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A participation mortgage or participating mortgage is a mortgage loan, or sometimes a group of them, in which two or more persons have fractional equitable interests. [1] In this arrangement the lender, or mortgagee, is entitled to share in the rental or resale proceeds from a property owned by the borrower, or mortgagor.
It was a play on NINA, which in turn is based on the notation scheme for the level of documentation the mortgage originator required. It was described as a no income, no job, [and] no assets loan because the only thing an applicant had to show was his/her credit rating, which was presumed to reflect willingness and ability to pay.
No doc loans were popular in the early 2000s, but were largely phased out following the subprime mortgage crisis. Low-doc loans carry a higher interest rate and were theoretically available only to borrowers with excellent credit and additional income that may be hard to document (e.g. self-employment income).
A no-doc mortgage — also referred to as a no-income verification mortgage — does not require a lender to verify how much you earn with pay stubs and W-2s. These types of loans are also ...
In order for the deal to go through J.P. Morgan Chase required [24] the Fed to issue a nonrecourse loan of $29 billion to Bear Stearns. [25] [4] This means that the loan is collateralized by mortgage debt [26] and that the government can't go after J.P. Morgan Chase's assets if the mortgage debt collateral becomes insufficient to repay the loan ...
A mortgage origination fee is a lender’s charge you pay at closing to cover the cost of initiating, processing and funding your home loan. In general, you can expect the origination fee to range ...
Getting a second mortgage with Social Security as your only income source is possible, but there are caveats. Find out more about how to quality.
The mortgage market is estimated at $12 trillion [31] with approximately 6.41% of loans delinquent and 2.75% of loans in foreclosure as of August 2008. [32] The estimated value of subprime adjustable-rate mortgages (ARM) resetting at higher interest rates is U.S. $400 billion for 2007 and $500 billion for 2008.