Treasury bill
has a corresponding interest rate (i.e.
3-month T-bill rate, 1-year T-bill
rate). The rate determines the T-bill
Index rate, which is used in many
variable rate loan programs.
- Triple-Net Lease
- One in which the
tenant pays all operating expense of the
property. The landlord receives the net
rent.
- Trust Account
- A separate bank
account maintained by a broker or escrow
company to handle all money collected
for clients. A broker may not commingle
these funds with his/her own funds.
- Trust Deed
- See Deed of
Trust.
- Trustee
- A party who is
given legal responsibility to hold
property in the best interest of or "for
the benefit of" another. The trustee is
one placed in a position of
responsibility for another, a
responsibility enforceable in a court of
law.
- Truth in Lending
- See Regulation Z.
- Two-Step Mortgage
- A mortgage in
which the borrower receives a fixed rate
for a specified number of years (most
often 5 or 7), and then receives a new
interest rate based on the terms in the
note.
- Two- to
Four-Family Property
- A property that
consists of a structure that provides
living space (dwelling units) for two to
four families, although ownership of the
structure is evidenced by a single deed.
U
- Underwriting
- The decision
whether to make a loan to a potential
home buyer based on credit, income,
employment history, assets, etc.
- Undivided
Interest
- An ownership
right to use and possess a property that
is shared among co-owners, with no one
co-owner having exclusive rights to any
portion of the property.
- Unimproved
Property
- Land that has
received no development.
- Unencumbered
Property
- Real estate with
free and clear title.
- Unrecorded Deed
- A document that
transfers title from the grantor to the
grantee without recording (i.e.
providing public notice).
- Usury
- Charging a rate
of interest greater than that permitted
by law.
V
- Vacation Home
- See second home.
- VA Loan
- Home loan
guaranteed by the U.S. Veterans
Administration, enabling a veteran to
buy a home with no money down.
- Variable Rate
Mortgage
- See Adjustable
Rate Mortgage
- Verification of
Deposit (VOD)
- A document signed
by the borrower's bank or other
financial institution verifying the
account balance and history.
- Verification of
Employment
- A document signed
by the borrower's employer verifying
his/her starting date, job title, salary
and probability of continued employment.
W
- Waiver
- The voluntary
renunciation, abandonment, or surrender
of some claim, right, or privilege.
- Walk-Through
Inspection
- A final
walk-through immediately prior to
closing to verify that no changes have
taken place and no new damage has
occurred.
- Warehousing
- Mortgage bankers
and other financial institutions make
loans that are then periodically sold on
the secondary market. After the loan is
made but before it is sold, the loan is
said to be in the lender's warehouse.
- Warranty Deed
- A deed conveying
the title to a property with a warranty
of a clear marketable title.
- Wear and Tear
- Normal use and
the resulting reduction in value of a
property.
- Web Portal
- Commonly referred
to as simply a portal, a Web site or
service that offers a broad array of
resources and services, such as e-mail,
forums, search engines, and on-line
shopping malls. The first Web portals
were online services, such as AOL, that
provided access to the Web, but by now
most of the traditional search engines
have transformed themselves into Web
portals to attract and keep a larger
audience.
- Wraparound
Mortgage
- A loan
arrangement whereby the existing loan is
retained and a new loan is added to the
property.
Example : The seller sells his/her
property for $200,000. The buyer puts
$80,000 down. The seller has an existing
loan balance of $100,000 for a remaining
period of twenty-five years at an
interest rate of 6 percent. The seller
then makes a wraparound mortgage to the
buyer, (where the seller acts as a
lender) for $120,000 at 8 percent. The
seller has to continue making payments
on his old loan. They buyer has to pay
the seller on the new loan. The buyer
may at a later date refinance the
property and close both loans.
- WYSIWYG
- What You
See Is What You
Get. Computer software may
display data on the computer screen with
a format and color scheme that is
different when you print the page or
when you view it in a Web browser.
Software that is WYSIWYG will print and
look the same as what you see on the
screen in the WYSIWYG.
Z
- Zero Lot Line
- A form of housing
where individual units are on separate
lots, but are attached to one another.
Example: PUD, townhouse.
- Zoning
- Areas may be
zoned to specify use of a property i.e.
residential, commercial, agricultural.
These zoning ordinances are normally
enforced by the city or the county.
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Karem Built Homes, Inc.
P.O. Box 99447 -
Louisville, KY 40269
Phone: (502) 261-0009
Fax: (502) 261-9189
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