Realty411 Magazine Featuring Lee Arnold from Cogo Capital | Page 56
“The public likes to forget that
running for office is a business, no
different than being CEO of a bank
or CEO of Amazon. Nobody wants
to lose their job.”
“Imagine a Congress person
running for reelection who voted
to reduce lending guidelines. Their
opponent would say, ‘So and so
just voted to loosen up lending
guidelines. Is that who you want
running your government?’”
However, despite the changes
since the “great recession” of 2008,
Ryan’s more than 20 years of
expertise allow him to still work
with a variety of personal and
investment home buyers.
There have always been four
tests of lending: income, credit,
assets, and the property being
purchased (especially its appraised
value).
If someone is selfemployed and
their tax returns say they have no
income, but their company
generates $800,000 of revenue
annually, Ryan says he has
legitimate solutions for that issue.
“During the gogo years, you
could claim any ludicrous income
you wanted and pass. Currently, no.
We document your ability to repay
a loan,” Ryan added.
The amount of disposable
income and the debttoincome
ratio an applicant has are more
essential than before 2008,
according to Ryan.
“The VA (issued through the
U.S. Department of Veterans
Affairs) loan has for decades been
the one loan with consistently the
lowest percentage of default, and it
has always been a nomoneydown
loan. So, the down payment is not a
factor in loan quality. VA loans have
always done a broad range of credit
scores. So, credit score is not a
standalone factor in loan quality.
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Inspections and appraisals pretty
well take care of the property. At
the end of the day, the VA loan has
a different underwriting set,” Ryan
said.
“(All loans) still use debt ratios,
but it always requires a certain
amount of difference between your
takehome pay and your mortgage
payment. You have to have a
certain level of disposable income,
and it gets bigger if the family size
is larger. Somebody with five kids,
you know, I hate to say it, has a bit
more disposable income than a
single veteran (or civilian) does.”
“To me, fifty percent debtto
income ratio means you can't buy
the house. I think you should have a
different conversation with your
real estate professional, and just
buy a little bit smaller house.”
“Now, the beauty (for all
borrowers) is with a fixedrate loan.
Most of these people are wage
earners. Next year you get a couple
percent increase in your income
and almost 100 percent of that goes
toward your disposable income,
because property taxes and
insurance don't go up that much.
Utilities don't go up that much.
Because you have a fixedrate loan,
you just took your biggest
component: rent or house payment.
You turned and moved that to
where it's fixed.”