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July 12, 2009 at 1:13 AM #16019July 12, 2009 at 5:19 PM #428683drboomParticipant
I’m in the later stages of escrow on a short sale, so it remains to be seen whether it’s a “successful” experience or not. π
Expect a lot of competing offers, and expect to wait … and wait … and wait some more.
This is the second short sale my wife and I have tried to buy. On the first one, our offer was accepted rather quickly, only to disappear into the bowels of BofA’s approval process for 60+ days. When the “approval” package finally came back, the seller discovered a nasty little piece of paper requiring them to make good on any loss. Keep in mind that BofA told the seller over the phone that their short sale was “approved” and failed to mention the small matter of $270k they wanted over the selling price. The listing agent drove by and yanked his sign out of the yard the next day. That house has been vacant for several months now and will probably fetch $10-20k less than our offer as an REO.
We wised up on the second (current) short sale: fire and forget! To our surprise, our offer was accepted on this one too. Other offers were for higher dollar amounts, but they were all FHA, contingency-laden, etc., so ours looked the most attractive overall. It took 65 days for the bank (don’t recall who they are at the moment–some no-name lender) to come back with a positive answer (also a surprise), but a couple of weeks of that were due to the seller having difficulty locating some paperwork.
From there, it’s all gone fairly quickly: inspection, termite, appraisal, loan underwriting, etc. are complete (17 days into a c. 27 day escrow); the “to do” list is down to selecting from a couple of competing quotes for homeowner’s insurance and miscellaneous “i” dotting and “t” crossing. If all goes well, we should have the keys a week from Wednesday.
We never stopped looking while either of these were in the banks’ hands, but inventory has been so low this year that there wasn’t anything else we wanted to make an offer on.
The disadvantages to a short sale mostly revolve around the fact that it’s a crapshoot: the bank may or may not approve it, and you’ll grow old waiting to find out. On the plus side, full disclosures apply just like in a normal sale and there’s some room to work with the seller. We worked this to our advantage in the offer by not requiring them to remove a bunch of junk all over the property. This would give us zero leverage with a REO, but the older lady who currently “owns” the house is overjoyed to not have to deal with it.
Short sales are a pain, but just like the lottery you gotta play to win. Not that we got a great deal or anything, but this was just about the only way we could find a house in our price range.
July 12, 2009 at 5:19 PM #429422drboomParticipantI’m in the later stages of escrow on a short sale, so it remains to be seen whether it’s a “successful” experience or not. π
Expect a lot of competing offers, and expect to wait … and wait … and wait some more.
This is the second short sale my wife and I have tried to buy. On the first one, our offer was accepted rather quickly, only to disappear into the bowels of BofA’s approval process for 60+ days. When the “approval” package finally came back, the seller discovered a nasty little piece of paper requiring them to make good on any loss. Keep in mind that BofA told the seller over the phone that their short sale was “approved” and failed to mention the small matter of $270k they wanted over the selling price. The listing agent drove by and yanked his sign out of the yard the next day. That house has been vacant for several months now and will probably fetch $10-20k less than our offer as an REO.
We wised up on the second (current) short sale: fire and forget! To our surprise, our offer was accepted on this one too. Other offers were for higher dollar amounts, but they were all FHA, contingency-laden, etc., so ours looked the most attractive overall. It took 65 days for the bank (don’t recall who they are at the moment–some no-name lender) to come back with a positive answer (also a surprise), but a couple of weeks of that were due to the seller having difficulty locating some paperwork.
From there, it’s all gone fairly quickly: inspection, termite, appraisal, loan underwriting, etc. are complete (17 days into a c. 27 day escrow); the “to do” list is down to selecting from a couple of competing quotes for homeowner’s insurance and miscellaneous “i” dotting and “t” crossing. If all goes well, we should have the keys a week from Wednesday.
We never stopped looking while either of these were in the banks’ hands, but inventory has been so low this year that there wasn’t anything else we wanted to make an offer on.
The disadvantages to a short sale mostly revolve around the fact that it’s a crapshoot: the bank may or may not approve it, and you’ll grow old waiting to find out. On the plus side, full disclosures apply just like in a normal sale and there’s some room to work with the seller. We worked this to our advantage in the offer by not requiring them to remove a bunch of junk all over the property. This would give us zero leverage with a REO, but the older lady who currently “owns” the house is overjoyed to not have to deal with it.
Short sales are a pain, but just like the lottery you gotta play to win. Not that we got a great deal or anything, but this was just about the only way we could find a house in our price range.
July 12, 2009 at 5:19 PM #428905drboomParticipantI’m in the later stages of escrow on a short sale, so it remains to be seen whether it’s a “successful” experience or not. π
Expect a lot of competing offers, and expect to wait … and wait … and wait some more.
This is the second short sale my wife and I have tried to buy. On the first one, our offer was accepted rather quickly, only to disappear into the bowels of BofA’s approval process for 60+ days. When the “approval” package finally came back, the seller discovered a nasty little piece of paper requiring them to make good on any loss. Keep in mind that BofA told the seller over the phone that their short sale was “approved” and failed to mention the small matter of $270k they wanted over the selling price. The listing agent drove by and yanked his sign out of the yard the next day. That house has been vacant for several months now and will probably fetch $10-20k less than our offer as an REO.
We wised up on the second (current) short sale: fire and forget! To our surprise, our offer was accepted on this one too. Other offers were for higher dollar amounts, but they were all FHA, contingency-laden, etc., so ours looked the most attractive overall. It took 65 days for the bank (don’t recall who they are at the moment–some no-name lender) to come back with a positive answer (also a surprise), but a couple of weeks of that were due to the seller having difficulty locating some paperwork.
From there, it’s all gone fairly quickly: inspection, termite, appraisal, loan underwriting, etc. are complete (17 days into a c. 27 day escrow); the “to do” list is down to selecting from a couple of competing quotes for homeowner’s insurance and miscellaneous “i” dotting and “t” crossing. If all goes well, we should have the keys a week from Wednesday.
We never stopped looking while either of these were in the banks’ hands, but inventory has been so low this year that there wasn’t anything else we wanted to make an offer on.
The disadvantages to a short sale mostly revolve around the fact that it’s a crapshoot: the bank may or may not approve it, and you’ll grow old waiting to find out. On the plus side, full disclosures apply just like in a normal sale and there’s some room to work with the seller. We worked this to our advantage in the offer by not requiring them to remove a bunch of junk all over the property. This would give us zero leverage with a REO, but the older lady who currently “owns” the house is overjoyed to not have to deal with it.
Short sales are a pain, but just like the lottery you gotta play to win. Not that we got a great deal or anything, but this was just about the only way we could find a house in our price range.
July 12, 2009 at 5:19 PM #429266drboomParticipantI’m in the later stages of escrow on a short sale, so it remains to be seen whether it’s a “successful” experience or not. π
Expect a lot of competing offers, and expect to wait … and wait … and wait some more.
This is the second short sale my wife and I have tried to buy. On the first one, our offer was accepted rather quickly, only to disappear into the bowels of BofA’s approval process for 60+ days. When the “approval” package finally came back, the seller discovered a nasty little piece of paper requiring them to make good on any loss. Keep in mind that BofA told the seller over the phone that their short sale was “approved” and failed to mention the small matter of $270k they wanted over the selling price. The listing agent drove by and yanked his sign out of the yard the next day. That house has been vacant for several months now and will probably fetch $10-20k less than our offer as an REO.
We wised up on the second (current) short sale: fire and forget! To our surprise, our offer was accepted on this one too. Other offers were for higher dollar amounts, but they were all FHA, contingency-laden, etc., so ours looked the most attractive overall. It took 65 days for the bank (don’t recall who they are at the moment–some no-name lender) to come back with a positive answer (also a surprise), but a couple of weeks of that were due to the seller having difficulty locating some paperwork.
From there, it’s all gone fairly quickly: inspection, termite, appraisal, loan underwriting, etc. are complete (17 days into a c. 27 day escrow); the “to do” list is down to selecting from a couple of competing quotes for homeowner’s insurance and miscellaneous “i” dotting and “t” crossing. If all goes well, we should have the keys a week from Wednesday.
We never stopped looking while either of these were in the banks’ hands, but inventory has been so low this year that there wasn’t anything else we wanted to make an offer on.
The disadvantages to a short sale mostly revolve around the fact that it’s a crapshoot: the bank may or may not approve it, and you’ll grow old waiting to find out. On the plus side, full disclosures apply just like in a normal sale and there’s some room to work with the seller. We worked this to our advantage in the offer by not requiring them to remove a bunch of junk all over the property. This would give us zero leverage with a REO, but the older lady who currently “owns” the house is overjoyed to not have to deal with it.
Short sales are a pain, but just like the lottery you gotta play to win. Not that we got a great deal or anything, but this was just about the only way we could find a house in our price range.
July 12, 2009 at 5:19 PM #429195drboomParticipantI’m in the later stages of escrow on a short sale, so it remains to be seen whether it’s a “successful” experience or not. π
Expect a lot of competing offers, and expect to wait … and wait … and wait some more.
This is the second short sale my wife and I have tried to buy. On the first one, our offer was accepted rather quickly, only to disappear into the bowels of BofA’s approval process for 60+ days. When the “approval” package finally came back, the seller discovered a nasty little piece of paper requiring them to make good on any loss. Keep in mind that BofA told the seller over the phone that their short sale was “approved” and failed to mention the small matter of $270k they wanted over the selling price. The listing agent drove by and yanked his sign out of the yard the next day. That house has been vacant for several months now and will probably fetch $10-20k less than our offer as an REO.
We wised up on the second (current) short sale: fire and forget! To our surprise, our offer was accepted on this one too. Other offers were for higher dollar amounts, but they were all FHA, contingency-laden, etc., so ours looked the most attractive overall. It took 65 days for the bank (don’t recall who they are at the moment–some no-name lender) to come back with a positive answer (also a surprise), but a couple of weeks of that were due to the seller having difficulty locating some paperwork.
From there, it’s all gone fairly quickly: inspection, termite, appraisal, loan underwriting, etc. are complete (17 days into a c. 27 day escrow); the “to do” list is down to selecting from a couple of competing quotes for homeowner’s insurance and miscellaneous “i” dotting and “t” crossing. If all goes well, we should have the keys a week from Wednesday.
We never stopped looking while either of these were in the banks’ hands, but inventory has been so low this year that there wasn’t anything else we wanted to make an offer on.
The disadvantages to a short sale mostly revolve around the fact that it’s a crapshoot: the bank may or may not approve it, and you’ll grow old waiting to find out. On the plus side, full disclosures apply just like in a normal sale and there’s some room to work with the seller. We worked this to our advantage in the offer by not requiring them to remove a bunch of junk all over the property. This would give us zero leverage with a REO, but the older lady who currently “owns” the house is overjoyed to not have to deal with it.
Short sales are a pain, but just like the lottery you gotta play to win. Not that we got a great deal or anything, but this was just about the only way we could find a house in our price range.
July 12, 2009 at 9:35 PM #429283sunny88ParticipantThank you for your detailed response. We have just submitted 4 offers on short sales and have received one counter-offer so far. We are not expecting a quick response on the other offers as our offers were back-up offers.
July 12, 2009 at 9:35 PM #429510sunny88ParticipantThank you for your detailed response. We have just submitted 4 offers on short sales and have received one counter-offer so far. We are not expecting a quick response on the other offers as our offers were back-up offers.
July 12, 2009 at 9:35 PM #429352sunny88ParticipantThank you for your detailed response. We have just submitted 4 offers on short sales and have received one counter-offer so far. We are not expecting a quick response on the other offers as our offers were back-up offers.
July 12, 2009 at 9:35 PM #428993sunny88ParticipantThank you for your detailed response. We have just submitted 4 offers on short sales and have received one counter-offer so far. We are not expecting a quick response on the other offers as our offers were back-up offers.
July 12, 2009 at 9:35 PM #428772sunny88ParticipantThank you for your detailed response. We have just submitted 4 offers on short sales and have received one counter-offer so far. We are not expecting a quick response on the other offers as our offers were back-up offers.
July 12, 2009 at 10:51 PM #429030temeculaguyParticipantHang in there sunny, I’ll be willing to wager that the recent short sale experience is much better than it was a year ago or even six months ago. My next door neighbor closed a few weeks ago on a short, until I met them, I was convinced the whole process was a myth. In 2007 and most of 2008, I fired off a number of offers on shorts, never even got any feedback until the end of 2008. I wasn’t the highest bidder in that case and six or seven months later they called and asked if I was still interested. I told them to perform a sexual act on themselves, they foreclosed shortly thereafter because all the people making offers had found something else and they listed as a foreclosure and got less than my original offer. I was happy about it because I wasn’t nuts about that house, but it seems they have learned their lesson and the timeline is quicker. My neighbor was moved in within 60 days, offer date to close and there was more than one loan and he was one of the backup offers. Just keep in mind, that everyone else is doing what you are doing by throwing out multiples on shorts with the intention of only buying one, so it’s not as competative as it feels when dealing with shorts. I’ve now seen a number of people successfully buy shorts so far in 2009, their patience paid off for them.
July 12, 2009 at 10:51 PM #429318temeculaguyParticipantHang in there sunny, I’ll be willing to wager that the recent short sale experience is much better than it was a year ago or even six months ago. My next door neighbor closed a few weeks ago on a short, until I met them, I was convinced the whole process was a myth. In 2007 and most of 2008, I fired off a number of offers on shorts, never even got any feedback until the end of 2008. I wasn’t the highest bidder in that case and six or seven months later they called and asked if I was still interested. I told them to perform a sexual act on themselves, they foreclosed shortly thereafter because all the people making offers had found something else and they listed as a foreclosure and got less than my original offer. I was happy about it because I wasn’t nuts about that house, but it seems they have learned their lesson and the timeline is quicker. My neighbor was moved in within 60 days, offer date to close and there was more than one loan and he was one of the backup offers. Just keep in mind, that everyone else is doing what you are doing by throwing out multiples on shorts with the intention of only buying one, so it’s not as competative as it feels when dealing with shorts. I’ve now seen a number of people successfully buy shorts so far in 2009, their patience paid off for them.
July 12, 2009 at 10:51 PM #429388temeculaguyParticipantHang in there sunny, I’ll be willing to wager that the recent short sale experience is much better than it was a year ago or even six months ago. My next door neighbor closed a few weeks ago on a short, until I met them, I was convinced the whole process was a myth. In 2007 and most of 2008, I fired off a number of offers on shorts, never even got any feedback until the end of 2008. I wasn’t the highest bidder in that case and six or seven months later they called and asked if I was still interested. I told them to perform a sexual act on themselves, they foreclosed shortly thereafter because all the people making offers had found something else and they listed as a foreclosure and got less than my original offer. I was happy about it because I wasn’t nuts about that house, but it seems they have learned their lesson and the timeline is quicker. My neighbor was moved in within 60 days, offer date to close and there was more than one loan and he was one of the backup offers. Just keep in mind, that everyone else is doing what you are doing by throwing out multiples on shorts with the intention of only buying one, so it’s not as competative as it feels when dealing with shorts. I’ve now seen a number of people successfully buy shorts so far in 2009, their patience paid off for them.
July 12, 2009 at 10:51 PM #428809temeculaguyParticipantHang in there sunny, I’ll be willing to wager that the recent short sale experience is much better than it was a year ago or even six months ago. My next door neighbor closed a few weeks ago on a short, until I met them, I was convinced the whole process was a myth. In 2007 and most of 2008, I fired off a number of offers on shorts, never even got any feedback until the end of 2008. I wasn’t the highest bidder in that case and six or seven months later they called and asked if I was still interested. I told them to perform a sexual act on themselves, they foreclosed shortly thereafter because all the people making offers had found something else and they listed as a foreclosure and got less than my original offer. I was happy about it because I wasn’t nuts about that house, but it seems they have learned their lesson and the timeline is quicker. My neighbor was moved in within 60 days, offer date to close and there was more than one loan and he was one of the backup offers. Just keep in mind, that everyone else is doing what you are doing by throwing out multiples on shorts with the intention of only buying one, so it’s not as competative as it feels when dealing with shorts. I’ve now seen a number of people successfully buy shorts so far in 2009, their patience paid off for them.
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