Localfund.com - All about Fund and Investment
*Home>>>Income Fund

Mortgage lenders?


Does anyone know of a mortgage lender who is willing to lend to someone self employeed with other proof of income other that last two years income tax statements? I am a partner in an RV company and have easily made over 100-120k the last two years. I currently have almost no debt, less than $1000 a month. The broker I am working with is having a hard time getting the underwriters to accept my proof of income. My returns are under extension due to hurricane Katrina and Rita. I have offered bank statements to show, and even copies of my schedule K1 which clearly shows my partnership funds paid to me. My company CPA is even willing to send them an affidavit.This has been the only thing keeping me from closing on the property which the seller has accepted by offer on. I also have my VA elegibility letter. This really sucks because the one thing I am most sure of is my income and being truthful about it. I have paid cash for three new cars in the past two years, and have great cash flow.

You missed the boat. Last year you could have gotten a mortgage little or no documentation. One friend of mine borrowed 400k over the phone and was in his new house in 30 days.

Right now everyone is totally gun shy. If I were you I'd start with luxury home builders, most of these builders have connections because many of their buyers have very complicated income histories.

Why can't you use you past 1040's to verify your income? Have you contacted the IRS to see if they will help? Have you talked to your local congressman and explain the situation to him? Officially he might not be able to get directly involved but unofficially he might say something to somebody. These things do happen (especially for an Veteran).

Keep in mind mortgage companies hate dealing with the IRS. If you are lying and the IRS puts a lien on the house, that lien gets paid off first even before the mortgage. Therefore the mortgage company's losses can include the tax lien (loss of available equity to them) if the house goes into foreclosure.

There are loans meant just for self-employed people, and others who would have a hard time verifying income. They're called low doc and no doc loans. The low doc loan is a Stated Income loan. Basically, you tell me you make $X per month and I say OK. Your debt to income ratio has to be acceptable and you'll have to verify assets. The other is the no doc loan, or NINA -- no income/no assets. The lender doesn't want verification of either. In either case, your credit has to be pretty good, at least 720 or so. The loan-to-value ratio must fit guidelines in either case, and the rates will be higher to accommodate the additional risk.

Tags
  Investment Account   Invest Money   Invest in Gold   Invest Fund   Income Fund   HYIP   High Yield   Hedge Fund
Related information
  • Little $...little time...where to start?

    Rules: (if you are clueless) -NEVER buy stocks -NEVER buy a mutaul fund with ANY kind of LOAD (commission), I do not care what an advisor tells you. -ONLY buy class A shares of a mutual fund. I ...

  • Donating money to your own non profit organization?

    This would not be considered "income" on a non-profit organization's tax return. This would be considered contributions. If you expect to get paid back, this would be considered a ...

  • Unexpectedly retiring next month and plan to borrow from the 401k to pay off debts and remodel our home.?

    Any money borrowed from your 401K becomes due (usually within 60 days) when your employment ends. If you don't pay it back in the allowed time it becomes a withdraw and is reported to the IRS,...

  • Helper loan through my credit union.. what do you guys think?

    Most credit unions that offer HLPR loans also have a fixed rate option. This involves a fixed rate with a one percent discount for the first three years. Based on December rates, the current rate...

  • Are car accident lawsuit settlement taxable in Ontario, Canada?

    It's non-taxable as per CRA's website: "Amounts that are not taxed You do not have to include certain amounts in your income, including the following: - any GST/HST credit or ...

  • Health Care: can you answer the following 4 Q's?

    Yes, I can. but it's personal, and irrelevant to just about anyone else. So I don't see the purpose in it. We don't have "national health care" here in the US - whi...

  • 401(k) Penalties?

    a. Income tax plus 10% of the amount of the distribution b. You will pay the tax in the year of the distribution. If withholding has not been taken from the distribution, you will pay the tax...

  • Help! How can I start a business when I have no money, real bad credit and no rich friends or family?

    wow... sounds interesting. I wish you could give more details. The best way would be to advertise that you are looking for investors; draw up a business plan with a detailed list of expenses and pr...

  •  

    Categories--Copyright/IP Policy--Contact Webmaster