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Short Sales

Is it possible to do a short sale when there is a second mortgage on the property?

Yes it is possible, but there can be twice as much work to do and more time required to get the short sale approved. Additionally, it is very important that the second mortgage not go more than ninety days in arrears. That is because as a matter of policy, many lenders will assign their seconds to a collection agency after three months of missed payments. These collection companies can be extremely difficult to work with and have been known to kill many a short sale.

If the first mortgagee in a foreclosure sale is “upside down”, meaning the value is less than the first mortgage balance, then the mortgageee in second position gets absolutely nothing.  Even so, many of these collection companies will make insane and unreasonable demands. As a typical example, one such collection company recently demanded $30,000 on a $60,000 second mortgage from the short sale seller who was basically destitute. This seller had lost his job, had spent every dollar of savings trying to keep up his payments. He had nothing left. He could no more come up with $30,000 than the man in the moon.
 
In that case, the first mortgagee was already taking a huge hit, writing off nearly $100,000. The first offered the collection agency in second position $5,000 to settle. The collection company would not agree, the property went to foreclosure and the collection company received exactly what they deserved, which is nothing.
 
In another case … We recently sold a  short sale condo across from the Gulf of Mexico. A collection company was involved and hindered the sale for 26 months!  Yes, we had the property under contract on five separate occassions over a 26 month period of time. Even funnier? We originally had the property under contract for $325,000. 26 months later when the collection company finally agreed to the terms, we sold and closed the property for $209,000.  Effectively, the collection company cost the first mortgagee $116,000.  Even funnier still?  The first morgagee also owned the second mortgage and had assigned it to the collection company.  The collection company was negotiating against their own client!!
 
Some day we will look back at all this and laugh …??

Fannie Mae Tightens Policy

One more reason that a short sale is better than foreclosure … The government-owned mortgage giant Fannie Mae issued the following warning:

“Defaulting borrowers who walk-away and had the capacity to pay or did not complete a workout alternative in good faith will be ineligible for a new Fannie Mae-backed mortgage loan for a period of seven years from the date of foreclosure.”

Prior to this policy change, a foreclosure would render the mortgagor ineligible for 5 years. However, if you complete a short sale instead, the prohibition is a mere 2 years – Approximately the length of time it takes the average consumer to get back on their feet again.

ED AND TERRI SMITH RANKED #5 IN FLORIDA

Broker/Owners Ed and Terri Smith were recognized by RE/MAX International for their ranking as #5 among all residential real estate teams in Florida Y-T-D through April 30, 2010. Long time top producers in the local real estate market, the Smiths closed 92 real estate transaction sides in 2009.  Additionally, the Smiths were ranked  #9 in the state of Florida by RE/MAX International for 2008 and 2009. 
 
The Smiths opened their first RE/MAX office in Destin 20 years ago, April, 1990. They just relocated their office to the old “Cox and Young’ building on Highway 98 in the heart of Destin between McDonald’s and Golden Corral.  “Cox and Young opened in 1973 and was the first recognizable real estate office in Destin” Ed said.  “The visibility is great and the walk-in traffic is excellent. The move was a great decision!”
 

RE/MAX operates 7,000 offices in 80 countries worldwide which is an international presence far greater than any of its competitors. RE/MAX has been honored as the leading real estate franchise for nine of the last ten years by Entrepeneur Magazine.

New rules could speed short sales of distressed homes

WASHINGTON – Jan. 12, 2010 – The federal government is setting guidelines for short sales of homes, giving lenders a 10-day limit to respond to offers, freeing borrowers from debt and providing financial incentives to lenders.

The new rules seek to address the many criticisms of short sales and figure to play a significant role in South Florida, where distressed properties dominate the market as the housing slump meanders into a fifth year.

“The cloud could be lifted,” said Domenic Faro of the Fort Lauderdale Real Estate firm. “This could bring us back to some normalcy.”

In a short sale, the homeowner unloads the property for less than what’s owed on the mortgage, and the lender forgives the difference. Nearly half of all single-family mortgage holders in Palm Beach, Broward and Miami-Dade counties are “under water,” meaning they owe more than their homes are worth, according to third-quarter data from Zillow.com, a Seattle-based real estate firm.

While short sales are considered the perfect solution for “underwater”

homeowners on the verge of foreclosure, the deals often drag on as lenders take weeks or months to respond to offers. Frustrated buyers walk away during the delays. In some cases, lenders insist that borrowers share in the financial loss, holding up the transactions even longer.

To speed up the process, the U.S. Treasury is calling for lenders to respond to short sale offers within 10 business days. Sellers are eligible for $1,500 moving allowances, and they will not be on the hook for repayment of any debt.

Also, lenders will get $1,000 to cover administrative and processing costs, while investors owning the mortgages will receive a maximum $1,000 for allowing up to $3,000 in short sale proceeds to be distributed to less senior lenders. Loan servicers participating in the Obama Administration’s Home Affordable Modification Program are required to follow the guidelines.

The rules do not specifically apply to loans guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, which represent about half of all U.S. mortgage debt. The two government-run mortgage companies are working to finalize their own guidelines.

The Treasury plan, which must be implemented by lenders no later than April, is meant to help sellers like Dawn Sclafani, who has been waiting since October for her lender to approve a short sale offer on her Margate home. A buyer has offered $155,000, and she owes $233,000.

Sclafani, a 50-year-old psychologist, said she’s eager for the bank to approve the deal so she can put the experience behind her.

“I want to move on … but I can’t until somebody gives me permission to,”

she said. “I’ve heard that this is a horrendous process. The banks are just not very cooperative. I do believe these new rules will help.”

U.S. Rep Ron Klein, D-Boca Raton, agrees, saying the guidelines are meant to make short sales “a more usable tool.” Klein points out the rules provide standardized paperwork for all short sales and give buyers and sellers a more reasonable time frame for whether or not the sales will happen.

But Klein and others say the government may have to increase the financial incentives. The $3,000 cap on short sale proceeds is not sitting well with second lien holders, who have been demanding more money from sellers, the first lenders and real estate agents in exchange for releasing their claims and allowing the short sales to proceed.

“This is a great program if all these mortgages had only one lien holder,”

said Travis Hamel Olsen, chief operating officer for Loan Resolution Corp., an Arizona company that helps lenders complete short sales. “But many of these properties have two liens.”

Meanwhile, some local real estate agents remain skeptical of the guidelines.

 

Broward County agent Ron Rosen, who urged Klein last summer to push for new regulations, said he thinks “the banks will still play their little games with people and make life difficult for everyone.”

Edward Goldfarb of RE/MAX PowerPro Realty in Davie doubts the Treasury will enforce the new rules. “There’s no teeth to them,” he said.

A spokeswoman for the Treasury says it will hand down “substantial”

penalties to lenders that don’t comply. They can include the withholding or reduction of payments and requiring improperly rejected loans to be modified.

Lenders have blamed short sale delays on the complicated nature of the transactions, sheer numbers of deals and on borrowers who don’t submit proper paperwork in a timely manner.

In many cases, the banks are not to blame, said Ward Kellogg, chief executive of Boca Raton-based Paradise Bank. Still, he thinks the guidelines are necessary to force lenders to clear the market of so many distressed properties.

“I think the pressure on (the banks) is a good thing,” Kellogg said.

Copyright C 2010 Sun Sentinel, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Paul Owers.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

 

 

Treasury Announces Short Sale Changes

 The U.S. Treasury Department under the Making Home Affordable program has released a plan to speed up and encourage Short Sales as a means to help families avoid foreclosure. RE/MAX International has been heavily involved in efforts to streamline Short Sale proposals for over a year, and although the new guidelines aren’t everything we would hope for, they do represent a significant improvement over the current situation.
Short Sales have been difficult to close, and these new measures are a huge step in the right direction. One major highlight: A lender must give a yes or no answer to an offer within 10 days.
 
Also included: a moving allowance, incentives for sellers and lenders, commission rules, and a stipulation that releases sellers from debt liabilities.
The Treasury Department has finally announced their finalized rules for SHORT SALES under the Making Home Affordable program.
 
In a nutshell:
· Mandatory consideration of short sale after HAMP, before foreclosure
· Pre-approved terms from servicer before property listing
· 10 days for servicer to accept/reject offers

· Agents commission protected

· Incentive payments to servicers

· Relocation allowance to borrower

· Guidelines and system to try and clear second lien roadblocks

· Servicers must implement by April 5, 2010

 Unofficially, some folks at FANNIE MAE have indicated that between now and April, Fannie will be rolling out PILOT PROGRAMS in CALIFORNIA and FLORIDA that will follow similar if not exactly the same rules. Based on these pilots, Fannie and Treasury will tweak these rules as necessary before the national roll out in April.

 Here’s an initial Reuters news story <http://web04.echomail.com/web04/l.do?cid=204&mid=2192&e=rq~rq-greev.pbz&t=10703>  outlining the new policies.

Here is the announcement from Treasury <https://www.hmpadmin.com/portal/docs/news/hampupdate113009.pdf>  and the actual guidelines as published in Supplemental Directive 09-09 <https://www.hmpadmin.com/portal/docs/hamp_servicer/sd0909.pdf>

Also, here is a short article in DS News that summarizes things <http://www.dsnews.com/articles/index/treasury-releases-guidance-for-making-home-affordable-short-sales-2009-12-01>

Q: You said earlier that less than 20% of the short sales get approved. With those odds, why would anyone try?

 A: Although the national averages look gloomy, there is hope if you want to sell or buy a short sale. Many knowledgeable agents around the nation have much higher than average success rates.

Our personal short sale success rate now stands at more than 95%. As more agents become proficient with short sales, we believe that the national averages will improve as well.

On the other hand, consider how much smoother the process would be if the 80% that will never be approved were never submitted. The entire process would be much more streamlined and efficient.

 

Short Sale Mania

So, you think you want to buy a short sale?
 
Roughly 65% of all pending sales in our market fall into one or more distressed property catagories. That could be a short sale, pre-foreclosure, bank owned, etc.
 
The number of these pending sales equates to about twice the number of actual monthly closings. We are now learning that on a national basis, less than 20% of all submitted short sales are approved and actually close. Additionally, the process is becoming so protracted that many of the short sale buyers give up long before they get a response back from the foreclosing lender. With less than 20% of the short sale contracts being approved on a national basis, the odds of success are slim at best.    
 
So why do more than 80% of the short sales fail to close? Inexperience on the part of the real estate agents, period. The majority of short sale offers are so far below the lender’s minimum threshhold that the offers will never see the light of day. All these lowball offers only serve to bog down an already overwhelmed system.
 
So what to do?
 
Finding an experienced, qualified short sale agent should be your top priority. That is the single biggest factor in determining whether or not your transaction will be successful. Remember that for most real estate agents, the short sale business is a very recent phenomenon.  However, some of us have been orchestrating short sales for years. 
 
We know how to structure the short sale proposals. We know what the parameters are and what the lender will likely accept.  At 96%, our short sale success rate over the past three years far exceeds that of the national average.  There is no substitute for experience.

How is a short sale better than foreclosure for a seller?

We are asked this question many times each and every week. There are many advantages to the short sale, but a few of the biggest ones are: Your credit score is less severely impacted; You will not risk having a deficiency judgment filed against you; You can be eligible for a Fannie Mae loan in two years instead of five; If you have a security clearance, it should not be negatively impacted; Overall, your credit will recover much more quickly.

Additionally, while a foreclosure may remain on your credit report for 7 – 10 years, it really never goes away. It will remain in the public records forever.

Why do short sales take so long to complete?

That old adage “garbage in, garbage out”, probably best sums up the problem. The banks and lenders are being inundated with hundreds of thousands of short payoff proposals that don’t stand a chance of EVER seeing the light of day. The offers must fit within certain parameters to be approved. While our personal short sale success rate is more than 90%, the national average is only 25%. Were it not for the 75% “garbage”, the short sale process would be far more efficient and the real estate markets could see genuine recovery much more quickly.

Are there fewer foreclosures on the market right now?

Yes, there are fewer foreclosures on the market now … There are several reasons for the decline in the number foreclosure sales, but such is not the case in terms of actual filings. Filings may be about to increase significantly though.

The reasons for the cancelled sales, abated foreclosures and dismissals have to do with:

1. Moratorium commitments for entities receiving government funds
2. Some servicers have run out of money to advance foreclosure costs
3. Servicers are now being instructed to mitigate costs when a foreclosure will only result in the burden of maintenance, repair, taxes and insurance and the ire of the affected neighborhood
4. The overwhelmed servicers have minimal trained staff and huge caseloads
5. The servicers have to deal with conflicts between investor tranches
6. Servicers have to wade through the complex IRS REMIC tax shelter issues set up in the PSA

The decline in foreclosure sales is a result of loss mitigation which has now morphed into “loan management”, but is not likely to be successful in the near term as property value continue to decline, making it difficult to accomodate modifications.

In spite of these efforts, many borrowers will not qualify because of bad debt to income ratios, loan to value ratios. Also due to poor credit scores and in general, an inability to qualify for a mortgage loan and/or obtain property insurance.

In 2008, more than half of the borrowers who were able to obtain loan modifications from their lenders were delinquent again six months later. In other words, nationwide modification efforts have not been especially successful thus far.

Then we have the next generation of defaults – That is, those occurring within the ranks of the chronically unemployed – previously referred to as the middle class. Nationwide surveys indicate that the average family has the liquid resources to survive for 60 days without income. Unemployment rates are rising, and consequently, a rise in related mortgage defaults.

All this data is being closely scrutinized by lenders and government alike. The lenders are coming around to the realization that putting families out of their homes is not a good business model.

If you are looking for a deal on a distressed property, short sales may be better options than bank owned.