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Don Taylor, Ph.D., CFA, CFP   Expert: Don Taylor, Ph.D., CFA, CFP
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Your best bet is to have a prime credit rating
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Avoiding a subprime mortgage
 

Dear Dr. Don,
I've heard about subprime loans. I am buying a new house and want to protect myself from all the bad things I've heard about them. How do I do this?
-- M.K. OK

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Dear M.K.,
Subprime references the borrower's credit rating, so the easiest way to avoid getting a subprime loan is to have a prime credit rating.

Don't know your credit rating? You can use Bankrate's FICO score estimator to get a free estimate or pay for your credit score from one or more of the three main credit bureaus -- Equifax, Experian or TransUnion. Bankrate has the contact information for all three firms.

Some other things to avoid include no-equity loans, no-documentation loans or ninja loans. A ninja loan is slang in the mortgage industry for no-income/no job -- the mortgage applicant doesn't document his or her income or employment.

No-equity loans are generally structured as 80/20 piggyback loans where the first mortgage is for 80 percent of the home's purchase price and a second mortgage finances the rest -- often with an adjustable-rate home equity line of credit, or HELOC.

Subprime lenders and borrowers counted on rising home prices and low interest rates to finesse traditional underwriting standards for mortgage lending, allowing home buyers to stretch in qualifying for financing. Seventeen rate increases by the Federal Reserve in its targeted federal funds rate and a stalled reality market later, should we be surprised that some subprime loans are unraveling?

Bankrate.com's corrections policy -- Posted: Sept. 5, 2007
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