Mortgage Putback

  

Categories: Mortgage

See: Mortgage.

Remember being a kid and finding something super awesome on the shelf at the store (like an economy-sized box of M&Ms or a BB gun), but then being frowned at and told to put it back when we tried to sneak it into the cart? Well, a “mortgage putback” is kind of the same thing. It’s a mortgage that has to be repurchased, or put back. In other words, the originator of the loan has to buy it back from the current mortgage owner. Mortgage putbacks exist not only to protect the mortgage owner, but also to protect investors in mortgages and mortgage-backed securities.

When putbacks happen, it usually means that something about the mortgage just...isn’t quite right. For the most part, the “not quite right” part usually has to do with negligence or fraudulent practices on the part of the original lender. This was especially prevalent leading up to the 2008 subprime mortgage crisis. Lenders were issuing mortgages all over the place, sometimes without confirming the income, assets, etc. of the potential borrowers, and sometimes without bothering to adhere to their own laws and rules. Since then, of course, there have been plenty of regulations put into place to address the early aughts’ lawless wasteland of mortgage lending. But in the meantime, if we suspect any of the mortgages in our lives of not being up to legal or regulatory snuff, the mortgage putback avenue might be one worth exploring.

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Finance: What is a second mortgage?4 Views

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Finance allah shmoop What is a second mortgage Okay you

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know what a first mortgages it's otherwise cleverly named what

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is called it is called oh yeah Mortgage it's Just

00:14

a loan on a house You paid four hundred grand

00:17

for this baby Hundred grand down two hundred fifty grand

00:19

in a first mortgage And they're still fifty grand You

00:23

owe well where's that fifty large coming from the bank

00:27

wouldn't loan you any more on a first mortgage that

00:30

was costing you six percent a year Tio you know

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to rent that money So you had to get a

00:34

second mortgage which should things go awry and you become

00:40

a statistic Well that's it's fully behind the first mortgage

00:44

in the priority stack of payback So in a bankruptcy

00:48

situation the first mortgage first what's called a first mortgage

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get it fully paid along with any fees associated with

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it and back interest accrued and any other things that

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are associated with that first mortgage it stands in line

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first in priority Then any cash leftover gets attributed to

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that second mortgage So not surprisingly second mortgage money costs

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a lot more to rent then first mortgage money because

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the risk of non payment in a bad situation is

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meaningful E higher especially when the borrowed does this for 00:01:25.136 --> [endTime] a living

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