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Originally posted by rxor49 View PostI have no comment on mortgages. However, you should check your loan documents. Mine say I need 20% of principal in my checking acct on day 90 and day 365 post-origination of the loan. At 2 years out, you likely don't need to meet the liquidity requirement anymore.
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Originally posted by rxor49 View PostI have no comment on mortgages. However, you should check your loan documents. Mine say I need 20% of principal in my checking acct on day 90 and day 365 post-origination of the loan. At 2 years out, you likely don't need to meet the liquidity requirement anymore.
Thanks very much! if thats the case then Id be a little upset at the lack of transparency as Ive asked the agent about this in the past but gotten not a 100% striaght answer, esp since their banking is so relationship based
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Originally posted by Lordosis View PostI do not think that mortgage rate is very competitive right now. I was able to get less than that six months ago. I realize this might have something to do with region. But I would hate to have to lock my money up in a low-interest-rate environment just to secure a not great mortgage.
Also also if you are considering an arm do you plan on paying the house off quickly or would you want to stretch it out over the term of the mortgage. If you are planning on paying it off in 5 to 7 years then it might be a good deal. Otherwise they do not seem to be giving you a very good rate differential on those.
Thanks, as always!
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I do not think that mortgage rate is very competitive right now. I was able to get less than that six months ago. I realize this might have something to do with region. But I would hate to have to lock my money up in a low-interest-rate environment just to secure a not great mortgage.
Also also if you are considering an arm do you plan on paying the house off quickly or would you want to stretch it out over the term of the mortgage. If you are planning on paying it off in 5 to 7 years then it might be a good deal. Otherwise they do not seem to be giving you a very good rate differential on those.
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I have no comment on mortgages. However, you should check your loan documents. Mine say I need 20% of principal in my checking acct on day 90 and day 365 post-origination of the loan. At 2 years out, you likely don't need to meet the liquidity requirement anymore.
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Anyone have experience with First Republic Bank Mortgage?
Hello
I refinanced my student loans with FRB. They required 10% of the loan origination amount to be in the checking account to lock in the relationship rate of 3.35% for 10year fixed. My principal was 169000, currently around 145000 2 years in and I could pay it off tomorrow if I wanted to, plan on doing so soon.
I am looking into mortgages and I was wondering if anyone here has had experience with mortgages at FRB. We are discussing a hypothetical 700K home purchase with 20% down in their First Home Program (areas we are looking at do not qualify for Eagle home community loan), currently they are offering 30 year fixed @ 3.45%, 7/1 ARM @ 3.2% and 5/1 ARM @ 3.1%. Closing cost credit up to 4K. To take advantage of "relationship pricing" at this price point you must have 15% of the loan amount (around 84K in this instance) across all FR accounts (not sure if this is checking/savings/MM only or if investment accounts count as well, or else rates are 1 percentage point higher.
My questions are:
Has anyone gotten a mortgage with FRB want to share their experience?
Is it worth the "relationship banking" and tying up your cash with them, assuming you shop around and they are offering competitive rates? My experience with them with student loans have been excellent and I keep the 17K in my checking and have a separate Ally savings account for the rest of my cash.
My understanding is that the 84K can also be in investment accounts (?), does anyone have experience investing with FRB?
Thanks!
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