toxicmolotof
2017-08-16 13:03:13
- #1
There are all kinds of commitments from banks.
There are commitments that are not worth the paper they are written on. Anyone who even thinks about buying a house gets those.
However, it also states that everything is subject to the verification of the collateral, subject to the verification of the financial circumstances, or whatever... that is useless to you.
You have to go with the bank at least far enough and have it checked so that the advisor tells you: Yes, we are willing to give you the following loans under conditions xy. Without conditions, restrictions, or pending verifications...
But you can tell the difference.
The bank saves itself a lot of work with the latter, because it does not have to create contracts yet. At many banks nowadays, this only happens when both parties say "yes."
There are commitments that are not worth the paper they are written on. Anyone who even thinks about buying a house gets those.
However, it also states that everything is subject to the verification of the collateral, subject to the verification of the financial circumstances, or whatever... that is useless to you.
You have to go with the bank at least far enough and have it checked so that the advisor tells you: Yes, we are willing to give you the following loans under conditions xy. Without conditions, restrictions, or pending verifications...
But you can tell the difference.
The bank saves itself a lot of work with the latter, because it does not have to create contracts yet. At many banks nowadays, this only happens when both parties say "yes."