James Balletta-Owner/Broker
(516) 921-5025

C.R.B., G.R.I., C.R.S.

Licensed Real Estate Broker

 

Home

 

Property Search

Residential Homes for Sale

Featured Properties

Open Houses

 

Buyers & Sellers

Buyer/Seller Info

Market Analysis

Dream Home Finder

 

Local Area

About Long Island

Syosset History

Local Phone Numbers

Syosset Weather

 

About Us

About Lex

Agents

Contact Us

Guest Book

 

Tools/Links

Mortgage Information

News

Elite Concierge Services

Real Estate & Helpful Links

REAL ESTATE GLOSSARY

 

REAL ESTATE GLOSSARY

  S

  • Sale-Leaseback

  • Second Mortgage

  • Secondary Mortgage Market

  • Savings and Loans

  • Secured Loan

  • Security

  • Seller Take-Back

  • Servicer

  • Seller Versus Buyer Closing Costs

  • Servicing

  • Settlement

  • Settlement Sheet

  • Single-Family Properties

  • Six-Month Adjustable-Rate Mortgage

  • Special Deposit Account

  • Standard Payment Calculation

  • Subdivision

  • Step-Rate Mortgage

  • Subordinate Financing

  • Subsidized Second Mortgage

  • Survey

  • Sweat Equity

Sale-Leaseback

A technique in which a seller deeds property to a buyer for a consideration, and the buyer simultaneously leases the property back to the seller.

Second Mortgage

A mortgage that has a lien position subordinate to the first mortgage.

Secondary Mortgage Market

The buying and selling of existing mortgages.

Savings and Loans

Among the customers of Savings and Loans (S&Ls) are individual savers and residential and commercial property mortgage borrowers. Their traditional role for savings and loans is to accept deposits and make mortgage loans, but it has expanded recently to a focus on one- to four-family residential mortgages, multifamily mortgages and commercial mortgages.

These institutions are growing bigger, and the lines between S&Ls and commercial banks are not as defined as in the past.

Deposit insurance is provided through the Savings Association Insurance Fund, a subsidiary of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

Secured Loan

A loan that is backed by collateral

Security

The property that will be pledged as collateral for a loan.

Seller Take-Back

An agreement in which the owner of a property provides financing, often in combination with an assumable mortgage.

Servicer

An organization that collects principal and interest payments from borrowers and manages borrowers' escrow accounts. The servicer often services mortgages that have been purchased by an investor in the secondary mortgage market.

Seller Versus Buyer Closing Costs

Buyers and sellers often negotiate who will pay certain closing costs, and the results vary depending on the negotiated deal. In fact, it's not uncommon for a sales agreement to state that either the buyer or seller pays all closing costs. The agreement that you and the seller reach must be specified in the sales contract.

Your negotiations could depend on a variety of factors, including the quality of the home, how long the home has been on the market, whether there are any other interested buyers, and how motivated the seller is to sell the home.

Servicing

The collection of mortgage payments from borrowers and related responsibilities of a loan servicer.

Settlement

The final step before you get the keys to your home is a formal meeting called the closing. It is at this meeting in which ownership of the home is transferred from the seller to the buyer.

Also called a settlement in some parts of the country, the meeting is typically attended by the buyer(s), the seller(s), their attorneys if they have them, both real estate sales professionals, a representative of the lender, and the closing agent. The purpose is to make sure the property is physically and legally ready to be transferred to you.

Several closing costs will be paid at this meeting. These expenses are over and above the price of the property and are incurred when ownership of a property is transferred. Closing costs generally include a loan origination fee, an attorney's fee, taxes, an amount placed in escrow, and charges for obtaining title insurance, and a survey. Closing costs vary according to the area of the country.

Settlement Sheet

The HUD-1 Settlement Statement itemizes the amounts to be paid by the buyer and the seller at closing. The (blank) form is published by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).

Items on the statement include:

-- real estate commissions,
-- loan fees,
-- points, and
-- escrow amounts.

The form is filled out by your closing agent and must be signed by the buyer and the seller. The buyer should be allowed to review the HUD-1 Settlement Statement on the business day before the closing meeting to know the closing costs in advance.

The HUD-1 Settlement Statement is also known as the "closing statement" or "settlement sheet."

Single-Family Properties

One- to four-unit properties including detached homes, townhomes, condominiums, and cooperatives.

Click Here to continue to Next Page


Lex Realty - Long Island's Oldest Real Estate Office

Serving Syosset, Woodbury, Jericho, Bethpage, Plainview, Muttontown, Laurel Hollow, the Brookvilles, Oyster Bay, Oyster Bay Cove and all of the New York Area Real Estate Communities