Mission Impossible Loans – Episode 7: The Retiring Realtor, The 1031 Deadline, and the Loan That Almost Died
By Steven Hook
Some transactions look easy on the surface.
Strong credit.
Large down payment.
Extensive real estate experience.
Seasoned borrower.
1031 exchange funds already in place.
That was the case when Mike, a veteran real estate agent and investor, was referred to me by another agent in his office.
He was purchasing another investment property for his portfolio through a 1031 tax-deferred exchange and needed financing quickly.
At first glance, it looked straightforward.
It wasn’t.
The Real Problem Was Hidden in the Income Story
Mike had excellent historical income and years of successful real estate experience.
But I requested updated documentation:
- Current year profit & loss statement
- Current commission income
- Rental income from existing properties
- Updated financial picture
That’s where the deal began to shift.
As the file moved forward, it became clear that multiple property sales, entity changes, and business restructuring had made his current income difficult to verify.
Then the truth finally surfaced:
Mike was retiring.
His current income no longer resembled the income shown on prior tax returns.
That one missing detail nearly killed the transaction.
Meanwhile… The Clock Was Ticking
Mike’s offer had already been accepted.
Then another issue surfaced:
He was also running short on time in his 1031 exchange window.
Now we had:
- Accepted purchase contract
- Tight closing timeline
- Expiring 1031 deadline
- Underwriter questioning income
- Rehab work in progress at subject property
- Potential title concerns
- Possible mechanics liens
- Appraisal uncertainty
In other words:
A classic Mission Impossible Loan.
The Pivot That Saved the Deal
Instead of forcing a traditional full-income loan into a situation where it no longer fit, I pivoted immediately into a more appropriate investor financing solution.
For borrowers with complex or changing income, some programs focus more heavily on:
1. Property Cash Flow
How do rents compare to the housing payment?
2. Credit Strength
High credit scores often dramatically improve pricing.
Mike had both.
That changed everything.
The List Of Lender Conditions Collapsed Overnight
Before the pivot, the loan file carried difficult income and employment conditions.
After restructuring:
- Fewer underwriting hurdles
- Minimal documentation
- Easier path to closing
- Cleaner approval process
The deal became manageable again.
The Interest Rate Surprise
Many borrowers assume “no income verification” means a huge pricing penalty.
Not always.
In Mike’s case, the interest rate difference compared to a traditional full-doc loan was only 0.125%.
Practically speaking?
About the cost of a few Mai Tais at his favorite Hawaiian tiki bar during retirement.
Final Lesson for Investors & Realtors
The right loan program can matter more than chasing the lowest advertised rate.
When income is changing, retirement is near, tax returns are complicated, or a 1031 deadline is approaching, structure matters.
A declined loan is not always a bad borrower.
Sometimes it is simply the wrong loan.
Have a loan scenario another lender said was difficult? Send it to me confidentially.
- Retiring but still buying investment property
- 1031 exchange deadline approaching
- Self-employed income difficult to document
- Investor with multiple entities
- Complex real estate holdings
That is where experience matters.
Every borrower is unique. Every property has a story.
If you’re navigating a real estate challenge — big or small — I’m here to help you find the smartest path forward.
🔎 BROKER’S EDGE – Smarter Real Estate Lending
🤝 Looking out for your Best Interest, and Helping Homeowners, Investors & Small Business Owners since 1990
📞 Steven Hook | Residential & Commercial Mortgage Broker
📱 415-260-9376 | 📠 415-449-3428
🎓 MBA | CMPS | CMA
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🌐 shook@Uamco.com or smhloans007@gmail.com
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This content is provided for informational purposes only and is not a loan commitment or guarantee of financing. Loan programs, rates, terms, and conditions are subject to change and borrower qualification. Individual results may vary.

