Hi, For rates - this is how it works in Bank rates - I have always worked for banks - broker are a different pay/rate - either you pay points for the rate and pay me - or the price is 0 points to you for the rate and the bank pays me. Your rate it determined by who pays for the rate, you or the bank, and if you want your closing costs covered that will make your rate higher - in other words, the more you pay into the cost of the rate, the lower your rate will be. I am supposed to collect 1 point for the rate - and this is how I am paid and how my boss is paid - so I do not keep the whole 1 point for the rate. So if you wanted to pay me for the rate, today on a 15 year fixed rate loan, purchase - loan amount less than 417,000, single family home, 20% or more down payment, FICO score over 740 - you would have the following options for rate for a 60 day lock -
3.875% = .350% cost to you, 4.00% = 0 points to you for the rate, 4.125% = .375% for the rate credit and 4.250% = + .750 credit to you for the rate.
Three days ago - add about .375% to each rate the cost for the rate was about the same - so it would appear this is about when your rate was locked. The rates have been on a real roller coaster these days. And 4.250% has been a very consistant 15 year fixed rate for a while - so locking in that rate was not a bad call - based on the last few weeks.
Once the rate is locked, you are protected from rate increase, but when rates go down - which they have been for the last 3 days - you are locked at the higher price - however, with a float down, if you do not pay a float down fee - the rate must go down about .50% before the bank can lower your rate and not lose money on the loan - because once they lock your loan amount and rate - they put an order in on your mortgage money - and they are forecasting profit and loss based on your future loan and rate (not 100% accurate analogy on my part - it's a very complicated and convoluted process - but the rate and terms of your loan does affect their balance sheets - and the mortgage department is charged by the Bank to remove, relock and lower a rate.)
On a 15 year fixed rate mortgage - if the loan officer has collected the necessary 1 point (either you pay or the rate sheet pays) the bank mortgage profit is at about 1.75% - of which the bank pays the loan officer about .50 - to about .70 (on a 200,000 loan that's 1,000 to 1,400) - and the mortgage department uses the rest to pay the loan officer's manager, his manager - and his manager - the building costs, marketing - well everything it takes to run a division of a bank. So the float down option that is not paid for comes out of the manager's profits on your loan - and the cost to a bank for a free float down is - about .625% - with the new rules in place, a Bank Loan officer cannot allow any cost for the loan to be reduced from our pay - or commission - it must come from the managers profit - and while they give us some margin - .625% is most of their profit. Before the new lending laws - I could reduce my profit and give you the benefit - and usually the manager split the cost for the discount with me - but the new rules are in play -and as predicted - the customer is paying for the new Frank/Dodd and Fed rules.
It is RARE that anyone locks at the bottom of the market - you are very very close! If you loan officer could lower the rate - they would - we are all paid commission - and only when your loan closes - and THE LAST thing we want is a customer who is unhappy with the rate - the loan - or us - and we do all we can to fix what we can to make you happy.
I hope this helps you to understand why your rate costs you - and us what it costs ...