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Negotiations
Lenders have the department (typically called
"loss mitigation") that processes potential short sale transactions. Today, lenders may accept short sale offers or
requests for short sales even if a Notice of Default has not
been issued or recorded with the locality where the property is located. Given the unprecedented and overwhelming
number of losses that mortgage lenders have suffered from the 2009 foreclosure
crisis, they are now more willing to accept short sales than ever before. This is great
news for borrowers who are "under-water" — in other words,
those who owe more on their mortgage than their property is worth and are having trouble selling to avoid
foreclosure as a result.
Lenders have a varying tolerance for short sales and mitigated losses.
The majority of lenders have a pre-determined criteria for such transactions. Other distressed lenders may allow
any reasonable offer subject to a loss mitigator's approval. Multiple levels of approvals and conditions are very
common with short sales. Junior liens - such as second mortgages, HELOC
lenders, and HOA (special assessment liens) - may need to approve the short sale. Frequent
objectors to short sales include tax lien holders (income, estate or corporate franchise tax - as opposed to
real property taxes, which have priority even when unrecorded) and mechanic's lien holders. It is possible
for junior lien holders to prevent the short sale. If the lender required mortgage
insurance on the loan, the insurer will likely also be party to negotiations as
they may be asked to pay out a claim to offset the lender's loss in the short sale. The wide array of
parties, parameters and processes involved in a short sale makes it a relatively complex and highly
specialized type of real estate transaction which is why unfortunately short sale deals have a high failure
rate and often do not close on time to save homeowners from foreclosure when they are not handled by a
knowledgeable and experienced professional. The best sources of knowledge and expertise in short sales are
short sale negotiators, loss mitigation specialists, and real estate lawyers who specialize in short
sale.
One thing a buyer should know about a short sale is there is no necessary commitment by the bank
to sell the house. When the bank completes a short sale they have to write off the difference between their
loan amount and the lesser proceeds from the escrow, something they wish to avoid. You may go through all the
paperwork to make an offer on the house, pay for inspections, and put down a deposit to start the sale
process. After you have made your offer, the bank may try to convince the seller to refinance their loan and
stay in the house, which avoids the bank having to take the write off. Any short sale contract includes a
contingency where the bank must approve the sale. If the bank persuades the seller to refinance the house,
the bank doesn't approve the short sale and the buyer gets their deposit back. In this situation the bank has
tied up several months of the buyers time and now the buyer must start the buying process over again. So if
you have a fixed time period to get in a specific city or neighborhood you may be better off with a
foreclosure (the bank formally took possession of the property) or a situation where the seller has equity.
In a short sale situation look for clues like has the seller moved out. This reveals the seller has no
intention of staying in the property or working with the bank to make the mortgage more affordable. You are
now seeing statements in Real Estate ads that say "Bank Approved Short Sale" or "Single Lender on Short Sale"
(telling you that only one bank has to approve the short sale, not a 2nd and/or Home Equity lender). After
doing due diligence with the selling realtor about how much the selling bank has approved, a Bank Approved
Short Sale is much better than one where the bank holding the mortgage has only been lightly involved in the
decision by the selling home owner to short sell the property.
Credit reporting
A short sale does adversely affect a person's credit report, though the negative impact is
typically less than a foreclosure. Short sales are a type of settlement. Like all entries except for bankruptcy,
short sales remain on a credit report for seven years. Depending upon other credit information it is typically
possible to obtain another mortgage 1-3 years after a short sale.
While it is frequent if not common for a lender to forgive the balance of the loan in
question, it is unlikely that a lien holder that is not a mortgagee will forgive any of their balance. Further, it
is common for a lender to omit updating mortgage balances zero balance after a short sale. However, willfully
misrepresenting information on a credit report can constitute libel in some jurisdictions, and lenders may be sued
in civil court for engaging in this behavior.here are some short sale homes in valley.
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