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Posted over 9 years ago

All About Delayed Financing........ Cashing Out Prior To 6 Months.

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Delayed Financing Exception

A cash-out refinance within six (6) months of a purchase transaction when no financing was obtained for the purchase transaction are allowed under the following parameters:

  • The new loan amount is not more than the actual documented amount of the borrower’s initial investment in purchasing the property, plus the financing of closing costs, prepaid fees, and points (subject to the maximum LTV).


FOR AN INVESTMENT FIXED RATE CONVENTIONAL MORTGAGE;

  • On an investment property; A SFR if you have #1-10 mortgaged properties, you can pull out up to 75% of the equity and on 2-4 units is up to 70% equity.
  • On an investment property; If you have #7-10 mortgaged properties, including subject you are required to have a credit score of 720, and are subject to a minimum loan amount of $50k!

FOR A PRIMARY FIXED RATE CONVENTIONAL MORTGAGE;

  • On a primary residence you can pull out up to 80% LTV on a SFR and up to 75% LTV on 2-4 unit multi-families.

    DELAYED FINANCING EXCEPTION

    Delayed Financing Exception

    A cash-out refinance within 6 months of a purchase transaction when no financing was obtained for the purchase transaction are allowed under the following parameters:

    • The new loan amount is not more than the actual documented amount of the borrower’s initial investment in purchasing the property, plus the financing of closing costs, prepaid fees, and points (subject to the maximum LTV).
    1. CASH OUT FINANCING AND DELAYED FINANCING HAVE THE SAME LTV REQUIREMENTS - BUT DELAYED FINANCING IS SUBJECT TO A MAX OF PURCHASE PRICE PLUS CLOSING COSTS.
    • The purchase transaction was an arm’s length transaction
    • The purchase transaction is documented by the HUD-1, which confirms that no mortgage financing was used to obtain the subject property. The preliminary title search or report must also confirm no liens on the subject property.
    • The source of funds for the purchase transaction can be documented (bank statements, personal loan documents, HELOC on another property). Any loans used as the source for the purchase transaction will be required to be repaid on the new HUD-1.

      Funds received as gifts and used to purchase the property may not be reimbursed with proceeds of the new mortgage loan. Funds of gifts are not allowed with investment purchases.

    • All other cash-out refinance eligibility requirements are met and cash-out pricing is applied. This is allowed on primary residences, second homes and investment properties per cash-out guidelines.
      • Ineligible Transactions
        The following transaction types are not eligible as cash-out refinances:
        • The subject property was purchased by the borrower within the six months preceding the application for new financing except if delayed financing guidelines are met
        • The subject property is currently listed for sale
        • The existing mortgage is a “restructured mortgage”
        • Transactions in which a portion of the proceeds of the refinance is used to pay off the outstanding balance on an installment land contract regardless of the date the installment land
          contract was executed.
        • The new loan amount includes the financing of real estate taxes that are more than 60 days delinquent and an escrow account is not established.

      Freddie Mac's Guide to Refinancing, including Cash Out.

      Fannie Mae's Guideline to Cash Out Financing.

    Fannie Mae Guideline for Cash Out, Mortgaged Property 5-10.

STATES WE LEND IN:

Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming

    This information is accurate as of the time of posting. Please also verify the accuracy of this information at the time you are considering these options as guidelines change. 



Comments (6)

  1. Good read.  So if I'm understanding the delayed financing idea correctly, if I wanted to pay all cash for a property, I would still have to pay for it with my own funds first, with the delayed financing funds coming only shortly thereafter.     In this case, could I take a personal loan (not a mortgage) for the initial purchase and then use the delayed financing?


  2. A little confused.  We are talking about getting a FHA refinance cash out loan? This is an exemption to what exactly? 


  3. Can I use this program if I made the initial purchase with Private/Hard Money?


    1. Great question. Did you happen to find out if this can be done? I am wanting to do the same thing only the original poster of the thread did not exactly simplify the wording.


  4. Great information!  Thanks for sharing.


  5. Great Information @Jerry Padilla

    I am actually structuring my loan with my lender but, I am not comfortable with stating the GC as the recipient of the funds once dispersed.

    Humans are humans; so, I would feel more comfortable naming myself on the HUD-1 at closing rather than naming my GC as the sole recipient of the funds once dispersed, as he will be performing the work on the property.

    My lender said this is the practice for a LTV cash-out refi prior to waiting six-months.