Buy your next home using Guilds Mortgage Sandwich. It’s Delicious!

For most of us, a sandwich was the first meal we learned to make for ourselves. As a result, roughly 50% of Americans consume a sandwich every day. I mean, come on, it’s one of the most simple yet versatile and loved foods on the planet, with countless variations to satisfy every palate.

And yet, for all its popularity, the sandwich is not infallible. Sometimes even the most basic ingredients can go awry—not to mention your more labor-intensive gourmet sammies, like Croque-Monsieur or the classic Sloppy Joe. Unfortunately, it takes just one poorly designed sandwich to realize how bad it can go wrong.

Similarly, over 50% of California’s own a home – so the majority of us have experienced the process of getting a mortgage and understand the essential “ingredients” to a successful close, but for many, it’s the opposite feeling of having your favorite go-to sandwich – it’s a complete drag! So how do you maximize taste, keep everything between the bread, manage any sogginess, and create the best balanced and delicious mortgage sandwich?

3 Items You Need for That Perfect Mortgage Sandwich

1 – Digital Lending for Speed and Efficiency

Getting a mortgage can be very document-intensive, with stacks of papers to collect and sign. And many lenders still work this way, asking for all of your supporting documents upfront, then picking what they need to complete your approval. So, years ago, Guild decided to flip the script and go to a more progressive platform to provide state-of-the-art technology to streamline the application process and minimize the number of documents to gather without sacrificing the human touch. You get all this technology with the guidance of an actual human being.

For example, Guild can verify a borrower’s assets without asking for a bank statement using AccountChek®. Instead of asking for a copy of a paystub or W2, we authenticate the borrower’s employment status digitally, using The Work Number®. Thus, speeding up the process significantly by requiring fewer documents, helping to remove much of the hassle and frustration compared to your more traditional mortgage experience.

2 – THE SECRET SAUCE is Customer Service

Guild Mortgage is known for its customer satisfaction, as evidenced by our #1 Ranking in Customer Satisfaction with Primary Mortgage Origination by J.D. Power*. At Guild, we want our customers to truly get that we are partners in their pursuit of a home. For more than 60 years, we’ve grown through referrals by focusing on doing what’s right. As a result, you can expect from Guild:

  • A FOCUS ON YOU – We look for a loan that fits your life. By thoroughly understanding your needs, circumstances, and life goals, we tailor each loan correctly for you.
  • HEART – We do what’s right for our customers, partners, employees, and community.
  • EXPERTISE – We have a proven track record of closing on time. We mind the details, so you don’t have to.
  • COMMITMENT – Wherever you call home, we are there in your community to strengthen and sustain the places people call home.

Guild prides itself on its core value, the promise of home without high-pressure sales tactics. Our goal is to learn more about you, assess your goals, review your financials, then make personalized loan recommendations to give you the necessary tools to make a sound decision either way.  

3 – The Benefits of Keeping your Money Local

I love when I can shop at my local grocery store, send my daughter to summer camp, or go to the movies, knowing my dollars support the people in my neighborhood. The same can be said for every client that comes to me for a mortgage. My team and I are local, familiar with the area, and knowledgeable about the community. We frequent the same businesses like you, and by keeping your dollars within our community, our friends and neighbors can meet their needs and prosper. By focusing on this local availability of wealth, we can create even more opportunities for those around us. 

I know some things are just easier online, as I am not immune to the power of pushing the “Buy Now” link when shopping on Amazon. But, whenever possible, I love the act of handing someone in my neighborhood my money, knowing it’s rewarding the people and businesses that serve our community.

Dan Tharp has been a Mortgage Lender in Sacramento for almost 20 years and would love to help you with your next mortgage.

The above information is for educational purposes only. All information, loan programs, and interest rates are subject to change without notice. All loans are subject to underwriter approval. Terms and conditions apply. Always consult an accountant or tax advisor for full eligibility requirements on tax deduction. *Ranked #1 in Customer Satisfaction with Primary Mortgage Origination. For J.D. Power 2021 award information, visit jdpower.com/awards

Home values are up. Can you still afford to buy?

Home prices in California are going up and will probably continue to do so. Does that mean they are less affordable?

The news can be misleading and confusing as it recently touted the significant move higher in the median home price, currently up 15% nationally versus last year. And 14.3% in Sacramento County, says the Sacramento Association of Realtors. 15% sounds awfully high. But the median home price does not measure appreciation. Instead, it marks the middle price point of recent home sales. 

With a substantial lack of inventory for lower-priced homes, more transactions occur for higher-priced homes, which pushes the median home price higher.

The actual Sacramento home price appreciation rate was about 1.25% for the last quarter, or 5% annualized. And it is forecasted to increase by a similar margin next year. So have you been priced out of the market?

The short answer is no, or at least not yet. California’s affordability factor has improved year over year because mortgage rates are down by almost a full percent, and incomes have gone up (Avg. weekly net pay is up 5.7% year over year nationally). Also, remember, only a portion of your income goes towards paying your mortgage. A 5% rise in income can offset a much more significant percentage rise in housing expense.

Let’s assume your monthly earnings did not improve from last year. Consider a buyer’s max purchase price of a new home, based on his/her income and debt was $450,000 last year. Maybe this buyer decided to wait because they were nervous about the market. Now, that home is worth about $472,500.

As a mortgage professional, if I were to use the same income and debt structure I used last year, this buyer would now afford a home for $490,000. This tells us that homes are actually more affordable, even though they have appreciated.

Granted, I am using very simple math here, and this does not get into down payment or cash required to purchase this home but is purely to show you the media doesn’t’ always get it right. Take the time to work through these numbers with a mortgage professional you trust, and don’t give up your dream of homeownership!

Coronavirus and Rates

As a mortgage professional for almost two decades, I have been through many wild rides, but nothing compares to what we are experiencing right now with this coronavirus; or what I am calling our alternative universe. Just over a week ago, the fear of COVID-19 sent stocks tumbling, and mortgage rates lower – according to Mortgage News Daily, the average rate for the popular 30-year fixed mortgage fell to 3.23%, an 8-year low.

Rates had been dropping for weeks as “breaking news” seemed to ping our phones by the minute, and fear began to manifest in real-time, as we watched the stock market cradle. In times of economic uncertainty, mortgage rates are typically the beneficiary of bad news, and rates go down as dollars move from the risky stock market and into the “usually” safe haven of mortgage-backed securities (aka mortgage debt) – and rates go lower.

As news of the virus drove interest rates down, homeowners rushed to apply for mortgages not seen in over a decade. According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, during the first week of March, refinancing applications reached their highest levels in over 11 years and jumped 79% week over week. We all went from being plain old busy to our hair catching on fire. That’s when the damn broke, almost at once, as Banks quickly began to increase rates to stem the demand. More factors contributed to mortgage rates spiking, and I will cover those in future blogs — no need to get too far in the weeds here.

In what seemed like a matter of hours, those attractive low-interest rates vanished in a poof of air, and rates shot up – and fast! According to Mortgage News Daily, that average rate is now over 4%, and we don’t know how high it may go.

The Fed Didn’t Drop Rates?

Most had not heard the news that rates had jumped when the Fed made a dramatic announcement that they were going to lower the Fed funds rate to almost zero. Within minutes my cell phone exploded with calls and text messages from clients “Dan, did you hear the news? The Fed is lowering rates to zero, and I want it! Unfortunately, I had to tell them it doesn’t work that way.

The Fed Funds Rate is the overnight rate at which banks borrow money from each other; it is not, however, the mortgage rate. Mortgage rates are influenced by the U.S. and global economies and the demand (or lack thereof) of mortgage-backed securities (MBS) that are bought and sold on Wall Street. In short, MBS represents the prices investors are willing to pay for these low risk, low rate, fixed investments. More demand drives interest rates lower, and less demand drives them higher. 

So to be clear, the Fed can’t just announce they are lowering mortgage rates by dropping the federal funds rate. But, by making these incremental moves, they can help influence mortgage rates to drop – or in this case not to go too much higher!

What is Quantitative Easing, and why do we want it?

Now that we all know Fed rate cuts don’t always lead to lower rates, there are a few other tricks the Fed has up her sleeve to help us. One method that paid huge dividends during the crash of 2008 is Quantitative Easing (QE), which is “the introduction of new money into the money supply by a central bank. 

In laymen’s terms, if the guys on Wall Street and investors won’t purchase Mortgage bonds or treasuries, the government can step in and fill that void. Thus, keeping the demand for MBS going, which in turn keeps mortgage rates low. And if rates stay low, it will promote consumer spending (and borrowing) and keep our economy humming. The Fed’s goal to push rates down using QE may work again, as it did when they purchased billions in bonds and securities over many years following The Great Recession.

What is happening today reminds me of just how fragile and reversible progress can be. And unfortunately, as a society, we sometimes have this terrible habit of repeating mistakes we made years ago. This is why it is so essential to work with people you trust and who have the experience to guide you through the steps of homeownership and finance. I am hopeful this move by the Fed will pay dividends, just as it did before, and we can all continue to realize the dream of homeownership. Be safe, everyone.