| Non-Income
Verification Loans
by Attorney William Bronchick
from legalwiz.com
The best interest rates are generally for conforming loans.
A conforming loan is one that adheres to FNMA's strict lending
guidelines. Conforming loans generally require strict proof
of income, assets and other debts. If, for example, you cannot
prove income to a lender, whether it be you are self-employed
for a short time or can't otherwise prove income, there are
non-income verification (NIV) loans.
NIV loans are not just for people that are self-employed.
In fact, I often use NIV programs because the loan process
is faster. Because I have many rental properties, documentation
for the loan process becomes more and more cumbersome each
time I apply. The NIV loan makes the process smoother and
easier.
NIV loans (also known as "stated income") require
less documentation than traditional conforming loans. Lenders
often advertise these programs as "no doc" loans,
meaning the borrower does not have to come up with any documentation
other than a credit report and a loan application.
Some loans are called "no ratio" loans, in that
you don't have to justify your total debt (mortgages plus
other continuing obligations, such as car loans and student
loans) compared to your income.
Few, if any loans are true "no documentation" loans.
Most of these offered programs are either "bait and switch"
tactics; the lender says they don't need documentation, but
when the loan is being processed, the lender will ask for
more and more documentation. Often times the lender will see
some red flags that trigger the additional inquiry.
The best defense to these tactics is a good
offense; speak to your lender or mortgage broker up front.
Identify documentation issues up front, educate the lender
about your finances and be truthful. The more a lender suspects
you are hiding something, the more documentation the lender
will ask for.
SIDE NOTE: Watch What You Say on NIV Loans.
Just because you don't have to provide documentation
of your income to the lender, it doesn't mean you
have a license to lie. Most lenders will make you
sign an authorization to release federal income tax
returns. They may not check now, but if your loan
goes into default, they may obtain copies of your
tax returns. If the income you report on your loan
application is way out of sync with your tax
returns, you may be answering to loan fraud charges.
Of course, there is a price to pay for doing an NIV loan;
the interest rate is generally higher for NIV loans than for
full documentation loans. The reason for the higher rate is
obvious - the less documentation you provide, the more risky
you are as a borrower. However, the more aggressive portfolio
lenders, such as Countrywide and Washington Mutual, are now
offering more competitive rates on NIV loans to borrowers
with high credit FICO scores.
|