Why Small Home Mortgage Loans Are Hard to Find...

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Why Small Home Mortgage Loans Are Hard to Find Providing small mortgage loans at non-subsidized prices affordable to the borrower has always been a challenge. The core problem is that the high cost of originating and servicing a mortgage loan is no smaller for a small loan than for a large one, but the dollar amounts of interest and origination fees received by the lender are smaller on small loans. The obvious remedy, charging a higher interest rate or upfront fees on smaller loans, may make it unaffordable, may be interpreted as "price-gouging", and may invite the attention of regulators. Home mortgage lenders prefer to avoid these problems by setting minimum loan amounts, which today are generally in the range of $50,000 to $75,000. Below $50,000, mortgage loans are generally not available. This is a problem for isolated communities in which home prices are very low, and also for borrowers anywhere who are looking to refinance small loan balances. The Problem of the Small Isolated Town "In my town, we need mortgage loans from $5,000 to $30,000, and they just aren't available. Is there anything that can be done?" The town is Winters, Texas, population about 3,000. There are few jobs there or anywhere very close, and median household income is about $26,000. Houses in Winters sell for less than $60,000. Mortgage loans are not available in Winters. In part, this is because the town is so isolated and the demand so small that it can't support a lending facility. There are no appraisers, for example; if one is needed the cost will be double the cost in a larger center because of the time it takes for the appraiser to get to Winters and back. The combination of exceptionally high origination costs and exceptionally small loan amounts is deadly. The best option for residents of Winters who need funding is an unsecured loan, as discussed below. The Problem of Refinancing Small Loans Another category of borrowers who are potentially vulnerable to the small loan problem are those who have paid their loans down substantially and would like to take advantage of lower interest rates by refinancing. "I have a 10% loan from way back, should have refinanced years ago, balance is only $42,000 now, is it too late?" Yes, it is too late. No lender wants to refinance a $42,000 loan into another $42,000 loan. The exception would be the case where the borrower wants to raise a substantial amount of cash from the transaction, which means that the new loan amount will be substantially larger than the balance of the old loan. In that situation, there is no small loan problem because the loan is not small. Small Unsecured Loans Through the Internet When I wrote an early version of this article in 2007, www.Prosper.com was a new firm chartered to create a virtual market that provides an attractive return to lenders and a reasonable cost to borrowers. Lenders are given extensive information about borrowers, including credit information


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