2. Shop the market
Buying a home is like buying a loan – except if you borrow mmore than 75% of the property value, you will probably wind up spending more on your loan in interest and fees than you paid for the house.
The relationship between real estate agents and property vendors is pretty similar to the relationship between conventional mortgage brokers and lenders.
Investors sometimes forget vendors and lenders have something to sell and real estate agents and mortgage brokers sell that “something” in exchange for commission from the vendor and the lender. The more money the vendors and lenders stand to make in a transaction, the more commission they pay their real estate agents and brokers – even when that winds up costing you more, too.
The smart approach is to shop your mortgage taking basically the same approach you did to shop for the property.
That is:
- Work out what you need from the business that arranges your loan (eg face-to-face or online service)
- What you need from your actual loan
- Get some prices from a range of sources, but don’t get preapproval from all of them as this will affect your credit rating
It’s a good idea to choose a few brokers rather than just one as different brokers favour different lenders so one broker may be able to get a bigger discount from the same lender on the same loan than a broker up the road can arrange.
You should also choose some lenders on and off the broker’s panel, because brokers might promote a panel of 15-plus lenders, but research shows that 62% mainly use four lenders or less. If you really want to test how many lenders a broker compares, ask them to produce a printout of Total Individual Costs (TICs), including loan feature comparisons for the best loans from 10 lenders that you pick from their panel. The broker should also add the three or four they think are best if they’re not already on your list.
Investors sometimes forget vendors and lenders have something to sell and real estate agents and mortgage brokers sell that something in exchange for commission
If you don’t have time, or you are worried you don’t have the skill to do it, consider hiring an accountant or independent adviser to do it for you, after all that fee is probably tax deductible for investment advice, and a better deal on your finance means more money for you out of every investment. The key is to make sure whoever does your number crunching is professionally competent and fully independent, which means they don’t have a lender alliance or associate mortgage broker.