July 9, 2009

Your Real Estate Advisor: 4 Prudent Rules for Buyers of Short Sale Listings

Four Prudent Rules for BUYERS Who Write Offers on Short Sale Listings

Rule 1: STAY PUT: Do not give notice in your existing housing until after you have closed on a short sale listing. Even if you have to pay a significant amount to go to a month to month arrangement where you currently live. The path to a closing on a short sale listing could get bumpy. The seller might:
  1. File for bankruptcy which removes the home from availability
  2. Receive an offer from another potential purchaser which the lender decides to accept instead of your offer
  3. Lose the home to foreclosure in which case you will no longer have a valid offer and will need to attempt to purchase it as an REO, if you are still interested
Rule 2: BE SUSPICIOUS: If your offer is signed by the seller very shortly after you write the offer (within a few days) then the chances are pretty good that the seller signed without the lender’s approval. There is no guarantee that the lender is going to approve. Most likely you have a listing agent who does not clearly understand that “lender approval required” means the “Lender has the right to accept or reject any offer which is not to their liking”. Everyone should wait until you have the lender’s “required” approval for the acceptance of a short sale.

You should not be celebrating that you are going to be closing if the seller signed but you do not have the lender’s approval. Lenders make the final decisions on short sales, not the sellers who are upside down nor the REALTORS who are unfamiliar with or unwilling to bend to the way short sale transactions are typically handled.

Rule 3: BE PATIENT: We mean be prepared to be ‘seriously’ patient, like for a few months. Literally. Buying a home which is listed for a short sale can get you a great deal on a property, but you must be prepared to wait for an extended period of time (2-3 months is common). The lender has numerous things they must check and cross-check before they can approve a short sale. Watch for a future blog on “What is Taking Them So Long?” We’ll address the laundry list of things which must be checked before a short sale can be approved.

Rule 4: EXPECT A COUNTER: Four things you should understand from the beginning:
  1. Your offer is likely to be set aside until the lender gathers the information they need to make a decision
  2. Your offer is likely to be ‘joined’ by additional offers during this waiting period
  3. The Lender is likely to present a COUNTER OFFER to the potential purchaser who they believe has the offer which will net them the most
  4. That this COUNTER may not be presented to all potential buyers
Consequently, you should write the offer for the amount you are willing to pay since you can not be guaranteed a second opportunity to increase that amount. Short sale transactions are a real estate gamble; you’ve got to realize that going in and decide if you have the stomach for this kind of acquisition. If not, find a regular listing which will offer you the comfort of more traditional negotiating and timing.

It’s all in the game. All in the wonderful game that we know as: Short Sale.

Copyright © 2008, Home Ownership Matters, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

(Please E-mail Heather at homeownershipmatters@gmail.com with any questions, comments or concerns you might have! We appreciate all comments and feedback, so please don't be shy.)

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