Are short sales getting easier? Some home owners are reporting that
banks are now not only more willing to consider a short sale, but are even offering incentives to
complete a short sale. For example, a home owner in Chicago says his lender approved his short sale and
then gave him a $20,000 check after the deal was finalized for selling the home as a short sale instead
of letting it sink into foreclosure.
Lenders accepting a lower mortgage payoff from an underwater seller
traditionally isn’t thought of an easy transaction to complete. Lenders weren’t so willing a few years
ago. But as the number of Americans underwater on their mortgages grow, more lenders are reconsidering
as they try to avoid extra costs incurred to their bottom-lines that a foreclosure can
cause.
For 2011, short sales accounted for about 8 percent of total home
sales, and rose 7 percent over 2010 totals, according to CoreLogic data. Short sales are up by 59
percent year-over-year in Illinois, 32 percent in Michigan, and 19 percent in Arizona alone, according
to CoreLogic.
“We’re starting to see that servicers and lenders are viewing short
sales as a better alternative than they had in the past,” says Daren Blomquist, spokesman for
RealtyTrac. “Some of that relates to the fact that it’s getting harder to foreclose. There are
additional requirements in terms of paperwork and requirements that states and judges are
imposing.”
Short sales can still be complex and lengthy — they can take up to
nine months to close and even after that, there’s no guarantee it’ll end successfully. “In general, it
is a totally different type of transaction,” says Mike Cuevas, a real estate profesional at Exit Realty
in Chicago. “You’re not only selling a house, you’re negotiating debt.”
Source: “Why it can Pay to try a Short Sale; Lenders may be
Viewing Short Sales as a Better Alternative,” MarketWatch (Oct. 20, 2011)
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Associates is an Oakland Real Estate company specializing in commercial, home and investment
property in the Oakland and East Bay Area. We provide real estate services including buyer agent,
seller agent, short sales, commercial and investment aquisitions, loan facilitation, hard money
lending, proerty management. Articles are provided as information only. We do not provide legal or
general investment advice.