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Please Help. . . . . Desperate

Date: Mon, 08/07/2006 - 12:07

Submitted by anonymous
on Mon, 08/07/2006 - 12:07

Posts: 202330 Credits: [Donate]

Total Replies: 3


My husband and I have a applied for a loan (our first home loan) and were told that in order to qualify he needed a letter from Palisades collections (the current account holder on an auto loan from 1999) stating that there was a repossession but that it was a VOLUNTARY one. They said that it is not heir policy and while they recognize that it was VOLUNTARY they will not verify it. What to do? Without verification we can never purchase a home.


I believe you are not dealing with a "strong enough" mortgage broker....regardless of how your credit reads you CAN absolutely get a loan. Further, I am assuming the loan is still outstanding as it has been over the 7 year mark; at 7 years it should be deleted regardless by all agencies at your request. I need to reiterate you are not dealing with the right broker! To say you can not by a home is absurd. If you advise your state..perhaps someone can put you in touch with someone. I have someone in upstate/western NY; someone else in Baltimore, Md. etc.


lrhall41

Submitted by on Mon, 08/07/2006 - 13:23

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ALSO, P-L-e-a-s-e- don't let anyone else pull your credit...mortgage brokers can be notorious for overpromising and underperforming. It is now (finally) your legal right to obtain that credit report from that broker, then take that report to another mortgage broker. You need to find an agent who works with subprime, like option 1 mortgage, and there are many others. If your credit score is 500 or above you can get a mortgage with a bank- below, you are limited to hard money or seller financing. Scores above 620 rates start to drop, at 680 you can get an American Express card, rates drop again, then around 720 still lower rates. Onward and upward. Don't let one "expert" (yes I'm sarcastic) dictate your future plans -- keep shopping! You'll be in your new home in 30 days if you want.


lrhall41

Submitted by on Mon, 08/07/2006 - 13:58

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