All the "experts" tell you to "shop for rates" -- but
they don't tell you how to shop for rates. Without an
understanding of how loans are priced and lock-in periods, calling up a
lender to find out their interest rate could provide you with mostly
useless information. So if you didn't read the previous two
sections to this article, click here.
If you simply call up and ask for interest rates, a
lender can tell you anything. One lender may quote a "floating"
rate (seven or twelve day lock) and another may quote you a forty-five
day lock. Another lender may quote you the rate for two points and
another may quote you the rate for one point. If you call lenders
on different days, you could get widely different quotes because rates
don't stay the same every day.
That isn't shopping for interest rates.
When you call a lender to shop for rates, you have to
know at least two things: how many points you want to pay and how
long you want to lock in the rate. You don't have to really intend
to lock in the rate, but you have to give them all the same parameters
so that you get meaningful quotes. You also have to get your
quotes all on the same day.
By the way, you can't trust ads in the newspaper, on
the radio or on television. Ads are generally placed at least a
day in advance. Since rates change every day, ad quotes aren't
reliable.