The big problem when trying to analyze the "price" of a particular loan is that the buyer (the consumer) and the seller (the lender) are usually not on the same page when a "price quote" is made. Comparing mortgage rates and fees is completely different than calling two competing grocery stores and asking for a price on a 12-pack of Pepsi. The only differentiation in the Pepsi product is the price. But the mortgage product has more characteristics than can be counted on one hand.
To give an accurate rate quote to a borrower, I typically need the following information:
- Loan Amount
- Purchase Price (the lower the relationship of loan amount to purchase price, the better the rate)
- Credit history of borrower (including representative credit scores)
- Property location (pricing can be different from one county/state to another
- Property type (condo pricing is typically higher than that of detached, single family homes)
- Occupancy type (is it owner-occupied or an investment property?)
- Does the borrower want impound accounts for taxes and insurance (if yes, the price can be better)
- Loan Type (does the borrower prefer a fixed- or adjustable-rate loan?)
- How many points, if any, are being paid to reduce the interest rate
