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	<title>Duncan Real Estate Services &#187; Short Sale Information</title>
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	<description>Kristin Duncan</description>
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		<title>Short Sale Information</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 12 Jun 2012 20:59:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Kristin Duncan</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Short Sale Information]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h6><span style="color: #ffffff;">Short Sale Information</span></h6>
<p>When J. D. Tucker and his domestic partner split up, the distress went beyond heartache.<br />
He became a single father with five adopted children, and only one income. It wasn&#8217;t enough to pay the mortgage on their south St. Louis home.<br />
He bought it at the height of the housing boom. He owed $265,000 on a house now valued at only about $155,000.<br />
He fell behind on the mortgage. “You start getting notices that they were going to foreclose on it,” he said.<br />
Instead, Tucker took an option that&#8217;s gaining popularity among distressed homeowners here. He convinced the bank to accept a short sale: The home is sold for less than the amount of the debt, and the bank forgives all or nearly all the remainder.<br />
“It&#8217;s generally the lesser of two evils,” says Kenny Reinhold, the Coldwell Banker Gundaker agent who handled the deal. Depending on the details, the owners&#8217; credit may take a lesser hit than in foreclosure, and he escapes the debt.<br />
Banks are becoming more amenable to short sales as the housing slump drags through its fifth year. The results show up in the statistics.<br />
In 2008, just after the housing bubble burst, sales of foreclosed homes in St. Louis County outnumbered short sales by more than two to one. Now it&#8217;s roughly even.<br />
There were 452 “pre-foreclosure” sales, the overwhelming majority being short sales, in St. Louis County in the first quarter. That&#8217;s a 33 percent increase from a year earlier, according to RealtyTrac, an online market for distressed property. Such sales were up 76 percent in St. Louis city, 25 percent in Jefferson County and 3 percent in St. Charles County, 56 percent in St. Clair.<br />
It&#8217;s part of a national trend. “Lenders are approving more aggressively-priced short sales, which in turn is resulting in more successful short sale transactions,” said Brandon Moore, chief executive officer of RealtyTrac .<br />
Short sales sales equal 11 percent of all sales in in St. Louis city, 10 percent in St. Louis County, 9 percent in St. Charles County and 12 percent in Jefferson County, 9 percent in St. Clair, 10 percent in Madison and 3 percent in Monroe.<br />
Tucker couldn&#8217;t get his lender to lower his monthly payment. He considered sitting in the house until the bank foreclosed, a process that could take many months. But he wanted a way to completely escape his debt.<br />
Creditors in Missouri and Illinois can pursue foreclosed debtors for “deficiencies,” the difference between the amount owed and the amount the bank collects from selling the house.<br />
In practice, banks rarely try to collect since they know the debtors are broke, although they may come back later after people with high-income jobs, such as lawyers and doctors. Banks may also sell such bad debt to collection agencies.<br />
Tucker is a hairdresser – not a high-income profession. But he was worried that the bank might some day sue him. “It could be years from now and the bank could say, &#8216;Now we want our money.&#8217;”<br />
Tucker put out a for-sale sign last fall asking for $220,000 on his city home. “Everybody said it was too high for the neighborhood,” said Tucker, so they began steadily dropping it. “When we got into the $160,000s, I said I can&#8217;t believe this house isn&#8217;t being snapped up.”<br />
Then came an offer for $155,000, and they took it to the bank.<br />
His lender said it would take the offer if Tucker signed a promissory note for $30,000 – a little less than a third of the deficiency. After more bargaining, they cut it to $10,000 and Tucker agreed.<br />
Tucker was unlucky. Most short sales don&#8217;t include such payments. Most, although not all, abolish the remaining debt, real estate agents say.<br />
Last week, Tucker was packing up to move. “I&#8217;m happy with it. Ultimately I&#8217;m glad it&#8217;s going to be over,” said Tucker. “I never in a million years thought I&#8217;d be in the situation I&#8217;m in.”<br />
His decision to short-sell, rather than accept foreclosure although it probably hastened the day when he can buy a house again. But it&#8217;s not clear whether it will rescue his credit score.<br />
FICO, the credit scoring company, says someone with a good credit score, 720, will see it drop to 570 to 590 after a foreclosure. A short sale, with the deficiency forgiven, will drop it to 605 to 625. But a short sale without forgiveness &#8212; which is unusual &#8212; has the same effect as a foreclosure.<br />
FICO says it generally takes debtors three to seven years for scores to recover after either a short sale or a foreclosure.<br />
Fannie Mae, which backs half of all new home mortgages, makes borrowers wait two years after a short sale for another mortgage if they have a 20 percent down payment, and four years if they have a 10 percent down payment. Borrowers have to wait seven years after a foreclosure, although Fannie will cut it to three years with “extenuating circumstances.&#8221;<br />
Persuading banks to take a short sale can be a slog. Banks have to be convinced that they&#8217;ll lose even more money in a foreclosure. “They want to see your pay stubs, bank statements. They want to see why you need a short sale,” said Tucker.<br />
Job loss is a big persuader. Divorce may also sway the bank. Banks sometimes play along when employers transfer debtors to other cities.<br />
Bankers say they prefer a short-sale to a foreclosure &#8212; if the buyer makes a reasonable offer. Banks avoid the legal, maintenance and marketing costs of taking and selling the house.<br />
One of the reasons for rising short sales is that real estate agents are getting better at it, bankers say &#8220;The agents are getting smarter about working with the bank. They know what the bank will accept,&#8221; said Gary Douglass, CEO of Pulaski Bank, of the largest St. Louis-based mortgage lenders.<br />
Homeowners are also more familiar with short sales, bankers say. They&#8217;re more likely to call a real estate agent rather than wait for the sheriff to show up with an order to get out<br />
Banks differ widely in their attitudes toward short sales. “Bank of America is not getting easier. Wells Fargo went through a difficult period, but now they&#8217;re getting more friendly,” says Elizabeth Kayser, a Ballwin attorney who specializes in negotiating short sales with banks. Loans guaranteed by the FHA often cause problems, real estate agents say.<br />
Just persuading the bank can take months, before the house goes on the market. Once an offer arrives, there&#8217;s usually another long wait ahead.<br />
Three years ago, it took six to nine months to get banks to say yes or no to a short sale offer, said attorney Kayser. Now, the wait is down to two to five months, she said.<br />
That requires a very patient buyer. “A lot of people are moving in with their parents just to get the deal,” says Joe LoPiccolo, a real estate agent who specializes in short sales.<br />
At Pulaski Bank, Douglas said he&#8217;d be surprised if his bank took more than 30 days to decide on an offer.<br />
Part of the delay in decisions stems from a massive processing jam that has vexed the industry since the housing bubble burst in 2007, leaving homeowners hoping for mortgage modifications hanging in limbo and delaying foreclosures, sometimes for a year or more after the homeowner stops paying.<br />
“A lot of banks are not staffed up. You may have a fellow who has a stack of these and he gets to you when he gets to you,” says LoPiccolo.<br />
Often the bank holding the mortgage isn&#8217;t the only decision maker. If there&#8217;s a second mortgage, its holder gets a veto. Second-note holders stand to be wiped out if the home goes to foreclosure. Still, they demand a payment to agree to a short sale.<br />
Many loans carry private mortgage insurance, which protects the bank – not the homeowner – if a loan goes bad. That gives the insurance company a say. “That&#8217;s the real trump card,” says Kayser. “They can make or break a deal.”<br />
Sometimes all of them send appraisers to look at the property. Then they ponder it.<br />
In exchange for waiting, short-sale buyers get a cheap house. In Missouri, short sales go for 20 percent less than comparable homes, according to figures from RealtyTrac.<br />
Foreclosed home sold by banks go for a 33 percent discount. That&#8217;s one reason that banks are leaning more toward short sales.<br />
Matthew Branson and fiance Caitlin Beck, both 25, were willing to wait long to get a good bargain. &#8220;We weren&#8217;t even looking for a home at first,&#8221; said Branson. But while &#8220;messing around&#8221; on Google they spotted a two-bedroom ranch they like near Lemay. They paid a visit and made an offer through a Coldwell Banker agent.<br />
It was a short sale, and the sellers were asking $79,900. They offered $70,000, and expected to be turned down. A little more than a month later, the lender accepted. They closed two weeks ago and moved in.<br />
Branson thinks his wait was relatively short because the lender was a small St. Louis credit union, not a multi-state bank or national mortgage servicer, which dominate the industry. &#8220;It was fairly easy,&#8221; said Branson. &#8220;I&#8217;m very happy.&#8221;</p>
<p>KRISTIN DUNCAN</p>
<p>CELL:  #562-480-1465    EMAIL ADDRESS:  Kristin@duncansrealestateservices.com</p>
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