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Lootifer wrote:Maybe theres hope after all? Naw dun be stupid.
Just a return customer thing; but not neccessarily mortgage area; they want your savings and any other banking stuff (assuming they offer those products). And word of mouth advertising is in vogue as well.


















Lootifer wrote:Yeh the more I think about it the more im sure itll be word of mouth advertising orientated. Though it wont be hurting their other products im sure. Just not for you maybe


















Woodruff wrote:Ok, so we're in the third year of our 5.25% fixed 30-year VA home loan. We've built up a tiny bit of escrow, and never missed a payment. My wife and I have started to talk about refinancing at a lower interest rate. Well, lo and behold, last week I get a call from our lender, saying that the VA has a program out that allows them to drop the interest rate on our home loan to 3.375% fixed and we can refinance now if we'd like to do so.
Well, of course we're going to do that, in the process of changing the 30-year loan to a 20-year loan (not changing the payments with the much lower interest rate, essentially).
So my question is this...WHY ON EARTH would my lender want to do that? By my most generous figures, they are losing a good $40,000+ by refinancing me at this point. I'm not a likely return-customer, as this was our first home purchase and we plan for it to be our last. What could they possibly be getting out of this (remember, they called me, we did not call them)?
What am I missing here?






























aad0906 wrote:Woodruff wrote:Ok, so we're in the third year of our 5.25% fixed 30-year VA home loan. We've built up a tiny bit of escrow, and never missed a payment. My wife and I have started to talk about refinancing at a lower interest rate. Well, lo and behold, last week I get a call from our lender, saying that the VA has a program out that allows them to drop the interest rate on our home loan to 3.375% fixed and we can refinance now if we'd like to do so.
Well, of course we're going to do that, in the process of changing the 30-year loan to a 20-year loan (not changing the payments with the much lower interest rate, essentially).
So my question is this...WHY ON EARTH would my lender want to do that? By my most generous figures, they are losing a good $40,000+ by refinancing me at this point. I'm not a likely return-customer, as this was our first home purchase and we plan for it to be our last. What could they possibly be getting out of this (remember, they called me, we did not call them)?
What am I missing here?
They do it to keep you as a customer. If they don't do it, you might go shopping for a much cheaper loan somewhere else. At least they know you're a solvent borrower.





















aad0906 wrote:Woodruff wrote:Ok, so we're in the third year of our 5.25% fixed 30-year VA home loan. We've built up a tiny bit of escrow, and never missed a payment. My wife and I have started to talk about refinancing at a lower interest rate. Well, lo and behold, last week I get a call from our lender, saying that the VA has a program out that allows them to drop the interest rate on our home loan to 3.375% fixed and we can refinance now if we'd like to do so.
Well, of course we're going to do that, in the process of changing the 30-year loan to a 20-year loan (not changing the payments with the much lower interest rate, essentially).
So my question is this...WHY ON EARTH would my lender want to do that? By my most generous figures, they are losing a good $40,000+ by refinancing me at this point. I'm not a likely return-customer, as this was our first home purchase and we plan for it to be our last. What could they possibly be getting out of this (remember, they called me, we did not call them)?
What am I missing here?
They do it to keep you as a customer. If they don't do it, you might go shopping for a much cheaper loan somewhere else. At least they know you're a solvent borrower.
































































Lootifer wrote:Well odds are they will be losing that $40k regardless.
Lootifer wrote:The real cost is only that of those who are too ignorant or lazy to refinance on their own. Which id guess is a small fraction of their customer base.
Lootifer wrote:Then consider that word of mouth only has to result in one or two extra customers in a hundred and theyre still making money since mortgage customers are so high value.










GBU56 wrote:The bank ain't losing any money, period. Banks today are getting money below 1%, so don't worry about them losing money on you.
GBU56 wrote:With your good credit rating the bank knows you'll be refinancing sooner than later. Just make sure your bank is NOT uploading fees for a quick profit from you.










Juan_Bottom wrote:^Exactly. I had customers that used a half dozen banks over a decade.










Nobunaga wrote:... Investigate further Woods. 2.875 is doable now, at a fixed rate, for a 15 year refi. That's what I'm looking at right now with Minster Bank (current rate is 4.75 through Union Savings).
... But if you cannot save back the closing costs with the interest savings within 3 years, statistically it is unwise to refinance, or so I've read. And closing costs, as I'm sure you know, are not cheap.
... Good luck either way.









































patches70 wrote:Best to be reading the fine print if I were you.
I assume you'll be cashing out the equity in your home?
Then understand this, the purpose is to keep you in debt. You look at it as saving 10 years off your mortgage, the bank is losing $40K or so in interest payments.
But see it from the other side. Say, for instance, your original mortgage was for $150K. You've brought the principle down to something like $125K.
You refinance, get $20K in cash but now your principle is back at $150K. And it is to be paid of in 20 years at a lower interest rate. The bank is still making money but they get you to stay in debt. That's the whole point.
patches70 wrote:I don't know what your actual situation is or the actual numbers, but don't even think that the banks are doing you a favor.
patches70 wrote:Now, if you ain't cashing out any equity and just refinancing your current principle and the savings on the interest rate cover the costs of your closing and fees, IDK, maybe that's a good thing. Paying less interest is always a good thing.
I imagine though, that the bank will want you to cash out your equity. Or push you in that direction, and it's just to keep you in debt.
patches70 wrote:But, with due diligence it might be a good thing for you. You'll feel real good with a nice fact sum of digital numbers appearing in your bank account. Take the wife and kids on a nice vacation. Buy a car. Or, you could commit the mortal economic sin of saving.










riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.





















KoolBak wrote:Seriously though, you're lucky to have the VA option




















Juan_Bottom wrote:I hadn't realized that it was a VA loan.
Don't trust the rate. They should always be under 6%, but I think that the national average is like 4.2 or something. I remember everyone was getting screwed with VA loans back in the day. With nice cred and no judgements or anything you should be well under 4% for a 30 year. Anyway, if I remember correctly VA loans are mostly done through a local bank, but the local bank isn't the actual lender. So the local bank wants you to refi at a better rate so that they can collect even more fees from you like more closing costs and document prep fees. So if you refi they will skim a few thousand bucks with little risk, and then they also get "collection fees" from the national bank by having you pay your mortgage to them. The lower rate will make you happy with them too, but really they are a middle man for a larger national bank. This is what I remember from VA loans. And I doubt that the rate that they are offering is the best that you can get.
I can't remember what the scheme is that makes this profitable for the larger bank. Typically they'll also collect closing fees, which allows them to make up some money by taking $2K or so off of the top. I'm guessing that they will lower your payments by giving you a better rate, but they'll do something with the number of payments that you have to make so that it will balance out. I dunno. But if you go to a different bank at a better rate they will actually have some profits to lose, so it also stands to reason that they actually want to give you the best rate that they can. That's especially true if your loan officer's pay is performance based.
I'm making sense here right?










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