JudicialTyranny
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2005
- Messages
- 746
If you get a mortgage from a broker, it is almost guaranteed to be sold. I used a broker for one of my houses and he told me the mortgage had been sold while we were at the settlement table. I had another mortgage through a bank and they eventually sold it also. It's not uncommon.hoosiergirl7 said:Just an FYI, we're military and we used USAA the first time we bought a house. As much as we love USAA as a financial & insurance institution, we will not use them again for a mortgage. They often sell their mortgages to other companies - ours was sold 2x's when we owned our first house and our mortgage went up because of this (at least one of the times it was sold). You might want to shop around for a mortgage. We did the Lending Tree thing and weren't really happy with any of the companies they referred to us. So a friend recommended Countrywide (she's a mortgage broker). They had the lowest rates that we were able to get at the time and they never sell their mortgages. However they did tell us that 1 in 4 of their mortgages are ones that get sold to them by other companies. We have been really happy with Countrywide and their staff.
Countrywide is one of the largest mortgage holders in the US, so generally they will keep their mortgages.
Countrywide had one of my mortgages (after it was sold to them) and I had trouble with them getting my escrow payment correct after the county screwed up the tax bill. It took about 3 years before the account didn't have overages or underages in it.
I don't see how selling a mortgage could increase a payment - they can't change the rate. Unless it was an adjustable mortgage and you were up for an adjustment upward, the only things that can increase the payment are increases in payments toward your property tax and/or insurance in escrow. That would occur if your property taxes went up (and they always seem to every year around here) or your insurance went up (and it's been doing that a lot lately). All of those things would have happened regardless of who held the mortgage.