Boston Herald

Lending Tree branches out to include value-estimate tool

- THE NATION’S HOUSING Kenneth R. Harney

Do we really need another Zillow Zestimates­tyle online gizmo to tell us what a computer model says our homes are worth? Probably not. There already are scads of real estate and mortgage websites that offer some type of automated home valuation feature, such as Redfin, Realtor.com, Chase Mortgage, RE/MAX, Homes.com, Bank of America Mortgage and Coldwell Banker, to name just a handful.

You’ve likely visited one or more of them — and you know that virtually none comes up with the same value conclusion­s. In fact, too often they don’t come anywhere near what local realty agents and profession­al appraisers tell you is the current market range for your property.

So why would a wellknown company venture out with a new version so late in the game? Lending Tree, the popular mortgage site, which debuted its own valuation model earlier this month, can tell you why: Because none of the other value estimators calculate your home equity or suggest how and when you might want to tap into it.

Is that important to you? Maybe, maybe not. Say you don’t pay much attention to what houses like yours are selling for lately so you’re not quite sure what your home is worth. You probably have a better sense of the balance on your mortgage since it’s typically included with your monthly loan statements. But without a good fix on the home value, you’re missing the essential ingredient.

Your equity at any moment is your home’s worth minus the debt against it. If you own a $400,000 house and you’ve got a $250,000 mortgage, you’ve got $150,000 in home equity, exclusive of transactio­n expenses if you sold the place.

But even with that knowledge, the question remains: What would it cost to turn some of that equity into spendable cash, whether for home improvemen­ts, kids’ college tuitions or some other worthy purpose?

This is where Lending Tree believes it has an edge: It’s got your mortgage balance informatio­n and can provide what it purports to be your home value estimate — together. Once you’ve indicated that you’d like to check rates and terms on home equity lines of credit or home equity loans, you’ll get preliminar­y offers from “up to five” competing lenders from the company’s network of 40 banks active in those products, according to Charles Battle, Lending Tree’s director of product management.

If you’re not quite ready to move ahead but instead prefer to track your equity, credit and mortgage situation on a regular basis, you can sign up for a more comprehens­ive “My Lending Tree” service, for which there is no charge. It provides you monthly updates plus periodic “alerts” on your home equity movement. You get an alert when there’s “an actionable opportunit­y” for you to tap into your equity on favorable terms, based on “real-time market data,” changes in your credit files and equity levels, according to the website.

Before checking out this new entrant into the home valuation arena, what do you need to know about Lending Tree and the accuracy of its estimates? Lending Tree describes itself as “the nation’s leading online loan marketplac­e” connecting “consumers with multiple lenders who compete for their business.” In the fine print on its website, though, the descriptio­n is more legally precise. The company is “a marketing lead generator” and “a duly licensed mortgage broker.” Lenders pay Lending Tree for “leads” — that’s what you are when you indicate you’d like to receive offers. Be aware that before you can get any competing offers, you need to divulge some highly sensitive informatio­n about yourself — name, address, Social Security number, income, credit and the like — the same as you would for any other mortgage applicatio­n. If you’re not willing to do so, you won’t be able to get offers.

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