When Transactional Funding Alone Won’T Work (Transactional Funding, Part 3)
When Transactional Funding Alone Won’T Work (Transactional Funding, Part 3)
Now that you understand how transactional funding works, it probably has taken a pretty big load off your mind. Turns out, despite the new laws that require your name to be on the deed of a property that you sell, you can still get funding that is not a risk to you or the lender without having to have perfect credit and a huge down payment on the property.
However, there are times that transactional funding alone will not work to smooth the short sale flipping process. This occurs in a deal in which there is a mandatory â??seasoningâ? process, which requires a buyer to hold a property with their name on the deed for a period of days, weeks or months before they can sell. As you can see, this can seriously slow the flipping process, especially if you are dealing with a buyer who wants to move in immediately. Seasoning is another method that legislatively works to help prevent fraud, but many investors feel that it is also deliberately designed to make flipping difficult and target the real estate investing community. There are two ways to deal with seasoning:
1. Find a way to work with it
2. Only invest in areas that do not have seasoning laws
It appears that many governing bodies are starting to see the flaws in the seasoning process, and many lending and legislative bodies are taking steps to undo the regulations that require seasoning. However, at this point in time, it is still something that you must consider before you flip a short sale.Â
If you are required to season a property before selling, then you will have to obtain some source of funding that will enable you to hold the property for the required period. This may involve credit checks, but many investors have found that private money lenders are a good source of funding in these cases, just as they are for construction loans and rehab deals. It is vitally important that you find out the seasoning laws and rules in an area before you set up a short sale deal. Otherwise, you may find that you have devoted a lot of time and energy to a lost cause if you are unable to season the deal as required.
There are some cases in which you can creatively work out a way to enable a buyer to basically take possession of the property during the seasoning process. However, these methods must be carefully checked out with an attorney to insure that you do not jeopardize your own funding or your buyerâ??s in the process.Â
Peter Vekselman has been successfully investing in real estate since 1996. He has completed over 1200 real estate deals, owned a construction company, been a private lender, and owned a property management company. Peter currently works with clients all over the US helping them achieve riches in real estate investing. For more information please visit www.CoachingByPeter.com.
Peter Vekselman has been successfully investing in real estate since 1996.
He has completed over 1200 real estate deals, owned a construction company,
been a private lender, and owned a property management company. Peter
currently works with clients all over the US helping them achieve riches in
real estate investing. For more information please visit
www.CoachingByPeter.com.
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Tagged with: Alone • Funding • Part • Transactional • Won’T • Work
Filed under: Bulk REO Financing
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