Buying a Home – What Happens After Your Offer Is Accepted

Our blog is read by real estate agents, brokers and consumers which is why this post is of interest. For those in the business this might be information worth sharing with your clients.

You might be wondering what happens after the offer is accepted? Having your offer accepted feels great, but for most home buyers, it’s just the beginning. There is still a lot more to be done before you’re done buying a house. You might think it’s time to get the keys and start moving in, but there are several things you still need to do before this thing is official.

Learn more about what happens after the offer is accepted and other real estate tips: realtor.com

Lending a Hand to Lenders – How to Speed Up the Closing Process

Contributor: Ron Gitter

Ron Gitter

Ron Gitter

Closing Thoughts…

At a co-op closing this week, where I represented the sellers by power of attorney, I sat across from the buyer’s counsel, who dutifully ground through the loan documents with his client, a first-time home buyer. As I checked my Blackberry to pass the time, I listened to the attorney describe in mind-numbing detail, page after page of the bank’s documents, pausing to get his client’s signature after each explanation was completed. All around the closing table, folks who have watched this drill on hundreds of occasions, do what’s always done at every closing… wait.

Rethinking the Loan Process

At that closing, the bank’s attorney stated the “golden rule” of lending: “He who brings the gold, makes the rules.” The crowd chuckled. That being said, the process by which a bank completes the loan documentation at the closing is about as up to date as applying a wax seal. Each bank has a slightly different set of documents, based upon whether or not the loan will be sold immediately after closing to Fannie, Freddie or to an investor. Basically, the documents are similar: a note, a security agreement or mortgage (depending upon whether it is a co-op or condo), a HUD Settlement Statement, and numerous other documents which are either required by law (as revised by recent Federal legislation and rule making) or by the bank’s own lending policies. With all due respect to those charged with the responsibility of attending to the bank’s closing details, the process consumes an excessive amount of time. There is no reason why a majority of the loan documents, with the exception of the note and security documents, can’t be signed at application or upon issuance of the loan commitment.

Why Signing Before Closing is a Better Idea

Although efforts are being made to educate and to protect the consumer from nefarious lenders and their minions, a closing, with its time limitations, is not exactly the best place to start explaining the implications of the loan documents. Most purchasers are in a daze at the big finale and really don’t comprehend the significance of each piece of paper which is briefly described to them before execution. Your typical future homeowner is thinking about the ton of money he or she is about to spend, or the costly renovations, or the move-in date, or whether it’s the right decision in the first place. You get the picture. Understanding the “name affidavit” or some other boilerplate document is not at the top of the list. It would clearly be in the consumer’s best interest to have that pile of documents in advance of the closing, so there would be a real opportunity to understand exactly what is being signed. In addition to speeding up the closing geometrically, the consumer would be better protected from signing a document he or she truly doesn’t understand — unfortunately, an occurrence at each and every closing. When I posed this suggestion at the closing table, after a few half-hearted attempts at telling me why it wouldn’t work, the bank attorney finally said, “Are you trying to take away my job?’ Well, actually, just trying to make it significantly easier.

Business as Usual

A closing represents the culmination of the efforts of a number of people: the attorneys, the brokers, the bank and its counsel, the managing agent, and of course, the seller and purchaser. Those involved in the process understand that a certain amount of time will be required to get to the finish line: that being the delivery of checks in exchange for ownership of the property. In the digitized world we live in today, however, a closing takes way too long and needs to be modernized. Lenders are not the only time-wasting culprits, but expediting the review and execution of loan documents would be a great place to start.

On to the Next One

The real estate economy thrives on closings. When handled the right way by all concerned, it represents the best efforts of the professionals, good feelings on both sides and the ultimate “win win” scenario. But there’s room for significant improvement in the time it takes to get to the handshakes.

About Ron Gitter:

I am a practicing attorney with offices in Manhattan, focusing primarily on real estate, business and commercial matters. Over the past 30 years, I have handled hundreds of co-op and condo transactions throughout the greater New York metropolitan area and have a reputation for solving problems and getting complicated transactions done.

CoopandCondo.com is a resource blog for purchasers, sellers and owners of co-ops and condos in New York City. My goal is to demystify the process, so that my readers are able to make informed decisions when it comes to all facets of co-op and condo transactions and ownership. Articles from the blog have been cited or featured online in Huffington Post, curbed, brickunderground, NYTimes online, serviceyoucantrust, theapplepeeled, habitatmag and a variety of other web and print publications. I am also a contributor on residential real estate matters for NY1, a regional television news station in New York City.

I am a member of the New York State Bar Association and its related Committee on Condominiums and Cooperatives.

My wife and I reside in Manhattan and in Wilmington, NC.

For more information about my firm, I can be reached at (212) 826-2405 and by E-mail at realities@coopandcondo.com.