Why Declined Deals Are Not Always Dead and What Lender Placement Actually Means

May 04, 20263 min read

Why Declined Deals Are Not Always Dead and What Lender Placement Actually Means

The Part of the Industry Nobody Talks About Enough

This happens more than anyone in the mortgage industry wants to admit. A deal comes in, gets declined, the broker thinks it is dead, the borrower walks away frustrated, and everybody moves on assuming the deal just did not work.

But here is what is actually happening on the other side of that story far more often than most people realize.

The deal was fine. The borrower was fine. The numbers made sense. It just got sent to the wrong lender and structured for the wrong program. That is it. That is the whole story in a significant number of cases that never should have ended in a decline.

Same Borrower, Completely Different Outcome

As Tripp Adams explains he has picked up files that were declined by someone else and closed them without a single issue more times than he can count. Not because there was a loophole to exploit or a technicality to work around. Because the deal belonged somewhere specific from the beginning and it was sent somewhere else instead.

Same borrower. Same income. Same property. Different lender. Completely different outcome.

That is not a fluke. It is what happens when a file lands with a lender whose guidelines, overlays, and appetite for that specific deal type actually align with what the borrower presents. The decline was not a reflection of whether the deal worked. It was a reflection of where it was placed.

Why Lender Placement Is One of the Most Underestimated Skills in This Business

The mortgage lending landscape is not one uniform market. It is a collection of lenders with different products, different guidelines, different overlays on top of agency guidelines, and different appetites for specific borrower profiles and property types. A bank statement borrower who gets declined at one lender may be a straightforward approval at another. A unique property type that one lender will not touch is another lender's core product.

Knowing where a specific deal actually belongs from the moment it comes in is the skill that separates brokers and loan officers who consistently close difficult deals from those who consistently send declines back to borrowers who deserved better outcomes.

When lender placement is right upfront approval rates go up. Fall-through rates go down. Borrowers stop getting bounced around from lender to lender hearing no when the right answer was always yes, just not here.

What to Do With a Deal That Should Not Have Been Declined

If you have a file that came back declined and something about that outcome does not sit right the answer is not to accept it and move on. The answer is to get a second opinion from someone who understands where that deal actually belongs.

Tripp Adams works with brokers who have deals sitting in their pipeline that someone else declined and want a straight answer on whether there is a path forward. Not a runaround. Not a vague maybe. A direct assessment of whether the deal works and where it needs to go to get there.

Send the file over. If there is a path forward it will be identified clearly. If there is not that will be communicated just as directly. Either way you will know the real answer instead of wondering whether a deal died that did not have to.


Sources

MortgageNewsDaily.com NationalMortgageProfessional.com HousingWire.com MBA.org ConsumerFinancialProtectionBureau.gov

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