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short sale

The Basic Short Sale Process

October 1, 2009 by Jon Griffith · Comments 

shortsaleprocessbasicHandling a Short Sale for a client is a very complicated and detailed process, but at its core, there are only a few basic steps involved.  The real success of the Short Sale is attributed to the experience level of the agent representing the seller.  If they don’t know what they’re doing, it’s likely you won’t have a very smooth transaction.  In fact, if they are attempting to short sale your home without experience, then they are doing you a disservice, as its our fiduciary as Realtors to represent your best interests, which cannot happen without proper experience.

Short Sales Process at its Basics

Listing:  The first step is to list the property for sale. Traditional marketing does not typically apply to short sale properties because we’re pricing it to sell as quickly as possible.  The seller doesn’t make any  money, and they don’t approve the sale, so essentially, the seller really isn’t the seller.  The bank is ultimately in charge.

Offer:  A qualified buyer presents an offer. Just like any other sale of any other property, ensuring the buyer is adequately qualified to actually purchase the home is just as important on a short sale as a normal sale.

Execution:  The seller signs the contract. Provided the offer is within reasonable fair market value of the comparable sales in the neighborhood, when the offer is presented, the seller will sign it and it will be considered executed or “accepted,” but not “approved.”

Submit to Lender(s): Along with all of the required documentation, the offer and all associated listing paperwork, addenda, financial statement, etc., is submitted by your Realtor to the lender(s) on the property and the approval process begins.

Receive Letter of Agreement: When the lender approves of the sale, meaning they’re taking what they can get from the deal, they provide a letter of agreement which the seller reviews and approves or disapproves of.  If the seller agrees to their terms, the normal closing time line begins.

Due Diligence:  It’s now time for the buyer to conduct their inspections and obtain their funding.  If everything checks out okay, and the property appraises for at least the contract purchase price, then the buyer moves on to the next step.

Signing:  Woo hoo! This is where the buyer signs their final paperwork.  Title will then record the property transfer with the county recorder and the new buyer will take ownership of the property.

That’s it. Those are the basic steps of a short sale.  From start to finish, this entire process is completely dependent upon how cooperative each party to the transaction is, and no two short sales are the same.  This entire process can take a few weeks, to more than 8 months.  So, as a buyer or a seller, be prepared to wait.

short sale

The Truth About Loan Modification

September 25, 2009 by Jon Griffith · Comments 

When applying for a loan modification, be prepared to disclose your entire financial life to whomever is negotiating your modification.  If you try to do it, you will fail, unless you are persistent, or insane.  Some attorneys require $3000 up front retainers to even begin negotiating with the bank.  There is no guarantee that it will work.

How Can I Qualify?

More than 60% of you do not qualify because a simple modification of your loan will not bring your financial position in line with the bank’s requirements.  So what are those requirements?  The lenders are simply looking at your finances to determine if your mortgage payment exceeds roughly 31% of your net take-home pay.  This is an estimate, and every case is different, but it’s typical.

stop_foreclosureThat means that if you have bad spending habits, or you’re paying bills that should be considered secondary to your mortgage before you pay your mortgage, your lender will call you out on it during the loan modification process.  You may need to prioritize your spending.

So, regardless of your monthly mortgage payment, if it’s less than 31% of your net take-home pay, you will probably be denied.  So don’t waste your time.

Loan modification typically results in a lowered interest rate, 10 years of additional payments on your home, payment deferral, or some other manipulation that will usually not help you anyway.

The real problem is that you owe money on a house that will not recover its value in enough time for you to break even on the future appreciation of your house, and therefore, you’re stuck in that house.  If it comes time to move, you’re still stuck in a situation where you may have to do a Short Sale to sell the home.

The real truth about loan modification is that it’s possible, but it pacifies the homeowner long enough for the bank to continue to make money off of your financial hardship.  Think about it.  The bank wants you to be enslaved to their madness for as long as possible.  At the same time, the banks are out of money and are going bankrupt, so your best option at this point in time may be to do a Short Sale.

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Buyer Backs Out on Short Sale

September 17, 2009 by Jon Griffith · Comments 

Ever heard that one before?

If you list and negotiate short sales, I’m sure you have. During the past year, the time frame required to close a short sale has increased as more and more properties hit the market in a distressed state. Short sales occur when the bank allows the owner to sell the home for less than they owe.

On all buyer contracts, I require that they put up a non-refundable portion of their earnest money for a specified number of days. When I started with distressed properties, I required a 60-day non-refundable period with $500.00 of the earnest deposit held to keep the buyer in the game.

Actually, this is my advice to the seller, who then agrees to the terms of the contract which is in their best interest. I do not make the terms, I only advise them what would be best.

Since the time it takes to close a short sale has increased dramatically, so has the time that I recommend the seller require the buyer to be non-refundable on that portion of their deposit. There is so much work involved in negotiating with investors –> THROUGH –> servicers, that it’s required by my sellers to hold on to the buyers as long as possible.

My most recent lost buyer, which occurred this evening at 11 something PM, had passed their 70 day time frame and were well within their rights to cancel with a full refund of their earnest deposit.

Who is at fault? Well, I’m not about pointing fingers, but in this particular case, the culprit is the investor who backed the 2nd mortgage.

2nd Lien Holders Don’t Get Their Money

When the owner of a home doesn’t pay, the 1st lien holder (after property taxes and other senior liens) can foreclose on the property. If there is a 2nd mortgage, they lose everything.

During a short sale, if the 1st lender agrees to a certain amount, they usually offer somewhere in the neighborhood of 10% of the 2nd lien holder’s balance to appease them and make them go away. If the 2nd does not accept the offer, the 1st can eventually foreclose and the 2nd will get NOTHING! NOTHING! Do I have to spell it out to the investor? NOTHING! Even if they demand more than the 1st is willing to pay, and the seller, or agent, or grandmother agrees to bring money to the table for the 2nd, the 1st lien holder MUST APPROVE OF THE SALE and if they don’t, THE 1ST gets the additional payment, leaving with 2nd again, with NOTHING ABOVE AND BEYOND WHAT THE 1ST AGREED TO PAY THEM.

So, now that the 2nd, in this particular case, has held the deal long enough to allow the buyer to surpass their non-refundable time-period, there is now no buyer for the property and the seller is faced yet again with the burden of paying their mortgage with money they do not have.

So What HAS been accomplished?

Well, now we know the bottom line and as long as the bottom line is fair market value minus all expenses, we should be able to find a buyer for the property.  If we don’t, the idiots who caused the delay, which allowed the buyer to bail out, will get NOTHING!  I don’t think I need to repeat myself again.

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Beating the BPO on a Short Sale

August 26, 2009 by Jon Griffith · Comments 

The BPO is the Broker Price Opinion.  It’s an opinion of the value of a home by a licensed real estate agent, not by a certified appraiser.  Before any home goes on the market, your real estate agent will conduct a Market Analysis of your home, neighborhood and neighboring sub-divisions.  He or she will recommend a price range.  You, the “seller” will determine the final asking price.  The home will then be listed for sale and the marketing will begin.

Short Sales are similar, but since the seller will not be receiving any of the proceeds of the sale, and the lender will be paying the commission on the sale, there is no reason for the seller to be concerned with the initial price of the home, and subsequent price reductions, provided his or her agent can show that the initial price is not off base and is in fact in line with fair market value.

Investors want as much as they can get out of the home, but for the sake of time, to avoid foreclosure, they will typically take less than fair market value.  The difference in cost to the investor (the one who purchased the loan) between a foreclosure and a short sale is in the tens of thousands of dollar.  It is typically better for the investor to take a discount off of fair market value than it is to let the home go into foreclosure.

When an offer is received on a short sale property, it is submitted to the lender along with all of the seller’s required documentation, which is similar, but not exactly the same for each lender.  As soon as the lender catches wind of a pending sale, they will order an independent internal BPO from an authorized broker.

The Problem

BPO agents don’t make very much money on each property they assess.  They also aren’t always familiar with the market where the subject property sits.  This can typically lead to a very inaccurate and lazy BPO reports.  When this happens, the investor will usually formulate a bottom line net proceeds dollar amount that they will be required to be paid at closing that’s too high.

If everyone does their job correctly, the listing agent, the buyer’s agent, and the BPO agent should all find a reasonably close comparison in price.  When this happens, the lender will usually approve the sale.

When we learn of a bad BPO, in other words, if the bank expects more than is reasonable for the market, we typically have to head out on our own to do an exhaustive analysis of the market area to illustrate the error.  By doing so, the lender will typically order a 2nd BPO.

It is assumed, however, that the listing agent did his job well and came up with the right price from the get go.  Not always possible in this changing market.

Beating a BPO takes time and tedious number crunching, but it can be done.  I recently showed the loan servicing company on one of my listings that they were severely off base on their price opinion and as a result, because I know the market in that area, and they don’t because they are in a different state, they approved the sale.

Don’t take the lender’s BPO as the final authority.  Your realtor should be the expert in the market area.  That’s why you hired them.   Although, the term expert is used quite loosely, he or she really should be in touch with what’s going on.

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