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Commercial escrows are
different from what you may be used to in buying a house. From the time
you sign the contract until you close escrow, you have a lot of details to
manage, numerous deadlines to meet and a pile of paperwork to deal with.
Your escrow will demand a lot of your time and attention.
If you have not purchased
many commercial properties before, you must understand this important thing.
Commercial escrows have critical deadlines that may not be flexible. We
suggest you mark each deadline on your calendar and review them regularly.
Your purchase requires the work of many professionals: escrow officers, title
officers, real estate brokers, mortgage broker, lenders, appraisers,
environmental consultants, building inspectors, etc. If your purchase
involves construction, this list may include space planners, architects,
engineers, contractors, developers and city planners.
Since obtaining financing plays such a central role in the
process, Rozelle Financial steps up to coordinate all these professionals.
We track each deadline and check up on the work of each person you are relying
on.
Escrow Stages
Transactions differ from one
to another, but most escrows include the following stages. If you
understand what
must happen in each one, the process will go much smoother.
Loan Application
You are strongly encouraged
to start the loan application process well before you open escrow. It
takes most borrowers at least a week to fill out forms, prepare and collect
financial reports and deliver it to us. We, in turn, need some time to
analyze them and prepare our presentation for the lender. Ideally, the
execution of the purchase agreement completes the application process, rather
than begins it.
Contingency Period
The moment the purchase
agreement is executed “the clock starts” on your contingency period. You
can cancel escrow and get your deposit back at any time during this period, but
not after it expires. You have a huge amount of work before you put your
money at risk. You will check out the property’s physical condition,
condition of title, zoning, etc. But for our discussion here, you have to
be certain you have a loan.
Lender Selection
Don’t overlook the time this
step will take! Having analyzed your package, we may need time to discuss
it with lenders before we present you with options. Then you need time to think
them over and perhaps to discuss them with your partners, spouse or CPA.
If you have a tough loan to place, we may need a couple weeks to find the right
lender.
Loan Approval
Lenders follow one of
two different
timelines leading to their approval. Some lenders approve loans first and
then order the appraisal and environmental reports. Others wait for the
appraisal and environmental to be done, then make their decision. Either
way, you should not consider your financing contingency satisfied until you have
these three things: a written loan approval, an acceptable appraisal and
a clean environmental report.
Lenders need at least two
weeks to approve a loan. Lately, appraisers have needed from three to five weeks
to finish the appraisal. A two week environmental report can be finished
concurrently. Consequently, your contingency period typically needs five
to seven weeks after the time you choose a lender.
Satisfying Closing
Conditions. The
lender's approval letter will list things you need to do before closing. Get to work on this list as soon as it arrives.
For example, you must provide property insurance. Buyers often forget
about this item until the last minute. We encourage you to contact your
insurance agent early in the escrow process. The lender will tell you what coverage will be required. Have
your agent send an insurance binder to escrow well before closing. If your loan
will be financing construction, you have lots of work during this stage getting
your drawings, contracts and permits in hand.
Document Preparation. About three days before
closing, when all the closing conditions have been satisfied, the lender will
draft loan documents. Normally you will see these documents for the first time
at escrow where you will be expected to sign them on the spot. If you want your
legal counsel to review them before you sign, let us know ahead of time.
We will ask the lender to draft them early.
Closing.
Several things take place in rapid succession at closing. The lender will send
“lenders instructions” to escrow summarizing their fees and outlining what must
be collected before closing. The escrow officer
will prepare an estimated closing statement which outlines all the charges and
tells you how much money you need to close. Make sure we review this
statement, since there are often errors that cost you money. You will then go
to escrow, sign loan documents and wire your money into escrow, When your money
is in escrow and all the lender’s conditions have been met, the lender will wire
the loan funds. The escrow officer then checks the file and submits it for
recording.
Within a week you should
receive a refund from escrow for the extra, padded funds they collected.
Note: Don't forget to ask the lender for a copy of the
appraisal. They are normally happy to provide it after the close of
escrow, but most will not offer it unless you ask.
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