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Real Estate News and Advice |
July 23, 2008 |
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Freddie Mac To Buy Mortgages From Buyer's Agent Cooperative
by Blanche Evans
Add another point on the scoreboard for exclusive buyer's agency. A Memphis, Tennessee mortgage cooperative owned by two-thirds of the franchisees of THE BUYER'S AGENT franchise has just received the federally-insured nod from Freddie Mac, which has agreed to buy the cooperative's mortgages. Created by THE BUYER'S AGENT founders Tom and Donna Hathaway, SouthMor Mortgage Corporation was sold in April to their franchisees, making it the first franchisee-owned mortgage cooperative in the United States. According to the company, SouthMor's mission is to provide deeply discounted mortgage loans to clients of THE BUYER'S AGENT. The cooperative will also make loans to non-clients, but may vary the rates according to whether the borrower uses one of THE BUYER'S AGENT franchisees to purchase a home or uses a competitor. Non-clients, says the company, will pay rates competitive with the local market and profits from those loans will be paid to the stockholders in the form of dividends. The cooperative neatly sidesteps any potential RESPA violations by making the loans non-profit to clients of THE BUYER'S AGENT network. No origination fee is charged, and normal lender "junk fees" are provided at cost. For example, lenders routinely mark up line items such as credit reports ($50,) documentation preparation ($200,) and loan underwriting fees ($150.) SouthMor charges what they cost - about $16, $25 and $25, respectively. "Borrowers can see what they are saving," says Hathaway. "It's right there on the good faith estimate, which we provide just like any other lender within three days of application." The exclusive buyer's agents can sit down at a computer with clients, keyboard into the software, and obtain a pre-approval over the Internet in 15 to 20 minutes. According to Dawn Davis, Executive Vice President of SouthMor, SouthMor can already provide mortgages in 42 states. Davis said, "We are able to provide mortgage loans to more than 85% of the people in the United States and we plan to increase that to 100%. Applications are currently pending in several of the remaining states." The company has come up with a win-win-win-win plan which saves borrowers money, gives a competitive edge to THE BUYER'S AGENT franchise owners who are shareholders of the mortgage company, gives franchise agents an edge, and the lenders benefit by loaning less money on homes that have been purchased through exclusive buyer's agency. According to the company, THE BUYER'S AGENT won a round in the Oklahoma Supreme Court in 1999 when the Court agreed that "franchisees of THE BUYER'S AGENT could offer more complete representation to home buyers than agents who represent sellers and that they had saved their clients thousands of dollars." Now the franchise is out to prove that it can continue the savings to buyers when they apply for buyer-agent friendly loans. But the franchise still has some battles ahead. The Oklahoma Real Estate Commission was able to get legislation passed that eliminates the word agency or agency relationships from its representation forms. Although it is unclear how the commission plans to enforce the new law, early speculation is that licensees will no longer be allowed to call themselves agents or to act as agents on behalf of clients. Unless the commission brings charges against a BUYER'S AGENT licensee for calling himself or herself "an agent", it is unclear what action the commission will take. The law will go into effect in January, 2001, but pre-licensing trainers are already receiving their instructions on how to interpret and train the law. Stay tuned. Published: August 18, 2000 Use of this article without permission is a violation of federal copyright laws. Related Articles:
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