Showing posts with label mortgage meltdown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mortgage meltdown. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

More Credit Crunch - FYI

Banks Make it Tougher to Get a Loan

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aBVR4W34oDrY&refer=home


It got tougher for U.S. companies and consumers to get loans in the last three months, a survey released by the Federal Reserve on Monday shows.

The survey, conducted in January, was available to Fed policymakers last week and helps explain its total 1.25 percentage point rate cut in the last month.

The survey showed that 80 percent of banks raised standards on commercial-property loans — a record. About 55 percent of banks toughened terms for prime home loans, up from 40 percent in October, while 85 percent of respondents made it tougher to get nontraditional loans, up from 60 percent, the survey said.

"It's definitely a broader-based tightening than we've seen before," says Edward McKelvey, senior U.S. economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in New York. "The economy is weakening, and weakening in a pretty substantial way."

Source: Bloomberg News (02/05/08)

Sunday, December 2, 2007

More About Short Sales

I have a friend, in the middle of a divorce, that's liquidating everything. Unfortunately, his investment property, that he bought for appreciation, was underwater and he asked me to help him sell it.

It started off like any listing; here's where we should price it, I'll put a sign out front, is there a tenant there now? This is where it starts to get interesting. His soon-to-be-ex has been living in the property with her new boyfriend and oh-by-the-way she hasn't paid the mortgage for six months! Crap!

I took the information and started getting in touch with everyone; the almost-ex, the lenders, the Home Owner's Association. The ex was civil to me. The lenders passed me back and forth and the HOA never called back.

This went on for a few months before the mortgage meltdown hit. The few buyers that were in the market couldn't get financing now and the number of sales dropped 75%. The Seller and I sat down to have a heart to heart. The only people buying right now are sharks looking for blood in the water, you aren't getting any money out of this property anyway, let's get this thing sold before it's a REO. He agreed to a DRASTIC price reduction and we got an offer within two weeks.

This is where the real work begins. We had submitted short sale packages to the lenders showing the Sellers insolvency and the market conditions for the subject property. The lenders had done their own valuations and their appraisal came in 10% higher than our sales price. I worked and negotiated and reasoned with both lenders for a month before lender #1 refused to take a short payoff.

Then the Notice of Sale was posted. Now I had great ammunition for lender #2; if you work with me you'll get some money back, if you don't you'll lose it all.

They finally saw my point and agreed to the shortsale - after reducing my commission and if you can get it done in 10 days - including the holiday.

I was pissed about the commission. I feel like I have been working twice as hard on this as any other listing and now my paycheck is a revenue source! When I calmed down I realized the truth is I have been blessed with lots of great clients that have gone overboard to get me a commission. Now, here is a buddy that needs my help, so I conceeded.

We got the Seller signed off, loan docs in title and then the payoff came in. We were $1500 short to close - and we were 4 days from sale.

I went back to the second lender, begged for their help, and got them to take care of the shortage. The new lien recorded, the payoffs were sent and my client won't have a foreclosure showing up on his credit report for the next 15 years.

It's a lot of work, you never know if it's going to fall into place or not and you don't get paid well. Welcome to real estate.

Friday, November 30, 2007

How to Buy a Short Sale

Being in California, I have had very little exposure to foreclosures - until the last few months. Now it seems like everyone I run into needs help selling the home that they owe too much on.

I remember the pyramid schemes of the 70s, if you were in first you got your money back. If you were a late adopter, you got the privelege of paying the early adopters. This translates over to real estate of these last few years as the stragglers finally jumped on the bandwagon just as it was going off the cliff.

So, in a short sale, the owner owes more than s/he can sell it for.

As the Realtor®, I get to market and sell the property as usual, then I get to negotiate with the overwhelmed bank for 2-4 weeks only to get a proposal back from the bank either accepting or rejecting the offer. And, oh by the way, the bank often thinks the realtor commissions are a profit center for them so, I get paid poorly or not at all.

Why would any business person deal with this kind of sale? Simple, I do it for my clients. As the buyer agent, we can negotiate some rockin deals. As the Selling agent, I have a client that is in trouble and I am much more skilled at negotiating a decent resolution that the client/owner.