Picking a Mortgage is not impossible
Once upon a time in a neighbourhood near you there used to be a point in time when if you were searching to compare mortgage rates that you had to pick up the telephone and call several banks. Then you might have dug out the community phone book from its drawer and made a couple of calls to some mysterious corporation in the borrowing section. Then you would have asked a few associates to see if they knew a guy, who knew a guy who knew about mortgages deals. The whole process was incredibly challenging as you repeated the same story to anyone you talked with and truly never knew if you were realistically getting the best information. You just kept on going until you got the equivalent answer a couple of times and figured it should be right.
Nowadays you simply call a mortgage planner like Kelleway Mortgage Architects. As a mortgage planner they function as a conduit between the consumer and the lender. Did you know that mortgage lenders have used mortgage brokers to outsource the work of finding and qualifying borrowers? Mortgage planners like Kelleway Mortgage Architects are mortgage brokers who plan a way to make the whole mortgage transaction so it works for you bearing in mind your existing financial affairs.
Find your mortgage the wise way – just like more Canadians are doing every year. User a Mortgage Planner.
A previous high street bank customer recently said “We did definitely not even go to the bank this time for our recent house in Maple Ridge. We have been just so disappointed from the past experience that we did definitely not want to run all over from bank to financial institution. We figured we could certainly not do any worse so we just put ourselves in the mortgage planner’s hands and they did the searching around for us. We benefit from insurance brokers for insurance, why wouldn’t we benefit from a Mortgage Planner for our Mortgage”
This entry was posted on Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010 at 4:51 am and is filed under General. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.