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Currently I'm dealing with a locally owned institution about a commercial loan. Interest rate is higher. Down payment is larger. Maximum term is only 20 years. And there is a reset of interest rate every 6-12 months after 3 years fixed.
I am also looking for a house. My wife and I are very frustrated with the process. In my naive mindset, I thought it would be exciting finding a first home?!? WOW was I ever wrong. The first house we found that we liked after a year of looking had "hidden" mold damage, septic failings, foundation cracks and in the end was turned into "buy as is".Even our realtor is getting pushy with us. I guess I can understand, he wants to finally get compensation for all his showings..Don't want to get started with the banks.... I'll be here all day. Keep your chin up ctviggen. Maybe you should find another bank to deal with that understands how taxes are done now...
I wonder why this is?
I wondered too. So I asked. They don't want to be providing an interest rate 10 years from now that costs them money vis a vis the prevailing rate at that time. Could be crap but I believe them. It is their money they are lending.Rates and other details will no doubt vary from state to state and from one institution to another. In my case, the commercial division looks to be my best option. But I'm not looking to buy a home, just a temporary investment. Others will have to decide for themselves whether they can live with non-standardized provisions.
We're trying to buy a house. Our sole debt is a car payment (and our house, which soon will be sold; that is, the closing occurs before we close on the "new" house). My credit rating is over 800 for all three credit companies. We're putting 20% down (NOT using proceeds from our current house; we're actually losing money on our current house). By any measure the bank wants to use, our salaries alone are easily enough to qualify for the house loan (PITI) with much to spare. What does the bank want? "Signed" business and personal tax returns. Both of these are filed electronically by accountants. We cannot provide "signed" tax returns. Shoot, before we used an accountant, I filed our taxes electronically; I haven't actually signed a tax document in at least a decade. Yet, the returns have to be "signed". They refuse to accept the 50+ pages of returns I've faxed them. I'm at over two INCHES of material I've faxed to the bank. That is, the pile of papers I've faxed is over two inches thick. And, they're still requesting information I've already faxed to them. So, I simply refaxed it, complete with a receipt showing they'd previously received the documents. And this is after they've already approved us for the loan -- we just need to provide this documentation. But I literally cannot provide some of the documentation, since it doesn't exist (I cannot provide "signed" tax returns). I have spent countless hours faxing materials to the bank. I have so much paperwork that I can no longer organize it -- it's simply grown too big. Now, it's just a massive pile "organized" by paper clips or larger clips. If the banks treat us this badly, what happens to those people who are putting 10% down or 5% down? No wonder the housing market is still bad!I think the pendulum has swung way too far to the conservative side.