Glossary
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- absolute fee
simple title (fee simple)
- A title that is
unqualified; the best title one can obtain; conveys the highest bundle
of rights.
- abstract
- A condensed history
of the title to a property, consisting of a summary of the original
grant and all subsequent conveyances and encumbrances relating to
the particular parcel of real estate.
- acceleration
- The clause in
a mortgage or trust deed that stipulates the entire debt is due immediately,
if the mortgagor defaults under the terms of the contract.
- acknowledgment
- A notarization
on a legal document attesting to the validity of the signatures affixed
hereto.
- acquisition
cost
- Under FHA, the
purchase price or appraised value plus the estimated closing costs.
- actual notice
- In a real estate
transaction, the verbal or written communication of facts pertinent
to the transaction, i.e., the physical condition of the property.
- add-on rate
- Method of computing
interest whereby interest is charged on the entire principal amount
for the specified term, regardless of any periodic repayments of
principal that are made.
- adjustable-rate
mortgage (ARM)
- A variable-interest-rate
loan.
- adjusted book
basis
- Purchase price
of a property plus any capital improvements minus accrued depreciation,
if any, to the date of the sale.
- administered
price system FNMA
- securities purchasing
procedure where required yields are adjusted daily to reflect financial
market factors.
- all-inclusive
encumbrance
- See wraparound
encumbrance.
- allodial system
- Land ownership
free and clear of any rent or service due the government.
- ALTA policy
- American Land
Title Association title insurance policy; the most comprehensive
form.
- amortization
- The systematic
repayment of a loan through periodic installments of principal and
interest over the entire term of the loan agreement.
- annual percentage
rate (APR)
- The effective
interest rate.
- annuity
- A series of income
payments or receipts over a period of years.
- appraisal
- An estimate of
the value of a property based upon comparison of real estate prices
and the market for real estate.
- assessed value
- A property's adjusted
actual market value to establish property taxes.
- assets
- All things of
value, encumbered or not, owned by a person, corporation or other
entity.
- assignment
- The transfer of
an interest in a bond, mortgage, lease or other instrument, in writing,
by the assignor to the assignee.
- assumed
- Buying a property
and taking over or assuming the responsibility for the existing mortgage.
- auction
- Selling property
to the highest bidder.
- avulsion
- A sudden separation
of land caused by flooding, earthquake or other physical disruption;
affects the fixity of real estate.
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- baby-boomers
- Name given babies born after World War II, now a significant
bubble in our population.
- balanced trust
- See combination trust.
- balloon payment
- The final payment of a partially amortized loan that
is considerably larger than the required periodic payments.
- banker's rule
- Using a 360-day year for prorating. bankrupt No longer
able to pay debts.
- basis points
- There are 100 basis points in one percent; thus, 50
basis points equal one-half percent.
- beneficiary
- The lender in a trust deed financing arrangement.
- BIF
- Bank Insurance Fund.
- bill of sale
- The document by which personal property ownership
is transferred.
- biweekly loan
- A loan designed to be repaid twice monthly to match
many borrowers payroll schedules.
- blanket mortgage
- A mortgage secured by the pledging of more than one
property a ' s collateral.
- blended rate
- Adjusted rate of interest on loan assumption.
- blue-sky provision
- Requiring full disclosure of all risks in a limited
partnership solicitation under the Uniform Partnership Act.
- bonds
- Securities issued to raise funds by a corporation
or a governing body, backed by a promise to pay a certain sum of
money on a specific date,plus interest
- book value
- Acquisition costs less any accrued depreciation.
- boot
- In an exchange, something of value given in addition
to like-kind property, e.g., "this acre and cash to boot"
- break even point
- That point at which gross income equals fixed costs
plus variable costs.
- bridge loan
- An equity loan made for a short time to raise money
for a special purpose.
- budget loan
- Loan payments include a portion for taxes and insurance,as
well as principal and interest.
- building and loan associations
- Obsolete term for savings and loan associations. built-up
rate See weighted rate.
- bullet loan
- See rollover loan and term loan.
- bundle of rights
- All of the ownership rights in real estate.
- buy downs
- Allows loans to be made at less-than-market interest
rates by paying front-end discounts.
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- Cal-Vet
- A special program
for eligible California veterans to help them finance the purchase
of farms and ranches within the state.
- capital gains
- Income earned
from the sale of investments, where the net sales price exceeds the
adjusted book basis.
- capital losses
- Losses derived
from the sale of investments, where the net sales price is less than
the adjusted book basis..
- capitalization
- Method of estimating
a property's value by considering net annual income as a percentage
of a reasonable rate of return on an investment. (Income - Rate =
Value.).
- caps
- Yearly and/or
life-of-loan limitations on amounts of variations allowed when adjusting
interest on variable-rate loans.
- carry back
- Seller agrees
to finance buyer in order to complete a property sale.
- cash flow
- Regular income
from property rentals.
- certificate
of eligibility
- A veteran's evidence
of entitlement for a V.A. guaranteed loan.
- certificate
of reasonable value (CRV)
- The appraised
value of a property being pledged as collateral for a D.A. guaranteed
loan.
- certificate
of savings
- A long-term savings
plan. chattel Personal property.
- CLIC
- Commercial Leasehold
Insurance Co oration- owned
- closing statements
- Final arrangements
to transfer title of property,as well as allocate charges and credits.
- cloud
- An outstanding
encumbrance that, if valid, would affect or impair the owner's property
title.
- co-insurance
- A FHA program
that allows loan originators to directly underwrite housing project
loans, shortening processing time considerably.
- co-insured
- All parties with
an interest in properties named as insured, e.g., the owner and the
lender.
- collateral
- Property, real
or personal, pledged as security to back up a promise.
- combination
trust
- A trust that participates
in real estate investments as both financier and investor.
- commercial
banks
- Established primarily
to serve the community's business needs. Do not invest heavily in
real estate loans.
- commercial
leasehold insurance
- See CLIC.
- commercial,
paper
- Loans issued by
banks and savings institutions for business enterprises.
- commitment
- A promise by a
lender to make a loan at a future date on specified terms and conditions.
A promise by an investor to purchase a specified amount of mortgages
from the loan originator.
- commitment
fee
- Charge imposed
for granting an agreement either to lend or to purchase at a future
date.
- common law
marriage
- Recognized in
California as eligible for community property.
- community property
- All property acquired
by either spouse during marriage and owned equally, except that received
by gift, devise or descent.
- Community Re-investment
Act (CRA)
- Provides that
financial institutions meet the credit needs of all citizens of a
community.
- comp
- Also known as
a comparable, property similar to subject property used as a basis
of comparison in market data appraising method.
- completion
bond
- A third-party
guarantee that the builder will complete construction.
- compound interest
- Interest paid
on the original principal and also on the accrued interest.
- concurrent
ownership
- Real estate ownership
by more than one party,such as partnerships, tenants in common, community
property and joint tenancy.
- condemnation
- See eminent domain.
- condominium
- Fee simple ownership
of an apartment or a unit, generally in a
- constant payment
mortgage
- Fixed payments
of principal and interest over the life of a loan.
- construction
loan
- Open-end mortgage
loan, usually for a short term, to finance the actual construction
of buildings on a property.
- constructive
notice
- In a real estate
transaction, the express revelation of a fact, e.g., matters of public
record.
- contingent
liability
- Responsibility
that exists beyond the primary boundaries of a transaction.
- contract rate
- See nominal rate.
- conventional
loan
- Mortgage loan
made without any additional guarantees for repayment, such as FHA
insurance, D.A. guarantees, or private insurance; usually given at
an 80 percent loan-to-value (IN) ratio.
- conversion
- 'A change from
a rental format to one of individual ownership.
- convertible
loan
- Borrower can change
to a fixed rate any time during the life of an adjustable-rate loan.
- cooperative
- A residential
multi-family building with the title in a trust or corporation that
is owned and operated for the benefit of the persons living therein,
who are beneficial owners of the trust or stockholders in the corporation,
each possessing a proprietary lease. All owners have joint liability
for the mortgage on the property.
- corporation
- An entity created
to act as an individual when engaging in business and finance, but
limiting the personal liability of its stockholders.
- correspondent
- A mortgage banker.
- cosigners
- Additional signers
to a financial agreement adding their guarantees to that of the borrowers.
- cost approach
- Process of appraising
the value of a property by adding the estimated value of the land
to the appraiser's calculations of the replacement cost of the building,
less depreciation.
- cost recovery
- Now used to describe
depreciation.
- coupon bonds
- Bonds with interest
coupons attached that are removed as they become due and cashed by
their bearer. Also known as bearer bonds.
- covenant of
seisin
- Clause in a mortgage
that warrants that the mortgagor has title to the property and the
authority to pledge it as collateral.
- covenants that
run with the land
- Conditions that
are recorded against property that remain in effect through changes
in ownership.
- credit loan
- Mortgage issued
strictly upon the financial strength of a borrower, without at re
for collateral.
- credit report
- Document indicating
credit circumstances of a borrower of a real estate loan.
- credit union
- Organization formed
by a homogeneous group for banking purposes, e.g., a government employees
credit union.
- cross-defaulting
clause
- Usually included
in a junior loan instrument; stipulates that a default in the senior
encumbrance also triggers a default in the junior loan.
- crunch down
- Recasting an existing
loan to a lower level to avoid a foreclosure.
- cycle
- A period of time
within which the economic ups and downs of business or real estate
takes place.
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- debenture
- A bond issued
without any specific collateral pledge, but secured by the general
assets of the issuer.
- debt ratio
- The relationship
between a borrower's long-term debt payments and monthly income.
- deed
- A document used
to transfer ownership of real property.
- deed in lieu
of foreclosure
- Voluntarily signing
over to the creditor the property pledged as collateral on a defaulted
loan.
- deed of trust
- A financing instrument
in which the borrower/trustor conveys title of the collateral to
a trustee to be held in trust for the beneficiary/lender. When the
loan is repaid, title is reconveyed to the trustor. If a default
occurs, the trustee exercises the power of sale on behalf of the
beneficiary.
- default
- Nonperformance
of a duty; failure to meet an obligation when due.
- defeasance
clause
- Clause included
in a loan instrument that provides for the cancellation of the mortgagee's
interest when the debt has been paid in full.
- deficiency
judgment
- A personal judgments
levied against the mortgagor under the terms of the note, when a
mortgage foreclosure sale does not produce sufficient funds to repay
the mortgagee the outstanding loan balance, interest and costs.
- de la Cuesta
Precedent-setting case
- (Fidelity Federal
Savings v. de la Cuesta) in which the United States Supreme Court
ruled on June 28, 1982, that the due-on-sale clause was legally enforceable.
- delinquency
- Late payments
or nonpayment of principal, interest, taxes, or insurance.
- Depository
Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980.
- Authorized deregulation
of banks and savings institutions.
- depreciation
- Loss of value
due to all causes, but usually considered to include physical deterioration,
functional obsolescence and economic obsolescence.
- deregulation
- See Depository
Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980.
- direct endorsement
program
- An FHA special
program allowing eligible lenders the right to underwrite the loans
that they create.
- direct sales
comparison approach
- See market-data
approach.
- disclosures
- Information pertinent
to a property's value required to be imparted to buyers and borrowers
in California.
- discount
- Difference between
the face amount of a note or mortgage and the price at which the
instrument is sold in the secondary market.
- discount rate
- The rate that
the Fed charges its members for funds borrowed on collateralized
loans.
- discounted
cash flow
- Present value
of income stream.
- discretionary
income
- Earned funds left
over for investment after allocations for necessities and reserves.
- disintermediation
- Rapid withdrawal
of money from savings accounts.
- disposable
personal income
- 'Personal income
less allocations for necessities; available for personal consumption.
- draws
- A system of payments
to a contractor under a construction loan.
- due-on-sale
clause
- A clause that
stipulates that a borrower cannot sell or transfer the property without
prior written consent of the lender.
- V.A.
- Department of
Veterans Affairs; since 1944, the D.A. has guaranteed the top portion
of an eligible veteran's loan.
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- easement
- Access rights
over someone else's property.
- ECOA
- See Equal Credit
Opportunity Act (ECO).
- effective rate
- Actual interest
rate paid on a loan, regardless of the rate stipulated in the contract.
- eminent domain
- The government's
sovereign power of condemnation over private property for the benefit
of the community; an example of police power.
- encroachment
- Improvements overlapping
adjoining property.
- encumbrance
- Any lien against
a property or any restriction in its use, such as an easement; a
right or interest in a property held by one who is the legal owner.
- endowment
- A permanent source
of income.
- English Common
Law
- Established allodial
system of real property ownership.
- entitlement
- The amount of
guarantee a veteran is eligible to secure on a D.A. loan.
- Equal Credit
Opportunity Act (ECO)
- Provides for the
elimination of discrimination for age, sex and race in finance. equitable
ownership Less than a fee simple estate, as that which a vendee owns
under a land contract.
- equitable redemption
period
- A period of time
established by custom, usually six months, that allows a defaulting
borrower to redeem property by bringing all payments current before
foreclosure. equitable rights The rights of a less-than-fee-simple
owner to occupy, lease or sell the subject property.
- equitable title
- See equitable
ownership.
- equity
- The interest or
value a property owner has in the property over and above any liens
against it.
- equity loans
- Monies loaned
to borrowers based on a percentage of the equity held in the collateral
property.
- equity trust
- An investment
trust dealing in ownerships rather than in financing.
- escalator clause
- Clause in a loan
instrument providing for increases in payments or interest based
upon predetermined schedules or upon a specific economic index, such
as the consumer price index. See variable-rate mortgage.
- escrow
- A third-party
agent that receives, holds and/or disburses, certain funds or documents
upon the performance of certain conditions; the closing agent in
a real estate transaction.
- estoppel certificate
- Legal form that
states the unpaid balance due on the loan as of a specified date
and prevents, or "stops," any purchaser of the loan from
claiming that the original borrower owes more than the stated amount.
- estate tax
- A tax imposed
by federal and state agencies on the net value of a deceased's estate
in excess of $600,000.
- eviction
- Legally dispossessing
occupants of real property for unlawful detainer.
- exchange
- A method for postponing
income taxes on capital gains by trading like-kind of property. See
Section 1031, Internal Revenue Code.
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- face value
- The stated amount
of a security. See par.
- Farm Credit
System
- A complete national
banking system for financing the activities of farmers and ranchers.
- FDIC
- Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation; provides insurance of $100,000 per account
and supervises the operations of banks that qualify for membership
in the insurance program.
- Fed
- The United States
Federal Reserve System.
federal funds rate The rate the Fed charges its members on uncollateralized
loans.
- Federal Reserve
System
- The nation's economic
manager, the Fed regulates its member commercial banks.
- fee appraiser
- Also known as
a field appraiser One who is not an employee of a particular fiduciary
lender; an independent agent.
- fee simple
absolute
- See absolute fee
simple title (fee simple).
- FHA
- Federal Housing
Administration; insures loans made by approved lenders to qualified
borrowers in accordance with its regulations.
- FHLB
- Federal Home Loan
Bank System; serves and regulates the national savings and loan associations,
much like the Federal Reserve System does for the commercial banking
industry.
- FHLMC
- Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation; provides a secondary market for mortgages.
- fictitious
deeds of trust
- Comprehensive
master deeds of trust established by lenders to cover all areas of
trust deed finance; referred to in shorter versions of trust deeds.
- fiduciary
- A person in a
position of trust and confidence who represents another; known as
the agent.
- financial intermediary
- Financial institution
that accepts deposits and makes loans.
- financial service
center
- A one-stop money
shop, like Sears, that provides insurance, real estate sales, real
estate loans and banking services in one location.
- financial statement
- A compilation
of a borrower's assets, liabilities and earnings records.
- fine-tune
- A method by which
the Fed controls the nation's economy by controlling the amount of
money in circulation.
- FIRREA
- The Financial
Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989.
- first mortgage
- A loan that has
priority as a lien over all other loans. See senior loan.
- fixed costs
- Regularly impacting
operating expenses such as taxes, insurance and maintenance.
- fixed-rate
loan
- The interest rate
remains constant over term of loan.
- fixture
- Article of personal
property attached permanently to a building or land so that it becomes
part of the real property.
- FMHA
- Farmers Home Administration;
lends funds to farmers unable to obtain financial assistance from
other sources.
- FNMA
- Federal National
Mortgage Association; provides secondary mortgage market.
FOMC
- Federal Open Market
Committee; directs and regulates the Federal Reserve System's open-market
operations.
- forbearance
- The postponement
for a limited time of a portion or all of the payments on a loan
in jeopardy of foreclosure. See moratorium.
- foreclosure
- Court action initiated
by a lender for the purpose of recovering the borrower's real estate
to pay the balance owed on a defaulted loan.
- freehold estate
- See absolute fee
simple title (fee simple).
- front-end zero
- Under a conventional
loan, a borrower may elect to finance all of the mortgage insurance
premium, thus incurring no cash obligation for this charge at closing.
- front money
- Money required
from a borrower as a down payment.
- FSLIC
- Federal Savings
and Loan Insurance Corporation; provides insurance of $100,000 per
account and supervises operations of its member savings and loan
associations. Now defunct.
- funding fee
- A front-end charge
of one percent of the loan amount paid by the borrower when securing
a DVA guaranteed loan.
- future worth
- The compounding
increase in the value of money over time.
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- gap
- A short-term,
high-interest loan covering the possible gap in construction financing
if rent-up requirements are not met and the long-term lender does
not vest takeout mortgage in full and/or the construction mortgagee
holds back a portion of the interim financing.
- Garn-St. Germain
Bill
- See Depository
Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980.
- general lien
- A lien on all
property of a debtor, both real and personal.
- general obligation
bonds
- Public improvement
bonds to be paid from property taxes.
- general partner
- In a limited partnership,
the individual or company acquiring, organizing and managing the
investment.
- gift tax
- A federal tax
on gifts in excess of $10,000 per donee per year.
- GNMA
- Government National
Mortgage Association; created in 1968 to take over special assistance
and liquidation functions of FNMA; participates in the secondary
market through its mortgage-backed securities pools.
- grace period
- A time allowed,
usually ten days, for making late payments without a penalty being
imposed.
- graduated payment
mortgage (GPM)
- Payments are adjustable.
- granting clause
- Words of conveyance
in a deed or mortgage.
- gross income
- 'Obtained annual
income from a property before any expenses are deducted.
- gross rent
multiplier (GRM)
- Comparing imputed
market rents to estimate the value of residential real estate by
the income approach.
- ground rents
- Perpetual leases
given by landowners to tenants, used predominantly in Maryland and
Pennsylvania prior to 1885. The owner retained title and the lessee
received the right of possession and use.
- growing equity
mortgage (GEM)
- A loan allowing
a borrower to accelerate its satisfaction by making additional monthly
principal payments.
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- hard money
loan
- Cash loan to a
borrower.
- hazard insurance
- Insurance covering
physical damage to property.
- hazardous waste
- Toxic waste materials
jeopardizing the value of real estate.
- hereditaments
- Things capable
of being inherited.
- holdback'
- Funds not issued
in a construction loan due to failure to lease up to required minimum.
- HUD
- Department of
Housing and Urban Development; regulates FHA and GNMA.
- hybrid financing
- Mixing conventional
forms of finance to create a new approach; the participation loan;
the convertible loan.
- hypothecation
- The pledge of
real estate as security without surrendering possession of the property.
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- impounding
of funds
- Fund set up by
a lender to collect and hold monthly payments from the borrower for
taxes and hazard insurance until they are due.
- income approach
- Estimating the
value of an income-producing property by capitalizing its net annual
income.
- income ratio
- The relationship
between a borrower's total income and the amount needed to make one
month's mortgage payment.
- index
- Utilized to set
interest rates, such as the six-month Treasury bill rate.
- industrial
development bond
- A bond that allows
private investors to finance apartment and commercial developments
by using tax-exempt, inexpensive funds. TRA '86 imposed severe restrictions
on this financing technique.
- industrial
revenue bonds
- Bonds issued for
developing an industrial park or for constructing a building for
lease to commercial tenants.
- inheritability
- The right to leave
an estate to a specific designee.
- installment
sale
- Paying for property
over time.
- interest
- Money paid for
the use of money.
- interest factor
(IF)
- From a table,
the numbers derived from formulas designed to indicate the present
or future worth of money.
- interest only
- A term loan arrangement
calling for payments of interest only, not to include any amount
for principal.
- interim financing
- See construction
loan.
- intermediaries
- Financial fiduciaries
including banks, savings institutions and life insurance companies.
- investment
conduit
- See REIT.
- B>involuntary
lien
- Lien imposed upon
a property by law, such as a lien for delinquent taxes, a mechanic's
lien or a judgment.
- IRA
- Individual retirement
account into which $2,000 can be deposited annually in an approved
tax deferment program.
TRA'86 created limitations on IRAs.
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- joint venture
- Type of equity
participation in which the lender puts up the funds, the developer
contributes special expertise and the two become partners in the
project.
- judgment decree
- Specifies the
awards made by the court in a civil case.
- judgment lien
- Charge upon the
property of a debtor resulting from a court decree, properly entered,
declaring that the owner is indebted and fixing the amount of the
indebtedness.
- judicial foreclosure
- A court procedure
utilized by lenders to secure clear title to a property under a defaulted
real estate loan.
- junior loan
- A loan in subordinate
priority position to a senior loan.
- junior mortgage
- A second mortgage;
a lien that is subordinate to a first mortgage.
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- Keogh plan
- A retirement plan
for self-employed individuals who may deposit 25 percent of earned
income, up to $30,000 annually, into an approved tax deferment program.
- kicker
- A bonus paid to
a lender as an enticement to make a below-marketinterest rate loan.
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- laissez-faire
- A free market
system.
- land contract
- Real property
sales contract.
- late payment
charge
- Penalty imposed
for late payments. leaseback See sale-leaseback.
- leasehold estate
- An estate for
a fixed length of time, established when a landlord gives up possession
of real estate to a tenant; the tenant has an equitable interest
in the property, defined by the terms of a lease.
- leasehold lending
- Loans on leased
property, with satisfaction dates usually designed to impact 10 to
20 years prior to lease expiration.
- leasehold mortgage
- Mortgage loan
secured by the tenant's leasehold interest in a property.
- lease option
- A rental agreement
including a tenant's option to purchase the property.
- legal description
- Official definition
of the boundaries of a parcel of real estate that is on file at the
county recorder's office.
- legal title
- See asolute fee
simple title (fee simple).
- lessee
- The tenant in
a leasehold estate.
- lessor
- The owner or landlord
in a leasehold estate.
- leverage
- Using someone
else's money for the purchase of property.
- liabilities
- Debts incurred.
- lien
- A legal claim
by one party against the property of another assecurity for a debt.
- lien theory
- Borrowers retain
legal rights in the property pledged to the lender who has an equitable
interest in the collateral.
- lien waivers
- Documents signed
by subcontractors and suppliers indicating they have received payments
in full.
- life estate
- Less than a fee
simple ownership created for the life of anyone except the grantor.
- lifting clause
- Clause included
in a junior loan instrument that allows the underlying mortgage to
be replaced or refinanced as long as the amount of the new senior
mortgage does not exceed the amount of the first lien outstanding
at the time the junior loan was made.
- like kind
- In an exchange,
refers to real estate for real estate, e.g., a lot for an apartment
house. See Section 1031, Internal Revenue Code.
- limited partners
- In a syndicate
or regular partnership, the owners other than the general partners.
Liability is limited to the amount of their investment.
- line of credit
- An amount stipulated
by a commercial bank to an active customer on an annual basis. Must
be brought to zero on an agreed upon regular date.
- liquidity
- The cash position
of an individual, business or financial institution, measured by
cash on hand and securities that quickly convert into cash.
- lis pendens
- Indicates that
a law suit is in process.
- loan constant
- See mortgage constant.
- loan-to-value
(L/V) ratio
- The relationship
between the amount of a mortgage loan and the value of the collateral
property; expressed as a percentage.
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- Ml, M2, M3
- Measurements of
the United States money supply.
- market-data
approach
- Process of estimating
a property's value through exam ination and comparison of actual
sales of comparable properties; also know as the direct sales comparison
approach.
- market value
- The highest price
for which a property would sell, assuming a reasonable time for the
sale and a knowledgeable buyer and seller acting without duress
- master trusts
- See fictitious
deeds of trust.
- maturity
- Due date of a
loan.
- mechanic's
lien
- Imposed against
property for nonpayment of labor fees.
- MGIC
- Mortgage Guaranty
Insurance Corporation; provides insurance for the top five to 30
percent of mortgage loans made by approved lenders and qualified
borrowers.
- mill
- One-tenth (1/10)
of a cent (0.001); used in property tax assessments.
- mobile-home
loan
- Mortgage loan
on a large mobile home considered to be real property; usually drawn
for a shorter period than a conventional real estate mortgage.
- money
- A medium of exchange;
a storehouse of purchasing power, a standard value
- money market
certificate
- Special savings
plan offered by thrift institutions.
- money market
funds
- Noninsured, nonregulated
private investment pools.
- moral suasion
- A technique by
which the Fed indicates its wishes to its membe banks, precluding
more drastic actions to achieve desired goals.
- moratorium
- A temporary suspension
of payments due under a financing agreement in order to help a distressed
borrower recover and avoid a default and foreclosure.
- mortgage
- A conditional
transfer or pledge of real property as security for the payment of
a debt; the document used to create a mortgage lien.
- mortgage-backed
securities
- Mortgage pools
established by GNMA that act as collateral for the sale of pass-through
securities.
- mortgage banker
- Semifiduciary
financial intermediary who originates new mortgage loans, collects
payments, inspects the collateral and forecloses, if necessary.
- mortgagebroker
- Semifiduciary
who joins borrower and lender for a real estate loan, thereby earning
a placement fee.
- mortgage companies
- Businesses designed
to lend money on real or personal property, e.g., Household Finance
Company.
- mortgage constant
- Factor or multiplier
used for rapid computation of the annual payment needed to amortize
a loan.
- mortgage insurance
premium
- Payment for an
FHA or private mortgage insurance policy; can be paid in cash at
closing or included in monthly payments.
- B>mortgage
pool
- See mortgage-backed
securities.
- mortgage release
document
- Filed when loan
is satisfied.
- mortgage revenue
bond
- A type of industrial
development bond that is offered by state and local governments through
their housing financing agencies and is tax-exempt.
- mortgagee
- The lender in
a mortgage loan transaction.
- mortgagee's
title insurance
- An insurance policy
protecting the lender for the amount-of the loan in the event of
a future title dispute.
- mortgagor
- The borrower in
a mortgage loan transaction; owner of collateral pledged as security
for the mortgage.
- multiclass
mortgage securities
- Short-term or
long-term mortgage securities, with or without pass-through privileges.
- B>municipal
bonds
- Bonds issued for
purposes of financing public improvements, such as schools, parks
and renewal projects.
- municipal mortgage
enhancement
- An FNMA program
in which AAA-rated Fannie Mae mortgage-backed securities are exchanged
for the underlying mortgage on a tax-exempt multifamily project,
enabling the developer to secure money at the lowest rate; familiarly
called "Munie Mae."
[ Back
to Index ]
- naked title
- Synonym for absolute
fee simple title.
- negative amortization
- Loan balance increases
as a result of less-than-interestonly payments.
- net income
- Gross income less
operating costs.
- net worth
- Assets less liabilities.
- nominal rate
- The interest rate
stipulated in a contract.
- nonbank
- A consumer bank
that accepts demand deposits or makes commercial loans, but not both.
- nonfiduciary
- A source of funds
for real estate finance that owes no duty to others and can maintain
complete discretion over its activities because it invests its own
funds. Examples include title insurance companies, private loan companies
and individuals.
- nonjudicial
foreclosure
- See strict foreclosure.
- note
- A signed instrument
acknowledging a debt and promising repayment.
- notice of delinquency
In junior finance,
- Where the borrower
gives the senior lender permission to notify the junior lender in
the event of a default.
- novation
- Full substitution
of the original borrower by a new, qualified borrower; releases the
original maker of the loan from all liability.
[ Back
to Index ]
- offsite improvements
- Refers to improvements
made to land outside a lot's boundaries, such as the installation
of streets, sidewalks and sewers.
- open-end loan
- A loan providing
for future advances.
- open-market
operations
- The techniques
employed by the Fed in buying and selling government securities that,
in turn, control the amount of money in circulation.
- opportunity
cost
- Earnings available
on alternative investments. option See lease option.
- origination
fee
- Fee charged by
a lender or other agent for processing a loan application.
- OTS
- The Office of
Thrift Supervision.
- overriding
trust deed
- See wraparound
encumbrance.
- owner's title
insurance
- An insurance policy
protecting the buyer for the amount of the purchase price in the
event of a future title dispute.
[ Back
to Index ]
- package loan
- A loan that includes
certain equipment and appliances located or installed on the premises
in addition to the real property itself.
- par
- The face value
of a bond or security.
- partial release
- Removal of a specific
portion of the collateral from the lien of a mortgage.
- partially amortized
- Loan repayment
schedule that provides for equal payments of principal and interest
up to a certain stop date, at which time the balance of the principal
is due in full. See balloon payment.
- participation
financing
- Where a lender
also becomes a partner in development.
- participation
loan
- A loan in which
more than one lender or more than one borrower has an interest; a
loan in which the lender receives partial ownership in the enterprise
that is being financed.
- pass-throughs
- Payments on securities
sold in the secondary market that are sent directly to the investors.
- pension plans
- Public and private
retirement programs wherein donations are made during the working
years to develop a pool of funds to be paid to those who reach retirement
a .
- personal income
- A persoiys gross
income from all sources.
- personal property
- Movable property
that does not fit the definition of realty. PHA Public Housing Authority,
now under the aegis of HUD.
- placement fee
- Charge levied
by a mortgage broker for joining a borrower and a lender who subsequently
negotiate a loan agreement.
- pledged account
mortgage (PAM)
- Combines a GPM
with a subsidizing savings account to provide the borrower with a
low payment plan, the lender with level amortizing payments and the
seller with cash.
- points
- Amount of discount
on a mortgage loan stated as a percentage; one point equals one percent
of the face amount of the loan; a discount of one point raises the
net yield on the loan by one-eighth of one percent.
- police power
- The government's
authority to regulate the use of real estate for the public welfare.
- power-of-sale
clause
- In a deed of trust,
it authorizes a lender's attorney to "confess a judgment without
process" to speed a foreclosure.
- premium
- A fee paid for
an insurance policy.
- premium (in
excess of par)
- A price paid for
a security in excess of its face value.
- prepayment
clause
- Clause that provides
for a penalty to be levied against a borrower who repays a loan before
the specified due date.
- present worth
- The discounted
present-day value of money to be received in the future.
- primary interest
rate
- See prime rate.
- primary lenders
- Originators of
real estate loans.
- prime rate
- Interest rate
charged by fiduciary institutions to their AAA-rate borrowers.
- principal
- Amount of a debt;
one of the parties in a financial transaction.
- priority lien
position
- Established by
recording loan documents-first in time, first in right.
- private mortgage
insurance (PMI)
- Mortgage insurance
issued by private companies.
- property
- Anything capable
of being owned.
- Proposition
13
- A California referendum
limiting the amount of annual property tax increases.
- prorations
- At a real estate
sale and/or loan closing, the allocation of charge and credits to
the appropriate parties.
- purchase-money
loan
- Loan given by
a borrower to the seller as part of the urchase price of the property.
- pyramiding
through refinancing
- Method of acquiring
additional properties through refinancing existing mortgages.
[ Back
to Index ]
- quiet title
- A technique to
clear any clouds from a property's title; a suit to quie title.
[ Back
to Index ]
- ranches
- Land grants for
grazing or farming issued by the king of Spain to political or military
agencies in California.
- real estate
- Also termed realty
and real property; a portion of the earth's surface extending downward
to the center of the earth and upward into space, including all things
permanently attached thereto by nature or man and all legal rights
therein.
- real estate
investment trust
- See REIT.
- Real Estate
Mortgage Investment Conduit (REMIC)
- Created by TRA
'86; allows companies to be formed for trading in mortgage pools
and escaping double tax imposed on corporations.
- real estate
mortgage trust
- A trust dealing
in financing investments rather than in owning them.
- Real Estate
Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA)
- An act calling
for the revelation of all costs in anticipation of closing a real
estate transaction.
- real property
- See real estate.
- real property
sales contract
- Also known as
a land contract; usually drawn between individuals. It is a contract
by which the purchase price is paid in installments over a period
of time during which the purchaser has possession of the property,
but the seller retains title until the contract terms are completed.
- realized capital
gains
- Investment profits
not subject to income tax,e.g., profits from refinancing, exchanges
and installment sales.
- recast
- A redesign of
an existing loan balance into a new loan for the same period or longer
to reduce payments and help a distressed borrower.
- recognition
clause
- Clause included
in a blanket loan contract used to purchase a tract of land for subdivision
and development; provides for the protection of the rights of buyers
of small parcels in case of default on the part of the developer-promoter.
- recognized
capital gain
- Profits from the
sale of investments and subject to income tax; derived by subtracting
the adjusted book basis from the net proceeds of the sale.
- reconciliation
- In appraising,
estimating a single value from the different approaches; see weighted
average.
- reconveys
- In satisfying
a deed of trust, the trustee reconveys full title to the borr
- recording
- Formal filing
of documents affecting a property's title.
- redemption
right
- Time allotted
to the borrower to redeem collateral afte default by paying the debt
in full, interest accrued and all court costs.
- redlining
- The delineation
by a lending institution of those areas of a commu nity occupied
by less-than-desirable borrowers; not allowed under the Community
Reinvestment Act.
- registered
bond
- Issued to a specific
owner; it cannot be transferred without the owner's endorsement.
- Regulation
Z
- Truth-in-lending
provision that requires lenders to reveal the actual costs of borrowing.
- reinstate
- In delinquent
deeds of trust, the time prior to exercising the power sale in which
the errant borrower may bring the loan current.
- REIT
- Real estate investment
trust; an unincorporated trust, set up to invest in real estate,
that must have at least 100 investors; management, control and title
to the property are in the hands of trustees.
- release clause
- Provision that,
upon payment of a specific sum of money, the lien on a particular
parcel or portion of the collateral will be removed.
- release of
liability
- Removes old borrower
from further responsibility for repayment of an assumed loan.
- REMT
- Real estate mortgage
trust; similar to REIT, but investment is made in mortga securities
rather than in real estate.
- renegotiable
rate mortgage
- See rollover loan.
- rent-up
- Required pledges
from lessors of commercial space before the developer will be able
to obtain financing; usually represents the required rental income
needed to break even.
- replacement
cost
- The cost of replacing
the subject property with a new property having the same amenities
and utility.
- reserve requirements
- A flat percentage
of deposits, required by the Federal Reserve, to be set aside by
member banks as a safety measure.
- reserves
- Portion of business
earnings or bank assets set aside to cover possible losses or withdrawals
- RESPA
- Real Estate Settlement
Procedures Act.
restrictions Rules for use of real estate in an effort to preserve
value.
- return on investment
- Net annual income
divided by cash investment equals percentage return on the investment.
- revenue bonds
- Public improvement
bonds to be paid from the income generated by said im ments.
- reverse annuity
mortgage
- A system developed
for the elderly property owner in which regular monthly payments
can be received from a lender. When the total reaches a predesignated
amount, the owner then begins repaying the loan or sells the property.
- right of first
refusal
- Unlike an option
to buy or an option to renew a lease, which stipulates the terms
in advance, this approach allows the owner to secure a market price
bid that the occupant can be the first to accept or reject.
- ROI
- Return on investment;
see capitalization.
- rollover loan
- A loan that includes
a call date earlier than its normal amortization period; also called
a renegotiable rate loan or a bullet loa7L
- Roman Civil
Law
- Early private
property ownership codes enforced on California owners by the Spanish
rulers.
- RTC
- The Resolution
Trust Corporation.
[ Back
to Index ]
- SAIF
- The Savings Institutions
Insurance Fund.
- sale-buyback
- Financing arrangement
in which an investor buys property from a developer and immediately
sells it back under a long-term sales agreement wherein the investor
retains legal title.
- sale-leaseback
- Financing arrangement
whereby an investor purchases real estate owned and used by a business
corporation, then leases the property back to the business; may include
a buyback option.
- sale-leaseback-buyback
- See sale-leaseback.
- sales contract
- A financing device
used mainly in low down payment transactions where the vendor retains
legal title while the vendee acquires equitable ownership of the
property.
- savings and
loans
- Established primarily
as savings institutions, not commercial banks. Participate heavily
in residential real estate lending.
- secondary mortgage
market
- Source to which
originators of loans may sell them, freeing funds for continued lending;
aids in distributing mortgage funds on a national level from money-rich
to money-poor areas.
- Section 1031,
- Internal Revenue
Code Permits exchanges of like kinds of property as a method to postpone
paying income taxes on some capital gains.
- securitization
- The pooling of
real estate mortgages and trust deeds to act as collateral for the
sale of securities.
- security
- Something given,
deposited or pledged to make secure the fulfillment of an obligation,
usually the repayment of a debt; mortgages, trust deeds and other
financing instruments backed by collateral pledges are termed securities
for investment purposes.
- security agreement
- Financing contract
for personal property.
- self-terminating
trusts
- Evolved into savings
and loan associations.
- semifiduciary
- A general source
of funds for real estate finance, such as a mortgage broker or banker,
a mortgage or investment trust, a bond dealer or an endowment fund
manager. Distinguished from fiduciaries by the removal of a first-person
relationship that allows the semifiduciary to take more risks than
the primary financial fiduciary.
- senior loan
- A real estate
loan in first priority position.
- serial associations
- Precursors to
current thrift organizations.
- servicing fee
- Fee charged by
national lender's local representative who collects payments, disburses
funds for property taxes and insurance premiums, inspects the property
and forecloses, if necessary.
- shared appreciation
mortgage (SAM)
- Lender participates
in equity growth.
- simple interest
- Interest that
is charged only on the principal amount outstanding.
- sinking fund
- Monies deposited
in advance, in anticipation of satisfying a debt in the future.
- specific lien
- Lien against a
specified property of the debtor.
- specific performance
- The legal obligation
for the parties in a contract to fulfill their promises or be in
default and subject to a lawsuit.
- split-fee financing
- Equity participation
in which the lender purchases the land, leases it to the developer
and finances the leasehold improvements in return for a basic rental
plus a percentage of the profits.
- standby commitment
- Pledge by a permanent
lender to fund a long-term loan to take out the construction lender
upon successful completion of the building.
- standby takeout
commitment
- In construction
finance, the agreement by an interim lender to advance funds to take
out the construction lender.
- statutory redemption
period
- Legislated redemption
period allowing borrower time to redeem defaulted property.
- stop date
- Date on a term
loan when the balloon payment is due.
- straight-line
depreciation
- TRA '86 applied
to all improved investment properties put into service after January
1, 1987; 27.5 years for residential income and 31.5 years for commercial
properties.
- strict foreclosure
or strict forfeiture
- Under a land contract,
enables a lender to foreclose in as little as 30 days when the defaulting
borrower has less than 20 percent liability for its ultimate satisfaction.
- "subject
tiY'
- The recognition
by a buyer that a prior loan exists and not the legal obligation
to fulfill its retirements.
- subordination
- The act on the
part of a lender or a landowner in the case of a leasehold mortgage,
acknowledging by written recorded instrument that an existing loan
or interest can be placed in an inferior position to a new loan secured
by the same collateral.
- substitution
of entitlement
- Replaces one eligible
veteran with another on an existing DVA loan and restores entitlement
to the original veteran.
- suit to quiet
title
- See quiet title.
- sweat equity
- Increase in property
value due to physical efforts of improvement.
- syndicate
- An organization
of investors who pool their capital to make a real estate investment.
[ Back
to Index ]
- takeout
- See takeout mortgage.
- takeout mortgage
- A permanent loan,
obtained by prearrangement between a builder and a financial fiduciary,
to repay the interim lender at the completion of construction.
- tandem plan
- Investment plan
combining FNMA secondary market activities with GNMA guarantees.
- tax-exempt
bonds
- Issued to finance
public or private improvements for community benefit, interest from
which may be exempt from federal, state and local income taxes. Limited
application under TRA '86.
- tax-free gifts
- Gifts free from
any federal gift tax imposition; up to $10,000 annually from each
donor to each donee.
- tax-increment
financing
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