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From an e-mail

I’ve been talking to agents lately and I ask them about the things I’ve learned about from your site. I thought I would say things like “I want to apply for a backup loan” and they would say “Good idea!” instead of “Why would you do that?” I try to answer the why and next thing you know none of my why’s make sense anymore. Here is a summary of that conversation:

Me: Okay, so I need to get a “pre-approval” or “pre-whatever” from a lender so I can put an offer on this house . . . that sounds fair . . . but I want to shop my loan around and in fact, I want to get a backup loan.

Agent: Backup loan? What for?

Me: Because from what I understand what you are told at first isn’t what gets delivered and you are at the mercy of the loan officer if you don’t have a backup plan

Agent: They have to fill out the form and give you what they promise so you are protected.

Me: So it’s the law that they deliver what they fill out on this form?

Agent: No, it’s not the law but they wouldn’t dare change the terms or I wouldn’t recommend them.

Me: Well, most people don’t know they’re getting screwed until later and most of the ones that notice don’t do anything about it.

Agent: Well, if you hire me to be your agent then you should trust my advice . . . otherwise why would you hire me?

A similar conversation ensued when I talked about a “exclusive” vs “non-exclusive” buyer’s agent agreement. “There is no such thing as “non-exclusive”". What is the benefit to you? If I have multiple agents then they all work to find me the perfect house and the one that finds me the one I like is the one that get’s rewarded. Nope! If you tell an agent you have other agents he won’t work with you. Okay, well, I wouldn’t tell the other agents. But any good agent is going to make you sign an exclusive agreement.

Anyway, the sales techniques here are right up there with car salesman.

Let me ask you about your experience with monopolies? Your electric provider, mass transit provider, cable provider – do they furnish top notch customer service? Do you think someone might be able to do better, cheaper? Quite likely, because monopoly situations encourage rent seeking behavior. Monopolies are the classic example of rent seeking – do business with them, or not at all, meaning you’re stuck with whatever service they choose to give you at whatever price. Why in the world would you do that to yourself?

Only two possible reasons: You don’t have a choice or you don’t know any better. You do have a choice in real estate, no matter how much various people may choose to pretend you don’t. I certainly haven’t noticed any shortage of real estate agents or loan officers. There’s something like 7500 licensees in San Diego County alone. That leaves you don’t know any better. It doesn’t matter whether it’s through ignorance or not following through on the knowledge.

In fact, if you think about it, someone who insists upon exclusive rights to your business is telling you they’re worried about comparisons to other professionals. They’re telling you they’re afraid they can’t compete and they’re not willing to try. Does this sound like someone who’s likely to give you the best service? Someone who’s not willing to compete?

Just because an exclusive agreement isn’t in the consumer’s interest doesn’t mean that it isn’t very desirable for agents. In fact, most agents take a lot of classes in learning how to lock your business up and cut out the competition before anyone else gets to the starting line – several times more training than the average agent ever takes in learning how to actually give good service and good value to their clients. Look at the average agent symposium sometime. There will be easily ten times more offerings in how to get clients and cut out the competition than there will be in how to get your clients the best value. If the average agent doesn’t offer a non-exclusve buyer’s agency contract, they can pretend such a thing doesn’t exist. It does exist; it’s available in every state. In California, it’s form BBNE in WinForms, the standard computerized package. But if they can persuade you to sign an exclusive contract, they’re guaranteed to get whatever buyer’s agency commission is due – before they’ve done any real work, before they’ve demonstrated that they are really going to guard your interests at all. I’ve written about the drawbacks of an exclusive agreement before, and even given examples in shopping for an agent, and the games that get played with consumers by agents. If you’ve signed an exclusive agreement, you’re stuck. If you don’t, you’re not – indeed you keep far more control in your own hands.

Some agents will try to sidetrack you with an exclusive agreement “but you can fire me any time you want!” The first question is where is that written into the agreement? Show me please. In fact, the standard exclusive contract is written to be very difficult to break for any reason. The second question is that even if it is written in, how is that not functionally equivalent to a non-exclusive contract? The answer to that is they’ve still got your business locked up until and unless they make an obvious blunder. As long as they don’t make that obvious blunder, they’re still in the driver’s seat. But this doesn’t mean that they’re a good agent – you have no standards for comparison. Indeed, you are agreeing not to acquire any standards for comparison. Matter of fact, they can be the worst excuse for an agent ever and still not make any mistakes that most people are going to fire them for. Plead for one more chance, and most people will give it – dozens of times. The bottom line is that they still avoid any chance at having to compete.

Now just because your agreement is non-exclusive doesn’t mean you have to go find other agents. At least half of my clients never talk to another agent. But they have the option of doing so, and that knowledge is one of the things that motivates me to do the best job I can for my clients, and why I keep the list of clients I’m working with at any time short enough so that I’m certain I can handle them all with no deterioration of service. If I don’t, they can fire me and find another agent as easy as crossing the street. That motivation just isn’t there if you give someone an exclusive agreement. Do you want the agent whose motivation is to concentrate on giving a few clients the best job they can possibly give, or do you want the agent who’s a half-notch above getting fired, whose motivations are to lock up as many clients as possible, secure in the knowledge that none of those clients are likely to actually fire them? And if they’re confident they can give you such a terrific job, why are they requiring an exclusive agreement? If they’re really that good, they should be eager to compete. That’s the best confirmation of their abilities possible – the fact that someone else tried and couldn’t do it! As I’ve said, most of my clients see the job I do and never talk to another agent, and most of those who do end up telling me how much I shine by comparison. But it takes confidence in my own ability to offer that non-exclusive agreement. The ones who won’t are telling you that they don’t have that confidence. Do you think there might possibly be a reason for that lack of confidence?

Probably the largest number of agents and loan officers compete by being what I call “Social predators” Involved in Boy Scouts, Soccer, Little League, the church, PTA, whatever. They try to make those they come into contact feel obligated to do business with them, because they are after all, a good guy (or girl), they help the cause, etcetera. Surely such a person is worthy of trust? Surely they will treat you right? They lock up the business with an exclusive agreement or a large deposit, raising the barrier to competition as high as they can. This effectively sets you up for the kill. My personal experience leads me to believe that such agents and loan officers are responsible for a truly outsized proportion of the people who are losing their property to foreclosure in the current crisis. It seems like everyone I come across who’s in the process of foreclosure has a “social predator” story to tell. Most of them have no clue what happened until I dissect the entire process and show them that their “little boy’s wonderful scoutmaster” bent them over and took advantage. The thought process is natural, but the conclusion does not follow from the premise – a thing most people don’t understand until how it bit them (past tense) is plainer than the nose on their face.

Ronald Reagan loved a very applicable phrase: Trust but Verify. It’s not accident that this principle, which he applied as President, served him and the country very well. On a more personal level, you are willing to trust agents with your business (otherwise you wouldn’t be talking to them), but you want to verify that they’re earning it. You’re not willing to take trust to the level of the spouse who’s clueless about their spouse telling them they worked late when they come home at 3AM six nights in a row smelling like someone else’s perfume or cologne. This is the best function of a non-exclusive buyer’s agency agreement. This means you still have the right to go out and get the only valid standard of comparison: Another agent who has the same opportunity to do the same job as them.

In your situation, I’d be very blunt: “What you’re telling me about requiring an exclusive contract makes me believe that you know very well you don’t measure up to a good standard. In fact, the harder you argue for an exclusive agreement, the less willing I am to believe you are worthy of one. I’ll willingly give you a chance to earn my business with a non-exclusive agreement, but I’m not going to sign any exclusive agreements with anyone. Since you’re not willing to sign a non-exclusive agreement, I am wasting my time. Good-bye.” They have as long as it takes you to get to the door to change their mind. Walk out and never look back – find someone else who will offer non-exclusive agreement.. In fact, taking this stand in your self defense is the first and most critical point of Shopping for a good buyer’s agent. The standard non-exclusive contract is truly a bet you cannot lose as a consumer. There literally is no risk. Doesn’t matter if they’re a freshly minted licensee who’s never done a transaction in their life (How often do you hear that from someone who actually has significant experience?). Go ahead and sign a non-exclusive agreement, and the worst that can happen is they don’t get the job done. You’re still free to use anyone else who does. You have lost exactly nothing – as a matter of fact, both you and that agent are mathematically, provably ahead for having signed that non-exclusive contract! Hiring them thus can only increase the probability function in your favor! This improvement may be marginal or even zero, but so long as you do your due diligence it cannot be negative.

The same thing applies to the loan officer an agent recommends. The reason they’re choosing that loan officer has nothing to do with the best choice for you and everything to do with the best choice for them. That’s a loan officer they trust not to screw up the transaction by telling you, “You know, I’m not certain you can really afford this property.” That’s the loan officer they trust, by hook or by crook, to have a loan ready at the close of escrow, no matter what it takes, so that that agent can get paid. Has nothing to do with how good their loans are, how competitive they are, or any other advantage to you – only that they trust that loan officer to insure their paycheck. That’s what the agent is really telling you. The loan officer may be really good, and very competitive on price. Then again, they may not, and the one thing I’d bet significant money on, sight unseen, is that they will never tell you that maybe you’re stretching beyond your means – that agent will never send them another client if they do! The only agents I’m certain could tell the difference between good loans and loan officers and bad ones if it bit them are the ones who are also loan officers themselves.

If an agent is recommending a loan officer on the basis of “This person wouldn’t dare cheat my clients!”, ask them for a copy of the initial MLDS (California) or Good Faith Estimate (the other 49 states) and a copy of the final HUD 1 for that loan officer’s last five transactions with their client. (sarcasm on) What, they don’t have them? What a surprise (end sarcasm). But if they don’t, how can they possibly know whether that loan officer does or does not quote accurately? You’ve just asked for the only possible evidence, and they don’t have it! Nor does this cover how well they compete on price, and as long as the terms are the same and the rate/cost tradeoff is better, a loan is a loan is a loan. I used to advise people to apply for more than one loan, but changes in the lending environment have put the kibosh on what was an easy and effective way of managing your loan thusly. Now you need to have a real problem solving discussion with several potential loan officers and evaluate the solutions – a much more difficult task for a lay consumer, because neither I nor any other loan officer is doing back up loans any longer. Rate shopping on the phone doesn’t cut it any more because loan officers can lie like rugs and low-ball worse than any remodeling contractorand now they can point to a federal form for false credibility

You’re right that these sales techniques have a lot in common with used-car sales. Everybody in any sales business wants to avoid competing if they can – it means they don’t have to work as hard, and get higher profit margins. Consumers, for their part, need to learn to understand what actions mean, and that actions are important, not words. That’s part of the reason why I’m writing this article.

Sales persons, properly handled, are your best friends in the whole world. Nobody solves your problems as well as an expert with the motivation of getting paid for their trouble, and there always seem to be problems that lay people don’t realize exist until they’re bitten, which is almost always far too late to avoid all the damage that’s coming down the pike. Kind of like having a Terminator after you. If you don’t have your own very special protector, they’re going to get you. I don’t like having my clients bitten – not tomorrow, not next year, not ever. One bad transaction can ruin you as an agent or a loan officer, and I intend to be doing this for the rest of my life. So I’ll do everything I can to keep it from happening before it happens, and you want someone just as dedicated working for you. The only way to be certain is to watch them in action over time. But if they’re asking you to sign that Exclusive Agreement beforehand, how in the heck can you possibly have the knowledge of their business practices to give it to them?

Caveat Emptor

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Here was an idea I had: Pack a list of the most important things consumers need to know about buying real estate, as packed into the words I can say in sixty seconds without sounding like an over-clocked squirrel. Here goes:

Figure out what you can really afford before you do anything else. Shop by purchase price, not payment, and refuse to look at properties which cannot believably be obtained within your budget.

Listing agents are contractually and legally obligated to sell the property as quickly as possible for the highest possible price. They represent sellers, not buyers. If the listing agent can sell you the property for $100,000 above comparable market price, they have done nothing except their job. Never allow the listing agent to represent you as a buyer.

Buyer’s Agents represent buyers, not sellers, and having a good buyer’s agent will make more difference than anything else to get you a better property value for less money. Get at least one buyer’s agent before you start looking. Sign only non-exclusive buyer’s agency contracts, insist they cover bad points as well as good on every property, and fire any agent that won’t, or any agent that shows you a property that cannot be obtained within your budget.

There is no such thing as a perfect property, or the perfect time to buy real estate. Properties in immaculate condition command premium prices because the owners can get more money. If you want a bargain, be prepared to do some cosmetic work. A good buyer’s agent will help you know what’s cheap and easy to fix, versus what’s difficult and expensive.

How was that?

Caveat Emptor

P.S.: This guy is one of the best buyer’s agents there is

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Saw a sign driving: “Negative Equity? Sell and Get cash!”

Notice that it doesn’t claim that you can do so legally.

I saw another of these signs on the way to the office this morning.

When things are going sour, there are any number of scam artists who will promise the moon. We had them in the early nineties, and we have a lot more of them now.

Perhaps the largest number of these are flat out liars. They have no ability and no intention of actually delivering whatever they’re dangling out there as bait. They’re just putting something out there to get you to call, so they can get you into their office and try to do whatever it is that they do. Most of these are probably fishing for victims of a “subject to” scam. Notice that they didn’t say they could do it for everyone? “Subject to” deals are illegal, but quite often the lender will let you get away with it. Of course, if they don’t, they go after the person who signed the Trust Deed, not the scamster who talked you into it. Note that if they’re reasonably careful, the people who are dangling “subject to” deals are legally in the clear. Nor is it illegal (as far as I know) for them to use an advertising hook they have no intention of delivering. Even if it is illegal, it’s not like anybody gets charged for the initial handmade sign by the side of the road that’s long gone before there’s any investigation into what happened.

Even if these people are telling the truth as far as they go, there is something wrong with this scenario.

Either 1) you weren’t in a negative equity situation in the first place – you really could sell for at least what you owe on the property, or 2) You are going to commit fraud, and the lender is not going to be happy when they find out. Expect a very unpleasant visit from the FBI, large legal defense fees, and an extended vacation courtesy of Club Fed.

There is no lender in the world that is going to accept a short payoff where the borrower walks away with cash. End of discussion. That’s the entire bargain you make with a lender when you borrow money. They get paid every penny they are due first – and you get only the excess, however much – or little – that may be. If their payoff is short, they will not accept you walking away with a single penny from the sale of that property. To do anything else is a violation of securities and banking regulations. The Wicked Witch of Wall Street may be politically dead, but this is one issue that the financial world has developed extreme sensitivity to.

If the lender did not know about this cash that you are supposedly getting, you are going to be committing fraud. The person who sold you this scam is very probably committing fraud as well, but you definitely are committing fraud if you do this. That lender is going to require you, the owner of the property, to sign a statement to the effect that you are not receiving any money that the lender does not know about. So let’s add perjury to the list of charges against you, and quite likely conspiracy. Your defense lawyer is going to cost more than any cash you’re going to get out of it.

I had someone ask me whether an agent can volunteer to just give you some money from their commission. I’m not a lawyer, but as far as I am aware, it is legal. However, if they’re bringing you into their office and getting you to sign up with them to sell their house based upon such a promise while the lender ends up with a short payoff, you are still committing fraud, perjury, and conspiracy when you sign that document that says you’re not getting any money from the sale from any source, and that agent is committing at least fraud and conspiracy as well. The whole set-up is pre-arranged, and that give-back is a condition of the transaction that you and the agent are both aware of, but the lender is not. This makes you guilty of those three crimes. My understanding is that In order for the “gift” to pass legal muster, it has to be a pure gift, conceived by the agent with no pre-arrangement, executed for no consideration and no exchange of value on your part. Since that is not the case – they’re luring you in with the promise of cash from before they even saw you – it’s not going to get past the courts. Furthermore, even if such a gift was a pure gift on the part of the agent, it’s not likely that the courts or a jury is going to believe you when there are well-known scams like this going on.

People put these scams out there because they figure they’ve got an angle whereby they can still make money. I can think of several ways to do so off the top of my head, from using the property as bait to meet buyers (see Tina Teaser) to having you sign an agreement for a very large listing commission, and several ways in-between. All of them involve a violation of that agent’s fiduciary duty to you. Show of hands: How many people would sign up with an agent who straightforwardly told you he intended to scam you, and that as a consequence of this transaction, you would be likely to spend several years in prison? Anyone?

It is kind of elegant in a way: The victim of the scam (that would be you) can’t complain without putting themselves in line for several years as an involuntary guest of the taxpayers. But it’s amazing how often some outside factor causes the whole thing to unravel. Actually, cancel that. It isn’t amazing at all. Real estate and mortgage operations are all a matter of public record, and audits and record keeping are a part of life for anyone in either field. Failure to keep complete records is in itself an offense that practitioners can and do lose their licenses over, and the escrow and title companies have their own record-keeping requirements, and the lender will most certainly keep records. Matter of fact, if they can show you’ve committed fraud – and you have, make no mistake – then any legal shelter you may have had from their ability to collect the money they lost simply vanishes. This means, among other things, that even if your loan would have normally been non-recourse, the act of committing fraud means it becomes a full recourse loan.

You don’t want any of that to happen, and once you do it, you have no defense except to hope that you get unreasonably lucky, and nobody notices until the statute of limitations runs out. The only justification for doing a stupid stunt like this is if it gets you out of a worse predicament. It doesn’t. If anything, it makes any existing predicament worse.

Caveat Emptor

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From an e-mail:

I live in (City 1) and recently signed a work order on a semi-custom new construction house in (City 2). My wife and I make a combined 120K income and still can’t afford a decent place in City 1. It was preapproved rather quickly from both the builder’s mortgage company and a few outside companies and everything was moving along splendidly, until my employer decided to refuse to transfer me (something we had mutually decided on back in April). To make a long story short, the house will be built and ready to close in early November and 2 of mortgage companies are asking for a Relocation letter from my employer. Seeing as how I make 66% of the 120K combined salary, my plan is to tough it out here until I find (1) a job in City 2, or (2) a job here that will transfer me to City 2. My question is, if I can’t supply them with a relo letter am I dead in the water? Do I have to scrap the loan (primary residence) and try to get a second home or investment loan? The broader question here, is how critical is any piece of documentation? Obviously W-2s and bank statements can be deal breakers, but what about the other stuff? I.E. relo letters, proof of homeowners dues, etc etc.

First off, you have an obvious potential issue with your current employer. If your work order was predicated upon a promise of transfer, you may have a case against them if you want one for the amount of any money you’re out. Consult an attorney, preferably one that is licensed in both states. Obviously, this poisons the atmosphere, so you may not want to. On the other hand, you may have decided by now that you are done with them one way or the other.

Second, getting to the item of contention, the relocation letter. Every lender’s guidelines are different. You didn’t say how many lenders you had applied with, but few people apply for more than two loans. Any item the underwriter asks for can be a deal-breaker, especially if you can’t provide it. What the underwriter is looking for is a coherent picture of someone who is going to be able to repay the loan. If the loan underwriter doesn’t see a coherent picture of you being able to repay the loan under the circumstances it was submitted under, the loan will be declined. The underwriter can ask for anything they want. They can ask for proof your father gave birth to identical triplets, if they think it has some bearing on the loan. If you cannot furnish them what they want, and your loan officer can’t shake an alternative or an exception out of them, the loan is dead.

Now they’re not likely to ask for proof of something impossible and irrelevant like my example. Legally they probably could – Everybody has a biological father, so it’s not discriminatory on the face of it. They’re certainly not going to violate anti-discrimination lending laws by asking for something based upon race or sex. But they’re in the business of making loans, which in many cases make more money for the developer than the sale. However, if the underwriter approves loans that go sour, they can expect to be held accountable by their employer, and so they require and are permitted a certain degree of necessary latitude on additional requirements in order to do their jobs. If I tell an underwriter that I make $2 million a year in the stock market, I’d better be able to furnish proof. If it’s not relevant to the loan, I should keep my mouth shut about it because it’s asking for trouble. Never tell an underwriter anything not absolutely necessary for loan approval.

It’s a horrible lie about people from Missouri, but I tell people to think of underwriters as Missouri accountants. Their favorite sentence is, “Show me on paper.” All loan approvals are based upon the potential borrower and their current status quo. In other words, the situation as it is, not as you hope it will be someday. Yes, when doing Verification of Employment they ask about prospects for continued employment, but that’s just to establish that the employer isn’t willing to admit they’re about to fire you. They know that in the real world, people get told “Yes, we’re going to keep Mr. X here forever” and next week Mr. X is applying for unemployment.

What the underwriter is looking for is a coherent picture of you occupying the property and working at your current employer. You’re working in City 1 and living in City 2, which are not within daily commuting difference, but you applied for the loan as intending to make it your primary residence.

Given that they are requiring a letter of relocation, you have several options. I know it has happened in the past that employers who were not willing to relocate employees were nonetheless willing to write letters that said they were. This is stupid. This is fraud, and if the loan becomes non-performing the employer could potentially become liable for whatever the lender lost, not to mention that a lot of your protections as a consumer go out the window. Second, they could sign a letter that says you are going to be telecommuting from your new home. Yes, your job is in City 1, but you could legitimately be living in City 2 and still employed and doing your current job. Bingo, happy underwriter (probably). If your loan officers aren’t complete idiots they will have asked you about this, so I presume the answer is no.

So now we’re bringing in other issues as well. Now you have a husband living in City 1, while the wife and new home (and I presume wife’s job) are now in City 2. Fact: husband needs a place to live in City 1. “What’s that place to live going to cost him?” they ask. They take this answer and add it to the previously known total of your other monthly payments. Because you now have more in known monthly expenditures, now you may not qualify for the loan you were “pre-approved” for. Pre-approval doesn’t really mean diddly-squat, and the developer knows it, so they likely required at least a decent sized deposit from you, so if you don’t get the loan, you don’t get the house, and you may have a substantial forfeiture. See my first paragraph at the start of the article. Furthermore, some underwriters may see a potential divorce situation here, so they may ask for some kind of testimonial from third parties that you’re not getting a divorce.

Now, if you had a decent agent, he likely wrote your offer “contingent” upon your relocation. Unfortunately, if you’re buying from a developer, your agent probably works for the developer, and so didn’t do this. You may or may not have a case against the developer and the agent. Consult an attorney, but this is one area of many where buyer’s agents really pay off.

(Even if they’re inclined to trust me, I do not want to represent both sides in a sale, and will usually insist that one side go get another agent, or at least sign a release indicating that they realize I am working for the other party, not them, and have no responsibility as to their best interests. As your experience indicates, too many actions are a potential violation of fiduciary duty to one side if you do them and to the other if you don’t. There are some agents who get greedy and do both sides, but usually they make their attorneys very happy. If your agent wants to do both sides of the transaction, that’s never a good sign.)

However, what I suspect you really want is the house and the loan you signed up for. So I’m going to go on that presumption.

You make $10,000 per month. You may be able to get a friend to rent you a room in their home in City 1 for fairly cheap, so that there is not enough difference so you don’t qualify for a loan. Several years ago before I met my wife, I rented a room out cheap to a friend who was in a situation not too different from yours. “A paper”, you are permitted up to about about a forty-five percent debt to income ratio, and it can go higher if you have a high enough credit score such that DU or LP (Fannie and Freddie’s automated loan underwriters) will buy off on it.

You could go to a different loan type, carrying a lower rate and hence a lower payment. Unfortunately, the debt-to-income limits on these are lower. Unlikely to work.

You could go to a “second home” loan. Unfortunately, the standards on those a a little tighter, and there may be an additional fee of a quarter point or even a half, and you’re still going to have to show the underwriter a residence in City 1, which means the payment qualification issue raises it’s ugly head here, also.

Finally when this was originally written you could have gone to a sub-prime lender (where maximum Debt to Income ratio can be higher) or done a “stated income” loan. Both of those options are now non-existent. If you were working with a broker’s loan officer as opposed to a direct lender or packaging house loan officer, either would be no sweat – you might not even have to do another application. The broker would simply withdraw your loan package and submit it elsewhere. Unfortunately, from a subsequent email, I know that you’re not working with any brokers. Well, the developer probably has a sub-prime lender on tap as well, so that may be a low stress option. On the other hand, if they are a different branch of the “A paper” lender, they may not be able to do your loan either. Or, if you’re lucky, the developer is acting like a broker in the first place rather than a direct lender.

One of the great rules of the business is that you cannot go from a higher documentation loan to a lower documentation loan on the same borrower at the same lender. If I submit to lender A “full doc,” I cannot then later submit it to lender A “Stated Income.” The reasons for this should be fairly obvious, and this is a no brainer without exceptions across the business.

For brokers, because the paperwork is in their name and not the lenders in the first place, this means no new reports. But since you’re not working with brokers, what this means is that you’re likely to need a completely new set of reports from the appraiser on down in the new loan company’s name. This may be done on a retyping basis if you are lucky, or you may have to pay for completely new ones.

I strongly advise you NOT to quit your job, unless someone a lot more familiar with your situation and prepared to take the consequences of being wrong tells you otherwise. Here’s why: You quit your job. Now you are unemployed. It does not matter if you’ve been doing what you’re doing for forty years. Right now you are unemployed. As things currently sit, you do not qualify for the loan. Even if you’ve got a written offer of employment somewhere else, many lenders will not approve the loan until you have a pay stub to show for it. Since this means waiting several weeks at least, it’s almost certainly outside your window of opportunity.

One final issue: here in California, it’s illegal for a developer (or anyone else) to require that you do the loan with them in order to get the property. But it happens anyway (I’ve been told point blank by more than one developer’s agent that if the client doesn’t do the loan through them, the purchase contract will be canceled. Many others won’t tell you point blank, but they will throw obstacles up until you give up on the other loan), and it’s a long hard slog to prove legally and it costs you thousands and you still don’t get what you really wanted in the first place: the house you signed an order for. I am not certain the practice is even illegal in City 2, where you’re buying (although from some things I’ve heard about that state’s practices, I think it’s probably legal). So you probably want to be certain you’re not fighting the developer on this by finding your loan elsewhere. Unfortunately, you’ve already (probably) put a deposit down and you said in subsequent email that the home has appreciated while it was being built, so the developer has incentive to throw roadblocks in your path. Your transaction falls through and not only do they get to keep your deposit but they can turn around and sell the home for more. Preventing this kind of nonsense is what buyer’s agents are for (it also gives you someone easy to sue if something goes wrong!). Unfortunately, most developers will not cooperate by paying a commission to buyer’s agents for precisely this reason, which means that the average buyer will decline to pay an agent out of their own pocket and try to do the transaction on their own, which leads to situations like this.

Best of luck, and if this does not answer all of your questions, please let me know.

Caveat Emptor

Original here

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