Black & White Bridging completes case in eight days

Damien Druce, commercial director at Black & White Bridging, said: “This case was completed well within the client’s stipulated timeframe of 10 working days and we have a delighted customer and a happy broker."

Black & White Bridging completes case in eight days

Black & White Bridging has completed a case for a broker and their client in eight days.

 

Magnus Duke Dadzie of ABCD Capital Funding & Finance introduced the case.

It required 75% loan-to-value (LTV) funding on a leasehold flat, but with the stipulation that the deal had to complete within 10 days.

With the initial underwriting concluded, the case was in danger of being held up because the original valuer had been unable, due to ongoing pressure of work, to undertake the instruction.

A second valuer had to be instructed; the new valuation was delivered the following day and the case completed in eight working days.

Damien Druce, commercial director at Black & White Bridging, said: “This case was completed well within the client’s stipulated timeframe of 10 working days and we have a delighted customer and a happy broker.

“My definition of a ‘fast’ bridging loan is one that meets or exceeds the client’s expectations regardless of time taken and I hope that by illustrating this case, it might go a little way to balance stories of highlighted cases that infer that bridging deals are done in what seems the time it takes to make a cup of coffee. In reality, they are few and far between.

“In our case, completion in eight days, even with the added time handicap of a misfiring first valuer, is a fast completion in the real world, not because it took ‘X’ number of hours from end to end, but because we produced what was needed within the customer’s parameters.

“The sector does itself no favours by peddling the idea that bridging loans provide ‘immediate’ funding.

“If we continue to over-promise by trumpeting about the few cases where the stars align and everything falls right into place, we are just setting ourselves up for brokers and their clients to have overly unrealistic expectations about what we can offer.”