July 26, 2000, Revised
July 16, 2004, Revised November 10, 2004
1.The broker will be the customer's representative or agent, and will
endeavor to act in the best interests of the customer.
2.The broker will establish a price for services upfront, in writing,
based on information provided by the customer.
*The
price may be a fixed dollar amount, a percent of the loan, an hourly
charge for the broker's time, or a combination of these.
*The
price or prices will cover all the services provided by the broker. This
includes loan processing, for which customers always pay a broker or
lender.
*On
third party services, such as an appraisal, ordered by the broker but
paid for by the customer, the broker will provide the invoice from the
third party service provider at the customer�s request.Alternatively, the broker may have the payment made directly by
the customer to the third party service provider.
3.
Any
payments the broker receives from third parties involved in the
transaction will be credited to the customer, unless such payments are
included in the broker's fee.
*If the broker's fee is 1 point, for example, and the broker
collects 1 point from the lender as a � yield spread premium�, the
broker either charges the customer 1 point and credits the customer with
the yield spread premium, or charges the customer nothing and retains
the yield spread premium.
4.The broker will use his best efforts to determine the loan type,
features, and lender services that best meet the customer's needs, and to
find the best wholesale price for that loan.
5.The wholesale prices from which the broker's selection is made will
be disclosed at the customer's request.
6.When directed by a customer who has met lender lock
requirements, the broker will lock the terms
(rate, points, and other major features) of the loan, and will provide a
copy of the written confirmation of the rate lock as soon as it has been
received from the lender.
7.If a customer elects to float the rate/points, the broker will
provide the customer the best wholesale float price available to that
customer on the day the loan is finally locked.
8.The broker will maintain a web site on which its commitment to its
customers is prominently displayed, along with any other information the
broker wishes to convey.
9. A broker who
displays mortgages prices on its web site must indicate whether the prices
are retail or wholesale. If they are retail, the markup must be shown. If
they are wholesale, the broker must indicate that the prices do not
include the broker's fee.
Copyright Jack Guttentag 2004
Jack Guttentag is Professor of Finance Emeritus at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. Visit the Mortgage Professor's web site for more answers to commonly asked questions.
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