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Mortgage industry experts, what's one creative financing solution for mortgage clients facing unique circumstances?
Deadline: Apr 18th, 2024 06:59 AM
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clever
We're doing a major rewrite of our home-buying cost guide and looking for loan officers, buyer's agents, and financial planners who work directly with first-time homebuyers. We want specific, practical insights — not textbook answers. 1. When a first-time buyer sees their actual closing disclosure for the first time, what line item or total most commonly surprises them, and why do online articles fail to prepare them for it? 2. When does it make more financial sense for a buyer to put less than 20% down and pay PMI rather than waiting to save a bigger down payment? How do you explain this math to a client? 3. Since the August 2024 NAR settlement, how do you explain buyer agent fees to first-time buyers? Have you seen buyers negotiate commission rates, and what did that look like? 4. Beyond closing costs, what do buyers consistently underestimate about the first 12 months of ownership — the costs that come after they receive the keys? 5. How much cash should a buyer keep in reserve after closing, and what's the most common mistake you see people make with their liquidity?
C
clever
This expert commentary will appear in a major rewrite of our guide "Selling Stock to Buy a House," targeting home buyers with $50K–$500K in brokerage accounts considering liquidation for a down payment. Questions: 1. What's the most expensive tax mistake you've seen a client make when selling stock for a home purchase? We're looking for a specific scenario — wrong account type, didn't use specific identification, triggered short-term gains unnecessarily, etc. 2. When a borrower's down payment comes from a recent stock sale, what changes about the mortgage underwriting process? What documentation do lenders require, how far in advance should the borrower liquidate, and what happens when a large deposit from a stock sale appears without a proper paper trail? 3. At what portfolio size does borrowing against stock (SBLOC, pledged-asset mortgage, margin loan) start to make more sense than selling? We want real thresholds, current rate comparisons, and the honest risks — especially margin call scenarios. 4. For someone with ESPP or RSU stock who wants to buy a home, what's the one thing they need to understand about their tax situation that's different from selling regular brokerage stock? 5. What's your advice for a client who is emotionally afraid to sell stock they've held for years, even though they need the money for a home? We're looking for the psychological framing, not just the math.
C
clever
We're updating a long-form guide on buying a second home while renting out your first. Our article includes first-person experience from someone who did this, and we're layering in named expert insights to cover the financial, tax, and legal angles that readers consistently ask about on forums like BiggerPockets and Reddit. We need experts who handle these situations regularly. Questions (answer any or all): 1. When a borrower wants to keep their current home and buy a second one, how do lenders count projected rental income from the first property toward qualifying? Can you explain the 75% offset rule and what documentation (like Fannie Mae Form 1007) is involved? What catches people off guard? 2. What's the biggest tax mistake you see first-time landlords make when they convert their primary residence to a rental? We're especially interested in the Section 121 capital gains exclusion timeline — when should someone plan to sell vs. hold long-term, and what's the cost of missing that window? 3. Many homeowners debate forming an LLC for a single rental property. When does an LLC make sense and when is it overkill? 4. What compliance or legal requirements do first-time landlords often miss — the kind that can result in fines or liability exposure? 5. For someone locked into a sub-4% mortgage rate on their current home, how should they think about the rent vs. sell decision in a market where second-home rates are above 7%? Is there a simple breakeven framework you'd walk a client through?