Your Buyer's Financing Was DENIED! How To Save A 'Dead Deal'
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Realtors: Stop letting your deals die. Stop giving up so easily. Deals go sideways for many reasons, and as such, there are many solutions to solving these issues. Use this guide to get your transactions back to the closing table. Don't. Give. Up.
Today's discussion? Financing Denied! We will show you what to do about this, whether it's your buyer or the buyer on your listing. If it hasn't happened to you yet, put this in your brain as 'what I need to know BEFORE I need to know it!'
Rest assured: We have closed thousands of transactions over our real estate career, and have coached thousands of coaching clients to meet or exceed their goals.
The following are tried and true solutions to deals dying due to financing issues! We have done 100% of these solutions, and have coached clients to successfully do the same.
Secret: Manage your mindset. Get off the panic button and into action. If the buyer still wants to buy and the seller wants to sell, you still have a deal. Get to work to solve the problem. Most deals DO have a solution!
Note: If you have a backup offer, be sure you know the facts before you switch to that deal. If you don't have a backup offer, get a 2-week extension so you have time to resolve the issues and still get to the closing table, then get to work.
Realtors Guide to Saving the Deal: When Financing Is Denied.
(4 Common problems and how to fix them).
Note: Legally, a lender must give the reason a borrower is being denied their loan. Find out the specifics. If the lender won't tell you, they MUST tell the buyer.
1. Down Payment issue, and/or closing cost issue?
-If it's not enough, then how much does the lender require?
-Would changing the loan program change the requirement?
-Is it possible to use gift funds to make up the difference?
-Can the borrower cash out an investment account, 401k or other to build up the payment?
-Can the borrower get a co-signer and solve the problem?
-Is it because they're guaranteeing an appraisal gap? Might the seller renegotiate?
-Seller to provide a second mortgage to create funds? The seller can make interest on this loan, file it as a lien using the title company and require it to be paid off in a certain time frame.
-Can you raise the price by the deficit, and still have the home appraised? Have the seller contribute the overage to the buyer's closing costs, thus giving them more for their down payment. The seller nets the same because the purchase price was raised.
-Seller to provide seller's financing or use a hard money lender, then the buyer refinances into a more conventional loan.
2. Ratio issue? What does this even mean? Lenders require specific debt-to-income ratios in order to qualify a borrower for a mortgage loan. They calculate the buyer's total expenses divided by gross income, which equals a ratio. Housing-related expenses divided by gross income are an indicator of how much of someone's income they're spending on their house payment. Typically, the total debt-to-income ratio should be 36% or less, and the total housing expense 28% or less.
If ratios are too high, this means the borrower has too much debt, creating too much cash flow going out the door and not enough toward their mortgage payment.
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