A borrower makes monthly payments on their mortgage, but the loan was sold to Fannie Mae. Where do the borrower's payments go?
Correct Answer
B) To the mortgage servicer who forwards payments to Fannie Mae
Even when loans are sold to secondary market entities like Fannie Mae, borrowers typically continue making payments to a mortgage servicer, who collects payments and forwards them to the loan owner (investor) after deducting servicing fees.
Why This Is the Correct Answer
Even when loans are sold to secondary market entities like Fannie Mae, borrowers typically continue making payments to a mortgage servicer, who collects payments and forwards them to the loan owner (investor) after deducting servicing fees.
More Mortgage Knowledge Questions
A borrower is comparing two loan offers: Loan A has no points and 4.5% interest rate, Loan B has 2 points and 4.0% interest rate. The loan amount is $400,000. How much will the borrower pay upfront for the points on Loan B?
A lender charges a 1% origination fee on all loans. For a borrower obtaining a $250,000 mortgage, what is the maximum origination fee that can be charged without violating the points and fees test under the ATR/QM rule for a first-lien mortgage?
Under what circumstances can a Qualified Mortgage include a prepayment penalty?
A borrower is considering paying discount points to reduce their interest rate. Each point costs 1% of the loan amount and reduces the rate by 0.25%. On a $300,000 loan, how much would the borrower pay for 2 discount points?
A borrower asks about the difference between discount points and origination fees. What is the most accurate explanation?
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