Real Estate Investing - Follow-Up
- The Key To Successful Closings
By Lou
Castillo
If everyone
always did everything they said they'd do, we'd all be a lot richer.
Unfortunately, tasks are overlooked, and the ball is often dropped. If you want
to have successful closings, you must have strong "follow-up" skills
to catch problems early in the process. Follow-up on everyone and everything.
We can't begin
to tell you the number of closings that almost fell apart, or would have fallen
apart had we not kept a watchful eye on the entire process to make sure that
everything was completed when it needed to be. Here's a typical scenario:
you're wholesaling a house and you have just 30 days to get it closed before
the contract with the Seller expires. You find a buyer who can get a loan and
close before the expiration. Then a few days before closing you find out that
the loan isn't ready and closing must be delayed two weeks, but the Seller
already has another Buyer ready to pay more than your price, so they refuse to
extend your contract. You just lost the deal.
So what is
follow-up? We used to think it meant staying in touch with the buyer to make
sure that everything was completed for the loan. Then we learned that the buyer
is often a newbie and clueless of what needs to be done. Mortgage brokers just
usually respond "Everything looks great" until they can't close the
loan. So the real trick to following-up is to speak to the final decision maker
for each step. This works whether you're selling a retail house or a wholesale
house, or even if you are the buyer/borrower. The goal is to close without
delays.
Assuming that
you have already received a pre-qualification letter from the lender, and
ensured that the lender will loan on the deal (i.e. no issues with title
seasoning, assignment fees, inhabitability of the property), the first step is
to follow-up with the broker/lender that all of the application paperwork was
submitted, and have they forwarded it to the lender? If not, what is still
required? Determine if the lender requires a termite letter, appraisal, and a
survey (most lenders do). If so, have they all been ordered? When is each to be
completed? Keep following-up until you verify that each has been delivered. You
also want to verify that the appraisal was sufficient for the loan.
If we don't
already own the house, we order a title report as soon as we go under contract
with the Seller to discover any defects early in the process, and begin
resolving them. Closing attorneys usually do not order the title report until
just before closing to receive as current information as possible. But if they
find problems, it could delay your closing. It is well worth the $125 to run
title ahead of time, and eliminate delays.
Once the broker
has forwarded the paperwork to the lender, the next step is to verify the loan
has gone to underwriting. If not, what is the delay? If so, was the loan
approved? Do any conditions need to be met? What are they and who is handling
them? Make sure that once the conditions are met, the loan is returned to
underwriting and approved.
Verify that the
closing has been scheduled with the attorney, and that they have cleared title.
Find out if and when the loan package will be forwarded to the attorney. Then
remind all of the players of the date and time of closing, to bring a picture
ID to closing, and to bring any funds required in a certified check.
This seems like
a lot of work that should be handled by other people, but the reality is that
often times something is overlooked. Through your diligent follow-up efforts,
problems will be detected early and corrected, allowing your closing to occur
flawlessly and on schedule.
Lou Castillo
has been successfully investing in real estate since the early 1990s with a
focus on rehabbing and wholesaling single family residences. He is also a
national speaker and trains other investors on his model for investing and for
leveraging the power of the internet.
For more
information or to sign up for his Powerful Investing Tips visit http://www.Investorriches.com
Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Lou_Castillo
No comments:
Post a Comment