Islamorada Short Sales Information
Why Lenders Are Leery
Of Short Sales
This Foreclosure Alternative
Helps Strapped Homeowners,
But It's Not Easy to Pull Off
By RUTH SIMON and JAMES R. HAGERTY
April 17, 2008;
As more people fall behind on their mortgages, lenders have been slow
to take advantage of a longstanding alternative to foreclosure -- a
so-called short sale.
At first glance, a short sale might seem like a win-win for everyone
involved. In such an arrangement, the borrower sells the home for less
than the amount owed, with the lender forgiving the difference. The
sale releases borrowers from their obligations. For mortgage holders,
it can be less costly than foreclosing -- and could provide protection
against future price drops. For buyers, it can be a chance to buy a
home at an attractive price.
SELLING SHORT
Short sales -- in which a homeowner sells a property for less than
its loan value -- are tricky to pull off:
• It can take weeks or months to get mortgage companies to respond to
an offer.
• Mortgage servicers may balk at the purchase price.
• Homeowners may have more than one loan on the property, slowing the
process.
ADDITIONAL READING
• House Talk: A seller going through a short sale wonders why selling
a home "as is" seems to involve making repairs.
• Housing Blog: Get news, tips and analysis on Developments, WSJ.com's
housing blog.
Short sales -- which were rare when the housing market was booming
-- can also be a good way for lenders and investors to minimize losses.
They typically result in losses of 19% of the loan amount, compared
with an average loss of 40% for homes that are sold after foreclosure,
according to a recent analysis by Clayton Holdings Inc., which tracks
more than $500 billion in mortgage loans monthly for investors. The
costs of foreclosure can include not only legal fees, but also taxes,
insurance and the expense of maintaining the home until the property
is sold and repairing any property damage.
As the housing market continues to weaken, the number of short sales
is edging upward. Short sales currently account for about 18% of home
sales, according to the National Association of Realtors. But it can
be extremely difficult to get these deals completed. Unlike a traditional
real-estate sale, a short sale requires the approval of not only the
buyer and the seller, but also the mortgage-servicing company. In many
cases, loans have been packaged into securities -- which means that
the mortgage servicer must consider the interests of the investors
who own the loans.
Deals can fall apart because the mortgage company rejects the price
that has been agreed upon by the buyer and seller. Long delays in getting
an answer from the mortgage servicer are another obstacle.
The process can be so frustrating that some real-estate agents and
home buyers have decided that a short sale isn't worth the effort.
Shari Adams, a paralegal, bought a foreclosed three-bedroom house in
Stuart, Fla., after she tried twice to buy a home being sold in a short
sale. One deal fell through when the mortgage servicer turned down
her offer after six weeks and didn't make a counteroffer. Another deal
collapsed because it wasn't clear that the seller was truly facing
a financial hardship.
"I basically started to run away from any home listed as a short
sale," Ms. Adams says.
Low Success Rate
The success rate for short-sale offers is low, real-estate agents
say. Molly Kay Hamrick, president of Coldwell Banker Premier Realty
in Las Vegas, estimates that 20% of short-sale offers in the area lead
to completed sales, compared with 85% for more traditional sales. Redfin,
an online real-estate brokerage based in Seattle, says it represented
buyers on 65 short-sale offers in the first quarter but expects only
two or three to result in a completed sale.
Because so many deals fall through, Jean Manner Schwimmer of Coldwell
Banker Gay Dales in Salinas, Calif., advises buyers making an offer
on a short sale to put a clause in their contract that says the deposit
can't be cashed until it is clear that the sale has been approved by
the mortgage company and the contract has been signed.
Many borrowers walk away in frustration because it takes so long to
get a response from the mortgage company to their offer. Servicers
take an average of 4½ weeks to provide an answer on a potential
short sale, according to a recent survey of real-estate agents by Campbell
Communications, with some taking two months or more to respond. By
contrast, it takes an average of less than two weeks to get a response
to an offer for a property that has been foreclosed on, the survey
found.
"To make the process work, you have to have a buyer who just
wants that property and is willing to wait three to four months," says
Beth Butler, chief operating officer of EWM Realtors, based in Miami.
Alicia and Greg Green accepted a short-sale offer in December for
a home in Los Angeles they had purchased as an investment. But the
deal didn't close until late March because of delays in getting an
answer from the mortgage servicer, Option One Mortgage Corp. At least
two offers at higher prices fell through because of delays, says Bill
Etchegaray, the couple's real-estate agent.
"Luckily, we didn't lose the buyer," says Ms. Green. "I
thought we would because the process took so long." The couple
sold the home for $299,000, well below the $375,000 mortgage balance.
They fell behind on their payments when the construction business Mr.
Green owned went under. A spokeswoman for Option One pointed to the
complexities of arranging short sales and said the company is pleased
that the sale was successful.
Coming up with what everyone agrees is a fair price can be tricky
in a soft market. "Servicers are finding that people try to low-ball
the sales price knowing that the property is distressed," says
Vicki Vidal, a senior director with the Mortgage Bankers Association.
Missed Opportunities
But with home prices falling in many markets, a rejected short-sale
offer may wind up as a missed opportunity. Donald Schriver, owner of
Assist-2-Sell Good Sense Realty in suburban Phoenix, says a homeowner
he was helping late last year was offered $190,000 for his house in
a short sale but was unable to win approval from his mortgage company.
The borrower later decided to abandon the four-bedroom house, which
was built in 2005. The house is now in foreclosure, with an auction
scheduled for June. Prices in the area have continued to fall, says
Mr. Schriver, who believes that the most the home would now fetch is
$180,000.
A spokesman for Wells Fargo & Co., which services the loan, said
the company "made several unsuccessful attempts to connect with
the customer" and didn't turn down an offer for a short sale.
Some mortgage-servicing companies are tightening up on short sales
because they worry borrowers are rushing into these arrangements when
there are better alternatives. In March, Ocwen Financial Corp., based
in West Palm Beach, Fla., told its customers it would consider a short
sale only after it had talked directly to the borrowers and determined
there are no alternatives for keeping them in the home.
"We are concerned that some of our customers are not given all
the facts," says William Rinehart, the company's chief risk officer. "In
some cases, it's represented to them that a short sale is the only
solution to the problem they are in."
Part of the problem may be that many mortgage servicers were ill-prepared
for the spike in bad loans. As delinquencies have climbed, they have
had to scramble to add staff. Mortgage companies say they prefer other
means to help borrowers, such as a repayment plan or loan modification.
Clearing Hurdles
Gathering all the information needed to evaluate a short-sale offer
can take time, says Patrick Carey, an executive vice president with
Wells Fargo. The loan servicer must first determine whether the homeowner
really can't continue meeting the loan payments, then get an appraisal
or broker's opinion of the home's value.
Mortgage servicers also try to ensure that the proposed sale is an "arm's
length" transaction between two parties rather than, say, a sale
to a relative on sweet terms. They must also determine whether the
buyer has sufficient funds or the ability to get a loan. If all those
hurdles are cleared, the servicer may still need to get approval from
the investor that owns the loan and provide an analysis showing that
the investor will be better off with a short sale than with another
solution.
There are additional complications if the borrower has a mortgage
and a home-equity loan. In that case, both parties must approve the
deal -- which is a challenge when the sales price may not even be enough
to cover the mortgage balance.
To minimize delays, Mr. Carey suggests that homeowners contemplating
a short sale immediately call the loan servicer to get the approval
process started, rather than wait for an offer.
There are some signs that the process is getting smoother. In recent
weeks, some mortgage companies have begun to approve short sales for
borrowers who can show financial distress but haven't yet stopped making
monthly payments, says Dan Elsea, president of brokerage services for
Real Estate One in the Detroit area. Until recently, servicers wouldn't
even consider a short sale unless a borrower was at least 60 days late.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which own or guarantee nearly half of
all outstanding U.S. mortgages, both say they are trying to streamline
the short-sale process. Fannie Mae says that it plans to introduce
a policy in the next few months under which real-estate brokers would
be given an advance indication of the approximate minimum price that
would be acceptable in a short sale, a move designed to quickly weed
out offers that are too low.
Freddie Mac says it has already given its top servicers more flexibility
to accept short sales for homes backed by loans it guarantees or owns.
Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., another issuer of mortgage-backed securities,
also is offering incentives in some cases for servicers to arrange
short sales or loan modifications.
Write to Ruth Simon at ruth.simon@wsj.com and James R. Hagerty at
bob.hagerty@wsj.com
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