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T
Table Funding
A financing technique that occurs when a correspondent lender
or lender closes a mortgage loan with funds belonging to an acquiring
investor and immediately assigns the loan to that investor.
Tenancy by the entirety
A type of joint tenancy of property that provides right of survivorship
and is available only to a husband and wife. Contrast with tenancy
in common.
Tenancy
in common
A type of joint tenancy in a property without right of survivorship.
Contrast with tenancy by the entirety and with joint tenancy.
Tenant-stockholder
The obligee for a cooperative share loan, who is both a stockholder
in a cooperative corporation and a tenant of the unit under a
proprietary lease or occupancy agreement.
Third-party
origination
A process by which a lender uses another party to completely or
partially originate, process, underwrite, close, fund, or package
the mortgages it plans to deliver to the secondary mortgage market.
See mortgage broker.
Title
A legal document evidencing a person's right to or ownership of
a property.
Title
company
A company that specializes in examining and insuring titles to
real estate.
Title
insurance
Insurance that protects the lender (lender's policy) or the buyer
(owner's policy) against loss arising from disputes over ownership
of a property.
Title
search
A check of the title records to ensure that the seller is the
legal owner of the property and that there are no liens or other
claims outstanding.
Total
expense ratio
Total obligations as a percentage of gross monthly income. The
total expense ratio includes monthly housing expenses plus other
monthly debts.
Trade
equity
Equity that results from a property purchaser giving his or her
existing property (or an asset other than real estate) as trade
as all or part of the down payment for the property that is being
purchased.
Transfer
of ownership
Any means by which the ownership of a property changes hands.
Lenders consider all of the following situations to be a transfer
of ownership: the purchase of a property "subject to"
the mortgage, the assumption of the mortgage debt by the property
purchaser, and any exchange of possession of the property under
a land sales contract or any other land trust device. In cases
in which an inter vivos revocable trust is the borrower, lenders
also consider any transfer of a beneficial interest in the trust
to be a transfer of ownership.
Transfer
tax
State or local tax payable when title passes from one owner to
another.
Treasury
index
An index that is used to determine interest rate changes for certain
adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) plans. It is based on the results
of auctions that the U.S. Treasury holds for its Treasury bills
and securities or is derived from the U.S. Treasury's daily yield
curve, which is based on the closing market bid yields on actively
traded Treasury securities in the over-the-counter market. See
adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM).
Truth-in-Lending
A federal law that requires lenders to fully disclose, in writing,
the terms and conditions of a mortgage, including the annual percentage
rate (APR) and other charges.
Two-step
mortgage
An adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) that has one interest rate for
the first five or seven years of its mortgage term and a different
interest rate for the remainder of the amortization term.
Two-
to four-family property
A property that consists of a structure that provides living space
(dwelling units) for two to four families, although ownership
of the structure is evidenced by a single deed.
Trustee
A fiduciary who holds or controls property for the benefit of
another
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