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Published in the
August 2007 California Real Estate Magazine
Short Sales Basics
What you need to know to serve this market
By Elyse Umlauf-Garneau
Homeowners faced with stalled
appreciation, little or no equity, and subprime adjustable-rate
mortgages (ARMs) that are resetting to higher rates are combining
into something of a perfect storm. * Many subprime borrowers are
barely treading water and others have precipitated a wave of
foreclosures that is unlikely to ebb anytime soon. * The statistics
are daunting. In April, DataQuick reported that the number of
default notices (NoDs) sent to California homeowners last quarter
increased to its highest level in almost 10 years. Between January
and March, NoDs were up by 23.1 percent over the previous quarter.
Lenders, facing a surge in
delinquencies, increasingly are willing to accept short sales—sales
in which the loan balance exceeds the market value of the house—to
avoid costly foreclosures.
George Brown, owner of Thompson +
Brown Real Estate, Antelope, Calif., anticipated in 2005 that some
homeowners would be in distress when subprime mortgage rates
adjusted upward. His company developed radio ads and a separate Web
site (www.noforeclosurehere.com)
on the topic and started training salespeople to build a niche in
short sales. Such transactions now account for more than half of the
company’s business. “Whenever we have a downturn like this, you have
to look at other options beyond traditional business to survive,” he
says.
And it can provide for more than mere
survival. “Right now, there’s almost an unending supply of short
sales,” says Lance D. Churchill, legal counsel and lead instructor
of Frontline Seminars, San Diego. The company (www.frontlineseminars.com)
puts on intensive two-day seminars on short sales. “REALTORS® can do
these [transactions] and make a great living,” says Churchill.
But doing short sales requires
stamina. Though they’re not hugely different from a normal sale,
there’s a higher volume of paperwork and lenders impose aggressive
schedules. The process for short sales differs depending on the
lender, but here are some guidelines.
Qualify prospects
Examine loan terms to determine if
there are second or third mortgages and prepayment penalties. Also
assess clients’ financial status and whether they meet the criteria
for relief, recommends Lawrence D. Elliott, a REALTOR® with
Prudential California Realty, the Mulhearn Group, Hacienda Heights.
Lenders will accept job losses,
illness, death, and divorce as hardships, but typically won’t offer
relief for someone who gambled away assets. If financial problems
are temporary, lenders may consider reworking loans to allow a
homeowner to catch up and keep the house.
List and market the home and ask
clients for written permission to communicate with lenders on their
behalf.
Once NoDs are filed, there’s little
time (approximately 122 days from NoD to Trustee’s sale) to sell
properties before lenders take them back, so the earlier in the
process you get started, the better your chances of selling a
property at market value. That’s why practitioners recommend
promoting your short sales services to clients. “Homeowners usually
wait too long to get help and assume that if they miss a payment,
their house is gone. I wish they’d contact me before NoDs are
filed,” comments Elliott.
Most lenders won’t consider a short
sale until homeowners are behind on payments, though some are
starting to in order to avoid having an REO. “The rules and
processes are changing fast because lenders are trying to adapt to
the problem,” observes Churchill. “But you have to demonstrate
homeowners’ inability to meet their payments.”
Develop a lender package
Experts recommend contacting lenders
and asking for a workout package, which outlines a given lender’s
modus operandi. The aim is to make a plea on behalf of clients by
illustrating their hardships. Paperwork is similar to qualifying
clients for a mortgage, though you’re showing how financially
distraught or insolvent clients are, using documentation like W-2s,
tax returns, banks statements, expenses, and so forth. If there are
second and third mortgage holders, send the same package to them.
Develop a broker price opinion (BPO),
an assessment of the property’s condition and worth, and outline
current market conditions, including the number of sales versus
listings and the number of distressed properties on the market,
suggests Brown. You want to show lenders they’re financially better
off today with a short sale than they are with an REO later.
Include a hardship letter outlining
the homeowner’s crisis. Elliott asks for hand-written letters from
homeowners. “My goal is for them to write a letter that leaves a
tear on the page,” he comments. After all, he argues human beings
read the letter and the prose should be moving.
Most lenders want a solid buyer and
offer in hand, though some are agreeing to short sales even before
there’s a buyer.
Many lenders are ill-equipped for the
onslaught of problems associated with subprime borrowers and are
short on staff, time, and patience. “You can call lenders everyday
for two weeks and not get a call back,” warns Brown. He sends his
materials in brightly colored envelopes imprinted with his Web
address. The strategy: Staffers will start recognizing that his
packages are complete and can be processed quickly.
Negotiate
Negotiation skills are critical,
especially since all aspects of the deal are subject to lender
approval. You’ll also have to negotiate with second lien holders and
get them to accept the terms. “When you present offers to lenders,
be prepared for a ‘no’ out of the gate,” warns Steve Bognacki,
broker-owner of Exit Realty West, Corona. You have to arrive at a
price and timetable agreeable to all parties and you frequently have
to haggle over your commission. “We’re willing to negotiate our
commission, but we’re not in a position to accept nothing,” observes
Brown. “Most lenders are fair and pay accordingly.”
Long-term prospects
Most experts see no quick end to
short sales. Many are anticipating several more years of steady
business, given that another package of subprime loans will reset in
2008.
Doing short sales goes beyond just benefiting your bottom line,
believes Brown. For homeowners, a short sale keeps a foreclosure off
their credit record and lenders get more money than they would in a
foreclosure. “We’re also protecting home values and eliminating
having foreclosed, rundown houses in neighborhoods. It’s a win
across the board,” he adds.
Despite efforts of politicians and
non-profits to earmark funds for and halt foreclosures, most believe
that such efforts will be insufficient and that the subprime crisis
will continue building steam. So learning to do short sales will
benefit you now and throughout your career. After all, there are
always homeowners facing financial hardship. “With this skill, you
can always find work,” comments Frontline Seminars’ Churchill. “It’s
a way to bob and weave with the economy as it changes.”
Know the Law
There are a couple of
California-specific legal wrinkles to consider.
*Understand the difference between
recourse and non-recourse loans in California. Purchase loans for
owner-occupied properties are considered non-recourse, so if there’s
a deficiency in a foreclosure, the borrower can’t be held liable for
that deficiency. “The potential problem is that most loss mitigators
are being trained to ask borrowers to sign a note for any unsecured
balance in order to approve the short sale,” explains Lance D.
Churchill, legal counsel and lead instructor of Frontline Seminars,
a company that provides educational seminars on short sales. Say no
to such requests and explain to loss mitigators that it’s a
non-recourse loan.
*Be aware of California Civil Code
Sections 1695 & 1695.17. One aspect of the code has an enormous
effect on real estate practitioners. When buyers of a property in
foreclosure are investors (persons not intending to be owner
occupants) of a one-to-four unit property—one of which is
owner-occupied—the real estate agent representing an investor must
have a real estate license and be bonded for twice the value of the
property. The Catch-22: Bonds aren’t available, so investor buyers
can’t be represented by a real estate agent. For more information,
see Civil Code 1695 (www.car.org/index).
If an investor wants to purchase a
one-to-four unit owner-occupied property on which a NoD has been
filed, the investor has to use a contract that incorporates certain
legal requirements such as a five-day rescission right for the
seller. C.A.R. forms NODPA, HEAA, and HENC comply with the
requirements of the law and should be used by investors who wish to
make an offer to purchase property from a seller with a recorded NoD
on their property.
Finding Business
- Check the notice of default
sites, some of which charge fees for access, and none of which
C.A.R. endorses or recommends. County Records Research (www.countyrecordsresearch.com);
foreclosures.com; redloc.com; retran.net
- Search for-sale by owner sites
and magazines. Lance Churchill, legal counsel and lead
instructor of Frontline Seminars, San Diego, says people sell on
their own because they can’t keep up with payments and believe
they’re not able to pay an agent’s commission.
- Check with title companies to
find out what ARMs are about to reset in a given neighborhood.
- Advertise your short sale
expertise to clients and colleagues. One of Churchill’s students
receives daily referrals from colleagues who don’t know how to
work short sales.
- Work your neighborhood. Lawrence
D. Elliott, a REALTOR® with Prudential California Realty, the
Mulhearn Group, Hacienda Heights, walks his farm area, chatting
people up, leaving his card, and asking for referrals to those
who might need to sell.
- Promote short sales to buyers.
Steve Bognacki, broker-owner of Exit Realty West, Corona, has a
pool of interested buyers he can tap when a short sale comes up.
Pitfalls
- “It’s not done until it’s done,”
says Lawrence D. Elliott, a REALTOR® with Prudential California
Realty, the Mulhearn Group, Hacienda Heights. Sometimes lenders
won’t halt a foreclosure, even if there’s a buyer. When deals
dissolve, so does your commission.
- Be sure clients seek advice from
lawyers and certified public accountants. Homeowners could incur
a tax liability on forgiven debt.
- Be certain buyers are fully
qualified and pre-approved. Once lenders say “go,” closings tend
to happen quickly—within two weeks.
- Be accurate on HUD-1 figures
showing what lenders will net. If numbers are off, lenders could
cancel the deal.
- Warn sellers that if they
committed mortgage fraud to get loans, lenders could prosecute
them.
- Visit
http://legal.car.org and
refer to the Legal Supplement, “Legal Guide to
Foreclosure-related Transactions,” which was mailed with the
June issue of California Real Estate magazine.
Consumer Real Estate News
Can You Afford That Loan?
You’ve read or heard about the crisis
that many homeowners are facing because they can’t pay their
mortgages. Some of these homeowners were lured into loans with
extremely low rates (teaser rates) that adjusted up. When the rates
reset, monthly payments rose beyond what many homeowners could
afford, and some borrowers are losing their homes to foreclosure.
Consequently, maybe you think this is a good time to get a deeply
discounted property.
When loan shopping, remember there’s
a big difference between qualifying for a mortgage and affording it.
Frequently, lenders will qualify you for mortgages that are too big
of a stretch for your budget, so it’s up to you to crunch the
numbers and decide what you can really afford.
Seek advice: Don’t rely on a single
loan officer for advice, recommends Paul Leonard, the California
director for the Center for Responsible Lending, Oakland. “Consumers
have to be vigorous in their own financial self-interest, not
relying on recommendations of lenders who are not their financial
advisors,” he says. Shop multiple lenders and fully understand the
loan products you’re considering. Seek advice from a real estate
lawyer or a U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development-certified counselor. For a list of HUD-certified,
California-based counselors, see
www.hud.gov/local/index.cfm?state=ca. “Even if a lawyer costs a
couple of hundred dollars, it’s money well spent before you lock
into a financial transaction and put thousands of dollars at risk,”
argues Leonard.
Be a wise consumer: Don’t base
mortgage decisions on low teaser rates. When rates rise, will you be
able to service the loan? Factor in principal and interest, as well
as taxes and insurance, when considering the monthly payment. Know
that taxes will likely rise. Consider other major expenses—saving
for college and retirement, for instance—and monthly costs, such as
gas, food, car insurance, and entertainment.
Be realistic: Rising housing prices
aren’t a sure thing. Don’t sign a mortgage betting that housing
prices will rise and that you’ll sell if times get tough.
Realistically evaluate your long-term ability to make the payments
and only borrow what you can afford.
Crunch your numbers: There are a
multitude of online calculators to help you determine how much house
you can afford, whether to opt for a fixed- or adjustable-rate
mortgage, and how different down payment amounts will affect your
monthly payments. One source is
www.credit.com/calculators/home_mortgage.jsp.
Debt-to-Income Ratios
This term refers to how much you earn
versus how much you owe (excluding your mortgage). The ideal ratio
is a matter of debate, and to determine your threshold for debt, you
need to consider all of your expenses. Typically, financial planners
recommend that this ratio not exceed 20 percent of your take-home
pay. In addition, financial planners recommend that this ratio does
not exceed 40 percent when including your mortgage payment. For more
information, visit
www.debtsteps.com.
Avoid Foreclosure
If you’re behind on your mortgage,
don’t automatically assume you’ll lose your house. Quick action
might allow you to keep your property.
Raise funds: Examine your spending to
see if you can slash expenses. “People waste lots of money on things
like $3.75 lattes,” comments Randy Johnson, author of How to Save
Thousands of Dollars on Your Home Mortgage and contributor to
Credit.com. Can you get a second job? Swap your car for a less
costly one?
Contact your lender immediately:
Lenders prefer a performing asset over a foreclosure and are
frequently willing to work out a repayment plan. You’ll need to
provide a detailed financial picture and outline your strategy for
staying up-to-date with your mortgage. Here’s an example of what
lenders will need: www.housingeduca
tion.org/edi/pdf/edi_worksheet.pdf.
Whenever you’re asking for help from
a lender, Speare Valasakos, CEO and corporate broker, Frontline
Realty Group, San Diego, suggests clearly illustrating what you’ve
done—selling a car and meeting with debt counselors—to avoid future
crises. Here are some options they often consider.
Forbearance: Lenders may let you make
a lower or no payment temporarily—say for three to six months.
You’ll likely have to make higher payments when you start paying
again to bring the loan up-to-date.
Repayment: If you’ve recovered from
your crisis, lenders may allow you to pay more each month for a set
period to make up missed payments.
Modifications: Lenders can reduce interest rates and extend loan
terms to reduce the monthly payment.
Short refinancing: Under a short
refinance, you refinance and the original lender accepts a payoff
for less than you owe. Valasakos had a client with good credit who
was going to be upside down on a loan. The $470,000 property was 100
percent financed and its value had dropped to about $425,000. The
lender accepted $425,000 once Valasakos showed that the lender would
lose more by foreclosing.
Short sale: You can sell the property
and lenders may agree to accept less than you owe. This saves you
from having a foreclosure on your credit record.
Before accepting any deal, consult
with your accountant. Depending on the type of loan you have, you
could owe income taxes on forgiven debt.
Elyse Umlauf-Garneau is a
freelance real estate writer.
Reprinted with
permission from California Real Estate magazine, copyright 2007 by
the California Association of REALTORS®,
all rights reserved. |