- advertisement -
Bankrate.com
News & Advice Compare Rates Calculators
Rate Alerts  |  Glossary  |  Help
Mortgage Home
Equity
Auto CDs &
Investments
Retirement Checking &
Savings
Credit
Cards
Debt
Management
College
Finance
Taxes Personal
Finance

 

Rely on pros to cure title troubles

Refinancing a mortgage four times in a year creates enough stress. Add title problems, and you can hardly bear the anxiety.

- advertisement -

It happened to Apurva Pande and his wife, Chinmaya Misra. Both are architects in Los Angeles, and they bought a house three years ago. The house was dilapidated, which meant that they could afford it, and they could gut the interior and exercise their designing muscles.

They wrestled with financing, and in about one year, they refinanced four times, Pande says. Each time, they did cash-out refinances.

It worked this way: They would work on the house, increasing its value, then refinance the loan based on the greater value. They would pay off the old loan and borrow a bigger amount, taking the difference in cash, which they would use to pay for further renovations. Then they repeated the cycle of remodeling and refinancing.

At least twice, "we were literally days away from closing, if not less, before we would get this call about a prior title that hadn't been cleared up," Pande says via e-mail. "I think I aged five years faxing and refaxing titles (and) proof of previous closures."

Title problems common
Pande and Misra make an extreme example. Few homeowners invite trouble by refinancing four times in a year. But lots of people are afflicted by the problem they encountered: missing or incomplete paperwork that causes a delay -- or the threat of a delay -- in the closing of a mortgage. Many observers blame today's title troubles on the refinancing boom of 2003 and 2004, when lenders, title companies and county recorders were overwhelmed with more paper than they could handle.

It's up to professionals to fix title problems. But you can do a few things to increase your odds of having a trouble-free closing:

Tips for a trouble-free closing

Avoid busiest days
Dan Green, a mortgage consultant with Mobium Mortgage in Chicago, lays down one rule to his clients: Never close on a Friday or the last day of the month, especially in the afternoon and especially in summer. (This month, June 2006, carries a triple whammy: The last day of the month is a Friday, and it's in summer, when more people are on vacation.)

Green discourages clients from closing on those days and at those times because that's when title agents and closing attorneys are at their busiest. Everyone wants to close at the end of the month or on a Friday because those are convenient times to move. When settlement agents are at their busiest, they don't have as much time to deal with last-minute problems. "When something goes wrong, you need to be sure that enough people are available," Green says.

Closing procedures vary by state and county. In many places, title agents organize the paperwork and supervise the settlement. In some other places, mainly in the Northeast, real estate attorneys do that work.

They strive not to let anyone see them sweat. By the American Land Title Association's reckoning, 36 percent of real estate transactions require some type of corrective action. Usually a document is missing, or a new or corrected document needs to be filed. The repairs are done in the background, and in most cases the consumer doesn't know about it.

"We like to have the typical borrower believe that everything is going along hunky-dory," says James Maher, executive vice president of ALTA, the title industry's Washington-based lobbying group. "We don't want to have their confidence in the system undermined."

 
 
Next: Title troubles unnerve lenders, and it happens all the time.
Page | 1 | 2 |
 
 RESOURCES
Ins and outs of title insurance
Closing cost comparison study
Free weekly mortgage newsletter
 TOP MORTGAGE STORIES
Is agent commission negotiable?
Is the 40-year mortgage a joke?
4 steps to refinance
 

Mortgages
Compare today's rates
NATIONAL OVERNIGHT AVERAGES
30 yr fixed mtg 5.34%
15 yr fixed mtg 4.94%
5/1 ARM 4.94%
Rates may include points
ADVERTISING PARTNERS
- advertisement -
News & Advice | Compare Rates | Calculators
Mortgage | Home Equity | Auto | Investing | Checking & Savings | Credit Cards | Debt Management | College Finance | Taxes | Personal Finance
About Bankrate | Privacy | Online Media Kit | Partnerships | Investor Relations | Press/Broadcast | Contact Us | Sitemap
NASDAQ: RATE | RSS Feeds | Order Rate Data | Bankrate Canada | Bankrate China

* Mortgage rate may include points. See rate tables for details. Click here.
* To see the definition of overnight averages click here.

Bankrate.com ®, Copyright © 2009 Bankrate, Inc., All Rights Reserved, Terms of Use.