You run a mortgage company. You don't see yourself as some pencil pusher, tied inexorably to numbers and algorithms. You go with your gut. You trust your instincts. You basically see your persona in the mortgage financing world like that of a U.S. marshall in the Old West. Potential borrowers walk into your office. You like the cut of their jib. They just seem trustworthy to you. No need for ugly questions like "How much do you make?" or "What's your credit score?" or "Are you employed?" You just pull a sack of cash from under the counter and hand it over. They are off to buy their dream home. That's the fundamental structure of a no documentation mortgage. It bipasses the copious documentation usually necessary to get a mortgage loan.
As you might guess, it's not a well-regarded business practice. It was basically only popular for a short period of time...the brief era that ended with the mortgage meltdown and the financial crisis of 2007-2008. Basically, during the height of the mortgage boom, when originators could sell off any mortgage to "financial innovators" who packaged them into mortgage-backed securities (which in turn could get sold to suckers on Wall Street), mortgage originators couldn't crank out new loans fast enough. There was a race to get deals done as quickly and painlessly as possible.
Thus, the no-doc mortgage had its heyday. As we've suggested, it did not end well. These deals, which fall into a category of mortgages known as "Alt-A" (basically a short step above the dreaded "sub-prime" designation), contributed to the pool of toxic mortgage debt that nearly brought down the financial system in 2008. The subsequent economic crisis required a substantial government bailout to untangle everything.
It made no-doc mortgages dramatically less popular. It still comes up occasionally for specific cases, however, as in instances where people are self-employed or otherwise don't have standard documentation for their incomes.
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Finance: What is a Mortgage?345 Views
Finance allah shmoop shmoop What is a mortgage Well people
a mortgage is just dead it's alone but one with
special tax treatment For most people simply put Any interest
you pay on a mortgage to buy a home is
tax deductible Morty morton's inputs down a hundred thousand bucks
to buy a home that costs four hundred big ones
his mortgages three hundred grand at five percent interest per
year So that's fifteen thousand dollars a year he pays
to rent the money from the bank which he uses
to buy his dream home with the loop de loop
waterslide Morty earns one hundred grand a year and pays
tax on his last fifteen thousand of earnings soas faras
The irs is concerned since morty can deduct his fifteen
thousand dollars in interest against his earnings he does not
in fact earn taxable wages of one hundred grand annually
Instead he earns taxable wages of eighty five thousand dollars
a year Essentially with government is doing is sharing in
some of the cost of renting the money Taub i'm
ortiz home well why would the u s government be
so charitable Well because home ownership has been integral part
of the american dream since the u s of a
i po'ed in seventeen seventy six easy access to mortgages
and then home buying can be a hugely beneficial asset
In the vast majority of cases homes create family stability
a store of wealth and tax dollars for local schools
in the form of real estate taxes So don't feel
bad about splurging on that water slide there Morty Just 00:01:42.93 --> [endTime] remember you're doing it for the kids Hello
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