Comments (21) | Add a comment
Report calls short sale process 'inefficient and challenging'
-
CRAIG L. MORAN/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Real estate agent Carol Clapp says the more-than-a-year delay of a short sale on this North Las Vegas home has placed extra stress on the seller. » Buy this photo
Tools
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Trying to get a short sale approved by Bank of America has been frustrating and agonizing for real estate agent Carol Clapp and her seller. The process has dragged out for nearly a year without a decision.
The home in North Las Vegas entered escrow in October for $160,000, which was the listed price and in line with two separate bank-ordered appraisals. Now the bank wants a third appraisal.
Bank of America needed 30 days to review documents before assigning the file to a negotiator, Clapp said. It took another 30 days to get an appraisal or broker price opinion. After that it went to a final asset negotiator, who then came back with a counteroffer.
"It's absolutely ridiculous," Clapp said. "Our real estate market could be in better shape if banks would respond to offers in a reasonable amount of time. The bank has had 10 months to verify the value of the property so we could move forward. Either they're understaffed or they're not equipped to deal with it."
People are frustrated in their efforts to buy a home for less than the principal mortgage balance, commonly called a short sale, which must be approved by the lender.
Bank of America spokeswoman Jumana Bauwens said several factors contribute to a short sale's length. Some investors require the bank to order a second appraisal or broker price opinion to determine if the property value has changed.
In this particular case, the bank had not received a Federal Housing Administration loan package from the seller's agent despite six calls to the agent requesting the documents, she said.
"The short-sale process has taken longer than we would have liked to complete," Bauwens said. "But after receiving the materials we needed from the real estate agent two weeks ago, we are in the final stages of completing the short sale approval."
Short sales have surged in Las Vegas over the last two years, accounting for 31 percent of homes sold in July, nearly surpassing foreclosures. They were about 8 percent of sales in 2008.
Nevada Title Co. reported 4,608 short sales on the market in August, 1,008 closed and 7,994 in escrow. The average number of days from market entry to closing escrow for the listing period was 232 days. Median short-sale asking price was $140,000 in August, while median closing price was $135,000.
Both short-sale supply and demand are rising, while inventory in escrow continues to decline, the report showed. The absorption rate in August was 54 weeks, compared with 59 weeks in July, signaling progress in drawing down inventory in escrow without replacement.
Relative to standard sales and foreclosures, the escrow closing process for short sales remains "inefficient and challenging, but improving very slowly," the Nevada Title report said.
The Obama administration's Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternative program that took effect in April provides $1,500 for loan servicers to cover administrative and processing costs and up to $2,000 for investors who allow short sale proceeds to be distributed to subordinate lien holders on a 1-for-3 matching basis.
Apparently, that's not enough.
"Banks have to be better incentivized by the federal government to modify loans. Currently, it's in the bank's best interest to sit on mortgages, scoop up houses for cheap and then wait for the market to improve," said Sylvia Alayon, senior vice president at Fort Lauderdale, Fla.-based Consumer Mortgage Audit Center.
"Better incentives for loan modification would allow homeowners to start paying off their mortgages, decreasing the number of homes that are being foreclosed on and reducing the excess inventory of homes on the market," she said.
Things have improved for short sales over the last two years, but there's still need for improvement, Realtor Tim Kelly Kiernan of Re/Max Pros said.
He took a short-sale listing in May 2008 and closed on it 18 months later with Bank of America.
"This was when short sales just hit our market in a big way," Kiernan said. "There were several factors that caused this to be delayed, including Bank of America being very unorganized, unresponsive, uncooperative, assigning a new negotiator midway through the process. Then the original buyer became impatient and walked just as we got the approval."
That starts the process anew.
Clapp said the delayed short sale has placed added stress on her seller, a Nellis Air Force Base serviceman who was deployed overseas. He had to move his family to Colorado in January.
"Our armed services members who are overseas fighting for our safety deserve better," she said.
Bank of America has made tremendous progress improving the short-sale process over the past year, increasing its staff to 2,800 short-sale specialists from 1,500 earlier in the year, spokeswoman Bauwens said.
In the second quarter, the bank completed 25,000 short sales, nearly triple the number completed in the year-ago period. Almost half of those were already in foreclosure, she said.
"Demand for short sales continues to grow and we understand that it will play an important role for many distressed customers," Bauwens said. "We want to do short sales. We really, really want to do short sales instead of going down the road of foreclosure. That costs money and takes time and it's not good for anybody. This provides a dignified option."
One major factor that can extend the approval time frame is determining who owns the loan, Kiernan said. Is it a delegated or nondelegated mortgage?
Once the seller accepts the buyer's offer, the bank has to get approval from the noteholder -- in some cases a pool of investors -- as well as the mortgage insurance company.
"This takes time ... a long time it seems," Kiernan said.
He went through three buyers before closing on a short sale with Citibank in May on a listing taken in June 2009.
There also must be dialogue between the listing agent and homeowner, he said. The bank requires updated financial information from the homeowner on a monthly basis to make sure nothing has changed that would affect the short-sale approval.
When the bank does approve a short sale, it will often require the borrower to sign a note for mortgage deficiency judgment or come in with cash at closing, Kiernan said.
"The entire transaction could blow up after many months of work. In that case, the homeowner usually stays in the home until foreclosure occurs," he said.
Not all short sales are painful. Bank of America approved a short sale with a Veterans Affairs loan in less than 60 days and closed escrow four months after the listing.
"I was amazed at how this one went," Kiernan said. "The bank negotiator was wonderful to work with and responded to all my e-mails and did a terrific job in getting the transaction approved."
Contact reporter Hubble Smith at hsmith@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0491.
| Area | Listings | Closed | Fail | In escrow | Days on market |
| Southwest | 1,018 | 266 | 363 | 2,069 | 234 |
| Northwest | 807 | 179 | 226 | 1,406 | 234 |
| Henderson | 711 | 146 | 194 | 1,151 | 237 |
| South | 473 | 95 | 135 | 745 | 244 |
| North | 1,080 | 215 | 297 | 1,690 | 226 |
| East | 505 | 106 | 138 | 920 | 225 |
| Boulder City | 14 | 1 | 4 | 13 | 114 |
| Totals | 4,608 | 1,008 | 1,355 | 7,994 | 232 |
SOURCE: Nevada Title Co.
Comments
Terms & Conditions
The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The Review-Journal does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please use the Report Abuse button.
Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 24 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.
Note: Comments made by reporters and editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal are presented with a yellow background.











RSS

@vegasgurl, you should take your clients to a new home community. builders are more inclined to negotiate & a contract is a contract not an offer!
Read this carefully. Bank of America does not want to be quick with short sales! Especially if they are in the second position! They want you to agree to a short sale without a settlement so that they can come after you after the short sale! If you need to get out of the house quickly it might be better to just go into foreclosure and walk away!
Get information on how to reduce your debt by filing for bankruptcy http://bit.ly/cpmRHo
I HATE SHORT SALES (pardon my screams)!! Just had another client cancel due to the bank taking so long to approve the sale for our cash buyer. Why is it so difficult to get something sold these days? You would think the banks would be more than willing to oblige a cash buyer. Sorry but in addition to killing our prpoerty values, the banks have no interest in helping anyone but themselves.
Let me say I was in the house looking process about 5 months ago and alot of what I found was short sales and was told to say away from those for various reasons.After being told those reasons I am like who would want to wait that long for it to actually leave the short sale status..Its very challenging and inefficient just like it says on here.
Welcome to --------------- - http://www.newgoing.com
We are specialized in offering all kinds of top brand shoes, jeans, t-
shirts, bikini, swimwear, jacket, jerseys, watches, purses, handbags,
belts, wallets , sunglasses and hats etc.
Accept paypal ,All the prices list on our website include shipping
cost,insurance, tax etc..
$30 nike shoes,air jordan shoes,nike shox shoes,gucci shoes
$35 true religion jeans, ed hardy jeans,coogi jeans,afflictio n jeans,
Laguna Beach Jeans
$14 ed hardy T-shirts,Coogi T-shirts,Christ ian Audigier T-shirts,Gucci
T-shirts,Polo T-shirts.
$35 coach handbag,gucci handbag,prada handbag,chanel handbag.
nghd
To Graham!!!
THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU! I JUST SENT THIS TO MY LAWYER!!
Over 62 million mortgages are now held in the name of MERS, an electronic recording system devised by and for the convenience of the mortgage industry. A California bankruptcy court, following landmark cases in other jurisdictions, recently held that this electronic shortcut makes it impossible for banks to establish their ownership of property titles—and therefore to foreclose on mortgaged properties. The logical result could be 62 million homes that are foreclosure-proof.
http://www.yesmagazine.org/new-economy/homeowners-rebellion-could-62-million-homes-be-foreclosure-proof
Graham is correct. The problem is that the old money has now compounded to unbelievable amounts, not in cash alone. A small group of people own the world. It's like when you play grandpa in monopoly and the game is at the point where grandpa feels bad that he's beating you so bad, so he gives you some of his money so you can still play. But you will never win.
Dear Annmaureen.Macdonald, yes I have read G. Edward Griffin's illuminating expose of the criminal fraud which is the Federal Reserve smoke and mirrors banking system. Americans are asleep as to who really runs America. It's not the congress under the Constitution. It's shady organizations such as the private Council on Foriegn Relations, Trilateral Commussion and Bilderberger Group. Aided by their ethnic brothers at AIPAC – The American Israel Public Affairs Committee which refuses to register as an alien lobby group.
The same members of the Synagogue of Satan run the Federal Reserve and its Global black hand at the Bank of International Settlements that pulls the levers at most of the G20 central banks. Money rules the world and we all know who these biblical Money Masters are They run Wall Street, The Fed, our media and even Hollywood. Speak up and you'll be lampooned as has Mel Gibson. America is under control of a sinister unseen cabal and the sheepeople sleep immersed in celebrity, sports and American Idol. Time to wake up. The foreclosures are an effect and not cause of our problem. The one world global governance proponents are closing in on America for a kill shot whilst our bought and paid for Congressmen are asleep or complicit. We've been sold out. Time to end the Fed and line up the treasonous traitors. in the end this is a spiritual battle. The dark side uses its money creation powers to exercise control over us. Research, research, research people before it's too late.