5 caveats for short-sale buyers
Surprise costs could be lurking around corner
By Mary Umberger, Wednesday, December 2, 2009.Anyone who's even remotely interested in buying a home these days has heard the term "short sale" -- and if the phrase isn't familiar to you, it ought to be.
Short sales occur when a homeowner is willing to sell his property for less than the amount owed on the mortgage, and the lender agrees to the deal. In many cases, these sales can turn out to be genuine bargains.
It's the phrase du jour in housing: A recent Zillow.com survey estimated one in five mortgage holders are "under water" -- their homes are worth less than the balance on their mortgages. Another study, from the National Association of Realtors, found that one in 10 recent buyers purchased through a short sale.
But short sales are a different animal than traditional real estate transactions, and they've been known to frustrate and disappoint buyers who are unschooled in their complexities.
Five things short-sale buyers ought to know:
1. Short sales are almost never short, so to the patient buyer go the spoils. The process, from making an offer to the closing, can take anywhere from a few weeks to more than a year -- sometimes longer, according to Bonnie Overbeck, a Cincinnati-area real estate agent who specializes in short sales. She says, however, that in her area they typically take 90 to 120 days.
The basic reasons for the delays, Overbeck said, are twofold: One, the bank is taking a loss on a deal, which it obviously isn't eager to do. Two, some lenders are awash in foreclosure and pre-foreclosure properties these days, and they're just not staffed to process these home sales in volume.
"Banks are flooded with these deals, and they're trying to put a Band-Aid on the problem," Overbeck said.
"(Some short-sale) negotiators have 300 and 400 files on their desks," she said. "These employees are working from a script, and are paid by the hour to process a file."
2. Work with an agent who has a track record in short sales. These can be complex deals with their own rules and etiquette, and they require knowledge of what's reasonable and customary.
Overbeck is one of a growing number of agents in the newly emerging short-sale specialty. Three years ago she and two colleagues formed a team, Three Blondes and A Short Sale, at Huff Realty in Cincinnati. In addition to representing buyers and sellers, the group also trains other agents in short sales and acts as a short-sale negotiator for other agents.
"When we talk with agents (about the process), we tell them the typical real estate agent is a general practitioner," she said. "A short-sale practitioner is your cardiologist." ...CONTINUED
All rights reserved. This article may not be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever, in part or in whole, without written permission of Inman News. Use of this article without permission is a violation of federal copyright law.


You must login or register to post a comment.
Submitted by Robert A. Hulme on December 2, 2009 - 5:32am.
You can have the Short Sale, I have started to refer my Short Sale Buyers to other Realtors, I just don't want to waste my time with a process that is so uncertain.
www.provooremhomes.com
www.provorealestate.ws
Submitted by Mario Marrufo on December 2, 2009 - 6:31am.
Unfortunately, the majority of agents out there do not know what they are doing. Listing Agents and Selling Agents alike. The listing agent lists the house way under market value, and the dumb selling agent (because he did not do his homework)actually believes, because it's a Short Sale, that the bank will even be willing to accept less. So like the inexperienced agent that he is, advises his client to low ball the offer still. Then he gets them to wait for about 6 mos. just so the bank can come back to them and tell them that they are crazy, they want more for the home. Meanwhile buyers are estatic telling everyone how they got a great deal, only to have their dreams crushed, all because they have a Bonehead for an agent.
What's worse is the other Bonehead listing agent now has to increase the listing price, after it has been on the market for 6mos. He doesn't end up selling the home, and the bank then decides to Foreclose on the seller.
I couldn't agree more with this article. If you are thinking of getting involved in a Short Sale being seller or buyer, make sure you are working with an experienced agent!!!!
Mario Marrufo
CENTURY 21 EXCELLENCE
mario.marrufo@century21.com
cell 323/632/9023
lic# 01506359
Submitted by Jeremy Lock on December 2, 2009 - 11:14am.
I think that's highly impractical (and expensive) to do a physical inspection before submitting an offer on a short sale listing. In the San Diego market, you have clients make multiple offers on short sales all over town, so that advice clearly doesn't apply to some (and I would think most) markets.
Submitted by Michael Roberts on December 2, 2009 - 11:55am.
Great article! This should scare away the agents who are clueless, lazy or just plain procrastinators. This is a Real Estate category for the intrepid, tenacious type A personalities only! Bonnie is a FB friend and I respect her experience at the same level I address my short sales! This article gives me some more confidence the short sale process is going to become a more defined and executable process. http://bit.ly/6ltR3C
Michael Roberts
http://www.MichaelRobertsHomes.com
Submitted by Bill Gassett on January 24, 2010 - 7:49pm.
The thing that still amazes me about short sale listings is sellers who hire anyone ole Realtor to represent them and not someone who has experience with these types of transactions. There are many Realtors that take these listings in my area that do not have a clue about what they are doing. When a seller is a flash away from foreclosure it sickens me that they do not do their homework when selecting an agent.
Bill Gassett
See my blog at Massachusetts Real Estate and my website at Hopkinton MA Real Estate