Latest News “Stay informed with breaking news, world news, US news, politics, business, technology, and more at latest news.

Category: Mortgages

Auto Added by WPeMatico

  • 2 credit cards offer up to 5% back when you buy a new house, but there’s a catch

    The offers and details on this page may have updated or changed since the time of publication. See our article on Business Insider for current information.

    Affiliate links for the products on this page are from partners that compensate us and terms apply to offers listed (see our advertiser disclosure with our list of partners for more details). However, our opinions are our own. See how we rate products and services to help you make smart decisions with your money.

    a loving couple snuggles in front of a couch in a cozy living room while holding an iPad and a credit card
    Some credit cards earn rewards for buying a new home. Should you go for it?

    • The Rocket Visa Signature® Card earns 5% cash back if you use rewards toward a Rocket Mortgage down payment and closing costs.
    • Bilt Rewards members earn 1 point per $2 spent on a new home when they buy with an eXp Realty agent.
    • But if you don’t use these companies, you’re better off with a more flexible cash-back credit card.

    If you hope to buy a home in the next year or two, you’re probably saving every spare penny toward your down payment and mortgage closing costs.

    Two credit cards claim they can help you get there more quickly: the Rocket Visa Signature® Card and Bilt Mastercard®.

    The Rocket Visa Signature® Card earns 5% cash back on all purchases — but only if you redeem those rewards toward the closing costs on your new home, and as long as your loan is through Rocket Mortgage. Furthermore, you can only redeem a maximum of 800,000 Rocket Points, or $8,000, per new mortgage loan.

    Meanwhile, new homebuyers who participate in Bilt Rewards can earn 1 Bilt Point per $2 on the total cost of a new home — as long as their real estate agent works under Bilt’s partner brokerage eXp Realty. Bilt Rewards is the company behind the popular Bilt Mastercard®, which lets renters pay rent on a credit card without incurring a transaction fee.

    Bilt Members can also redeem Bilt Points toward a down payment on any home, so this double benefit can be worth a good chunk of change.

    Both cards offer a tantalizing proposition for prospective homebuyers, many of whom find the American dream of home ownership more difficult than ever. But both cards also have some real limitations, since the savings only apply when you work with Rocket Mortgage or an eXp agent (or both).

    The good news is you don’t need a specialized card to save money as you prepare to buy a home. The best cash-back credit cards earn up to 5% on common household expenses.

    Rocket Visa Signature® Card

    The Rocket Visa Signature® Card is a great option for prospective homebuyers who plan to finance their purchase with a Rocket Mortgage loan.

    This no-annual-fee credit card earns 5 points for every $1 spent on all qualifying purchases — a generous rate that outstrips most of the standard cash back credit cards, since none earn 5% back on everything.

    Rocket Points vary in value based on how you redeem them. They’re worth the most — 1 cent apiece — when redeemed toward closing costs, down payment, or buying down your interest rate on a new home purchase financed through a Rocket Mortgage loan.

    You can redeem up to $8,000 (800,000 Rocket Points) per new Rocket Mortgage transaction. Using your rewards this way can save you tens of thousands of dollars in compound interest savings over the lifetime of your mortgage.

    Rocket Points are less valuable when redeemed in other ways. They’re worth just 0.4 cents apiece, or the equivalent of 2% cash back per dollar spent, when used to pay down your existing mortgage principle.

    And if you redeem your rewards as a statement credit on your card balance, they’re worth a measly 0.25 cents apiece, or the equivalent of 1.25% cash back.

    Bilt Rewards

    The Bilt Mastercard® is already becoming a household name for renters looking to maximize credit card rewards, and you can continue that relationship as you enter your homebuying era.

    This $0-annual-fee credit card () won’t cost you an additional fee to keep long-term, and earns great rewards on dining, travel, and other expenses especially on Bilt Rent Day, when most purchases, excluding rent, earn double points, up to 1,000 points each month. Note that you must make at least five transactions per statement period to earn points.

    You don’t even need to be a Bilt credit cardholder to earn Bilt Points — simply joining the Bilt Rewards program is sufficient. All Bilt Rewards program members can earn 1 point per $2 spent on a new home purchased through an eXp Realty real estate agent.

    The best way to maximize the value of your Bilt Points is by using them for travel. But if you’re buying a home, you can also redeem any points you’ve already earned up until this point as a credit toward your down payment, at a respectable value of 1.5 cents per point.

    If you buy a $500,000 house, you’d earn 250,000 Bilt Points. However, you wouldn’t be able to claim that windfall until your purchase is complete, since you can’t redeem points you don’t yet own. Once the Bilt Points from your home purchase reach your account, however, you can redeem them for travel, credit toward future credit card statements, and more.

    Since there’s no cap on how much you can earn on home purchase prices or redeem, Bilt members can come out way ahead with this program, especially because there aren’t any annual fees to factor in. And if you happen to utilize Rocket Mortgage for your loan as well, you could double-dip on both sets of savings: $8,000 in Rocket Mortgage credit, plus however many points you earn from your home purchase.

    What really matters when buying a house

    A standard-issue cash-back credit card may sound uninteresting when compared to the Rocket card’s 5% cash back in mortgage savings on everything, or 2 Bilt Points per dollar spent on a new house. But the most important aspect of buying a house is making sure that the home — and the homebuying process — is right for you.

    In the grand scheme of things, $8,000 or even 200,000 credit card points is small potatoes compared to the life-changing investment you’re about to make. Don’t allow the excitement of earning rewards distract you from finding a real estate agent you jive with and shopping around for a trustworthy lender with the best mortgage interest rates available to you.

    Getting the right mortgage is especially challenging in this day and age of high interest rates, and finding the right mortgage lender as a first-time buyer is a decision that will impact your life for decades to come.

    The case for cash-back credit cards

    Believe it or not, getting a credit card can actually help you buy a house; using one responsibly is a great way to build a strong credit history that can help you score a great mortgage rate on your dream home.

    Cash-back credit cards have their pros and cons, but they generally share a common trait: They’re easy to use. Whether you opt for a flat-rate 2% cash back credit card or choose one that earns 5% cash back on bonus categories, what you earn is what you keep.

    Many cash-back credit cards also don’t charge annual fees, so you can keep your card open for years without worrying how much it costs. This is especially valuable leading up to a new home purchase, when you need to maintain your credit score to buy a house and to get the best mortgage rate.

    If you’re wondering whether you can use your credit card to pay your mortgage, however, the answer is typically no. Lenders generally frown upon using debt to pay off other debt — your credit card represents a line of credit and your mortgage is a fixed monthly payment on the sum of what you owe for your house.

    But some credit card issuers are warming up to the idea, so stay tuned for new developments in credit cards that can be used for paying mortgage payments in months to come. Bilt claims it will begin allowing program members to pay mortgages in 2025, while new fintech company Mesa has an invite-only waitlist for a credit card designed for paying mortgages.

    In the meantime, you can use a service like Plastiq to pay your mortgage — or most check-based payments, for that matter — using your credit card, as long as you’re willing to pay a processing fee around 2.9% per transaction.

    When every penny counts, make sure your credit card rewards fit your lifestyle and your needs — not the other way around.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • A Small Group of Mortgage Lenders Survived Rate Hikes—Now They Face the Double-Edged Sword of A.I.

    A Small Group of Mortgage Lenders Survived Rate Hikes—Now They Face the Double-Edged Sword of A.I.

    To paraphrase the opening line of Charles Dickens’ Tale of Two Cities, right now it’s both the best of times and the worst of times for independent mortgage banks (IMBs), or non-bank lenders. On the one hand, A.I. is beginning to reshape the contours of the entire mortgage ecosystem; new technologies are creating opportunities to streamline and drive efficiencies across the origination, underwriting and servicing sectors of the industry in ways that would have been almost unimaginable just a few years back. On the other hand, this new milieu of stubbornly high post-pandemic interest rates is putting the squeeze on nearly everyone. The Federal Reserve’s rate hikes are upending the playing field, pushing many IMBs out of business while driving a wave of consolidation among those who remain and are struggling to stay afloat. 

    As with any period of major tumult, there are always those who manage to navigate turbulent waters with the finesse of a seasoned surfer. In the mortgage arena, a select few major non-bank lenders are emerging as formidable players, adeptly maneuvering through this pair of industry disruptions. These entities are not only weathering the storm but are also strengthening their positions and capturing significant market share amidst the chaos.

    Mortgage origination and refinancing have plummeted since rate hikes

    The Fed’s decision to begin raising interest rates in 2022 for the first time in more than five years to combat post-pandemic inflation cascaded directly into consumer financial products; from credit cards to auto finance, almost no corner of credit markets has been left unscathed by the Fed policy making. And among the areas most profoundly affected by these rate increases has been the housing sector. 

    To put it in perspective, the average retail mortgage rate jumped from around 3 percent in early 2020 to over 7 percent in mid-2024. According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, mortgage applications as of June decreased by nearly 15 percent year-over-year, and over 30 percent since the Fed first started raising rates to combat inflation in 2022, highlighting the significant elasticity between higher rates and market activity. Data released from federally-backed lender Freddie Mac showed that total mortgage originations more than halved from $4.8 trillion in 2021—before the first rate increase took effect—to less than $2 trillion in 2023. And the refinancing segment of the mortgage market has all but vanished, dropping from $2.8 trillion in 2021 to just $310 billion in 2023, a nearly 90 percent fall-off. 

    Another impact of higher rates is an increase in the number of buyers who are foregoing mortgage financing altogether, instead opting to pay cash. As of late 2023, about one in three homebuyers were paying cash for their home purchases, a marked increase over 2022 figures. At the top end of the market, the numbers are even higher as the percentage of homebuyers who pay cash is nearing 50 percent, according to data from Redfin – levels that haven’t been seen in over a decade. 

    IMBs, which at its peak represented over 60 percent of all mortgage originations, have been the most brutally impacted by all these changes in consumer behavior. Unlike traditional banks such as USBank or Citibank, IMBs can’t accept deposits and must fund mortgages through wholesale credit markets or by selling loans to investors. Given their focus on mortgage and specialization in originations, nonbanks are inherently susceptible to market fluctuations – a vulnerability that has proven especially problematic since the Fed began raising rates, which in turn has forced IMBs to pass on their increased borrowing costs to consumers. 

    As early as 2023, many of these IMBs began closing up shop in droves. Since then, every month, industry trades have begun to read like obituaries, listing the names of the latest players forced to shutter. “We estimate that 38 percent of lenders have left the market since the Fed started raising rates,”

    Patty Arvielo, the CEO and co-founder of New American Funding, one of the nation’s largest independent lenders, told Observer. “But, from time to time, our industry needs to clean the house. These stats [showing consolidation among lenders and others going bust] show that many of these players were only in it for the re-fi game and when that dried up, they had nothing to fall back on. It’s periods like this one that enable the strong to get stronger. It’s good for the industry,” added Arvielo, who is viewed by many as the doyenne of the U.S. mortgage firmament

    All of this contraction among IMBs has massive downstream implications as these lenders play a critical role in minority and low-income families getting access to homeownership. In 2021, IMBs originated 73 percent of the mortgages for minority households. Additionally, nonbanks have originated over 89 percent of the FHA loans and 83 percent of VA loans in 2021. As these entities have lost volume and have not had alternative lines of business to have revenue diversification, they have been susceptible to the rapidly increasing costs to originate mortgages due to their reliance on people. 

    Is A.I. a silver bullet or a distracting shiny object?

    Adding to the angst of IMB executives is the rise of A.I. and other adjacent technologies that are causing their own disruptive wake that is rippling through the mortgage industry. 

    More than a handful of lenders have begun to experiment with A.I. in the hopes that the savings and efficiencies can make up for their losses in market share and help them recoup some of their mojo. The advent of foundational A.I. sources such as OpenAI and Anthropic have given birth to an entire ecosystem of applied A.I. that promises to revolutionize the mortgage lending space. 

    Chris Bixby, managing director at Rice Park Capital Management’s venture strategy that focuses on investing in mortgage and real estate technology, breaks down the impact that A.I will have on the sector in three areas:

    • Origination:  

    The cost of originating a loan is now over $12,000—up from $8,000 just a few years ago, Bixby told Observer at an A.I. in Real Estate conference in Manhattan earlier this month. “Approximately 90 percent of origination costs are still people. A.I. automation, machine learning, and other related technologies are all key opportunities to be part of an efficiency play here.” 

    Although it will be some time before the human element can be completely removed from the mortgage process, Bixby believes a sizable chunk of the workflow can be done better and faster by machine-learning algorithms which should ultimately translate into cost-savings for these non-bank originators. “Over the past two years, mortgage industry employment is down by approximately 30 percent. This constant ramp up and then cut jobs cycle that we have seen over and over can be smoothed out by better technology,” he said. 

    • Underwriting:

    When it comes to the underwriting side of the business, Bixby is less optimistic in the short-term. He believes that A.I. will only be able to drive marginal efficiencies until government sponsored entities (GSEs) like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac rethink and update how their underwriting guidelines – most of which were developed decades ago and have not been able to keep up with the times. 

    Specifically, Bixby believes that GSE lending guidelines are behind the 8-ball in understanding and capturing the way Gen Z and soon, Gen Alpha, make money—a radical paradigm shift from the way their parents and grandparents earned an income. 

    “The ‘gig economy’ is a real thing and underwriters still struggle to account for that type of earning without unduly penalizing borrowers,” remarked Bixby. “The GSEs need to reevaluate the way they underwrite a new generation of first-time borrowers purchasing a home.”

    Bixby thinks that FICO scores can’t continue to be held up as the end-all and be-all for determining credit worthiness. He suggests that bank statements or total family income may be an important way to underwrite those who earn money in less traditional ways even though it does not represent any more risk than a typical W-2 earner, and that A.I. can go a long way to help fold in these other reference points into the underwriting process as long as it’s sanctioned by government underwriters. “Unless the GSEs help remove the various impediments to adoption of new technology in the mortgage ecosystem, the industry will continue to be burdened by a boom-bust cycle of hiring and firing teams of people,” he added.

    • Servicing: 

    Finally, when it comes to loan servicing, Bixby believes that new A.I. technologies will have a major impact on customer relationship management. “AI-powered chatbots and virtual assistants can greatly improve the customer experience and handle routine customer inquiries, providing instant responses and freeing up human staff to focus on more complex issues. These tools also help maintain engagement with clients by sending personalized recommendations and reminders,” observed Bixby. He also feels that predictive analytics – helping IMBs better predict future borrowing patterns, identify potential opportunities, and detect fraud – will enable IMBs to tailor their marketing strategies and product offerings to better meet the needs of their clients and better mitigate risk.

    A brave new mortgage world

    All of these new technologies come at a cost, of course. And they require time to be trained and then successfully integrated into existing workflows. “If we are being honest, so far no mortgage company has really figured out A.I. In fact, I think that there is a risk that many IMBs will rely too heavily on A.I. and create a depersonalized experience,” said Arvielo of New American Funding, the largest lender to communities of color in the U.S. “And so far I haven’t seen any A.I. that can bridge the trust gap. From my view, it has to be another human marketing that mortgage.”

    The new era of high interest rates coupled with what many have called the most transformative technology ever unleashed upon humanity is reshaping the mortgage market in profound ways, particularly for independent mortgage banks. While the challenges are significant, A.I. and other technologies offer a path forward but not a silver bullet. While industry consolidation is a reality and part of an evolving competitive landscape, the ability of IMBs to navigate this new terrain will depend on their ability to adapt to these changes and leverage their unique strengths amidst rapidly blowing headwinds. 

    As IMBs navigate this brave new world, they must balance the efficiency and advantages brought by A.I. with a commitment to maintaining diversity and accessibility in the market. The stakes are high, not just for the brokers themselves, but for the many aspiring homeowners whose dreams hinge on their ability to secure fair and affordable financing.