January 7, 2008
Loan.com is a mortgage referral site and shares the major weakness of
such sites: it is vulnerable to the practice of low-balling, where
lenders quote prices they do not intend to deliver.
Loan.com Tries to Be a Better Referral Site
Five years ago, I wrote an article on internet mortgage referral sites,
six of which I examined with some care (
Are
Mortgage Referral Sites Useful?). In 2007,
www.loan.com joined the group,
claiming a unique distinction: all the loan providers on their site have
to abide by a borrower bill of rights. The question is whether this
provides any substantive benefit to borrowers, or is just another
species of hype?
I think the site sponsors get an A for effort, the same type of A I
received as an 8-year old when I tried to vault a bar and landed on my
head. The problem is that they applied the idea of certifying loan
providers, which I have good reason to believe they picked up from me,
to a referral site model on which it doesn’t work. It is the same model
used by the firms I examined in 2002, and which are still operating:
www.bankrate.com,
www.bestrate.com,
www.compareinterestrates.com,
www.domania.com,
www.interest.com,
and
www.loanpage.com.
Characteristics of Mortgage Referral Sites
Referral sites charge loan providers who post their mortgage prices on
the sites. They are a better information source than newspapers because
their coverage is generally wider and the prices are usually current.
(Prices reported in newspapers are obsolete when published.) Referral
sites connect to the web sites of the loan providers listed, and may
also show their telephone numbers, which is convenient.
However, selecting loan providers who show the lowest prices on a
referral site is hazardous, for three reasons. I will illustrate these
reasons with loan.com, though they apply to the other referral sites as
well.
Prices Don't Apply to Many Borrowers
First, the prices shown apply only to borrowers who meet the highest
underwriting standards – "creampuff loans". In the case of loan.com, the
posted prices don‘t apply if your credit is less than good, if you are
putting less than 20% down, if you cannot fully document your income and
assets, if you are refinancing to take out cash, if the property is
anything but a single-family house, or if the property is not your
permanent residence. These exclusions constitute a majority of
borrowers.
It is foolish to expect that the lender with the best price on a
creampuff will also have the best price on, e.g., a low-documentation or
small-down payment loan. The correlation is close to zero.
Information Provided on ARMs Is Incomplete
Second, you can’t shop adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs) effectively,
even if your loan is a creampuff, because information is not provided on
ARM features that affect the interest rate after the initial rate period
is over. These include the rate index, margin, rate adjustment caps, and
maximum rate.
Referral Sites Are Vulnerable to "Low-Balling"
Third, and most important, borrowers can’t fully rely on the prices
shown on the screen because referral sites provide an enormous
temptation to low-ball – to price below the price the loan provider
actually expects to deliver. A low price is the only way a loan provider
has of grabbing the borrower’s attention.
Loan providers can’t be held to the prices they quote, since they are
committed only when they lock, at which point the market may have
changed. The market is volatile, with prices reset daily and sometimes
within the day.
Further, the final price is contingent on the borrower being approved, a
process that provides ample opportunity for price adjustments, many of
them legitimate – as when the borrower does not meet all the
underwriting requirements assumed in the displayed prices. Easily
concealed in a legitimate price adjustment is an illegitimate increment
that retrieves the low-ball quote from the borrower’s grasp.
The largest of the referral sites, bankrate.com, has been sued by a loan
provider claiming that other loan providers were low-balling. In its
defense, bankrate.com claimed that it polices the behavior of its loan
providers through a process of mystery shopping, and if it finds that a
loan provider is not honoring the prices posted on bankrate.com, it will
temporarily suspend them from advertising on the site. The CEO of
bankrate.com was quoted in the Wall Street Journal as saying "It's a
pretty onerous policy and we bounce dozens of people a month."
Dozens of bounces a month indicate a pattern of widespread violations.
It also indicates that the punishment of being unable to list for a few
days is not much of a deterrent. It is not in the financial interest of
the site to bounce them permanently.
The borrower bill of rights in loan.com includes a "Rate Quote That
Won't Change", ie., no low-balling. But low-balling happens, despite the
pledge, and loan.com has had to adopt the same tactic as bankrate.com to
deal with it. Loan.com has mystery shoppers to check for compliance, and
they suspend violators – but not for very long.
Given the existing referral site structure, low-balling is an insoluble
problem. I predict that in 2008 a new type of referral site will arise
that does not have the problem.