Sydney Financial Group is offering a
First, Sydney Financials copyrighted software helps homeowners pay off their original home loans early by leveraging the money from their
The Sydney Financial system helps borrowers use their
ROYAL Bank of
A spokesperson for RBS said: “We regularly review our mortgage range against the market and, in the light of recent competitor moves, we are withdrawing our mortgages with a loan to value greater than 95 per cent.” John Postlethwaite, consultant with Punter Southall Financial Management, said: “With lenders withdrawing their 100 per cent LTV mortgages, it’s getting more difficult for first-time buyers.”It smacks of double standards for RBS to still have these 100 per cent mortgages through branches, but not intermediaries.” Earlier this week, Scottish Widows Bank reduced the LTV on its professional mortgage from 110 per cent to 100 per cent.
The National Association of Mortgage Brokers (NAMB) announced its support for a plan to reform the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s single family housing loan guarantee program. S. 2008, the “Home Ownership Made Easier Act” (HOME Act) introduced by Senator Mary Landrieu (D-LA), would expand eligibility for mortgage refinancing. Currently, the USDA program does not allow the borrowers to refinance an existing non-USDA mortgage into the USDA program.
This bill will allow borrowers to refinance into USDA-backed loans regardless of the type of residential mortgage loan they currently have.” There are a lot of consumers who need immediate assistance,” said NAMB President George Hanzimanolis, “but we have a scarcity of good programs out there that can help.”
The bill would allow refinancing to eligible borrowers in order to pay off first or second mortgages, finance rehabilitation projects on their homes, cover closing costs or consolidate other debt. Mortgage brokers stand in a unique position to bring these reforms into reality for consumers. By working through an approved lender, brokers give consumers access to an expanded selection of loan products including the refinancing opportunities made possible under S. 2008.
Loss claims in Quality Home Loans’ collapse have surged to $332 million as a three-way fight has broken out between the bankrupt lender, its investors and Pacificor, a Santa Barbara-based hedge fund that pumped more than $40 million into the company. The latest twist in the tangled Chapter 11 bankruptcy is a $60 million complaint by investors in Agoura Hills-based Quality Home Loans. Creditors have made $272 million in claims, and the investors’ filing pushed the total tab to the $332 million mark.
Last fall, a struggle broke out between John Gaiser, Quality Home Loans’ founder, and Michael Klein, the late Pacificor chief who publicly moved to take over the mortgage firm after it declared bankruptcy in August – a deal later rejected by the trustee overseeing the company. Since then, the “hard money” lender’s operations have ceased, it has shrunk from 191 employees to 10 and three major players are fighting over the assets:
• Investors in QHL Holdings Fund Ten and Golden State TD Investments – the entities used to fund Quality Home Loans’ lending – filed a $60 million complaint against the company and Gaiser, who lives in
• Independent of their investors’ filing, the QHL Holdings fund and the
• Pacificor has asserted that Quality Home Loans owes it $42 million for cash infusions made in the months before the lender collapsed.
