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SD Realtor
ParticipantYou can get an acct with countyrecordsresearch.com as well.
SD Realtor
ParticipantYou can get an acct with countyrecordsresearch.com as well.
SD Realtor
ParticipantYou can get an acct with countyrecordsresearch.com as well.
SD Realtor
ParticipantWith or without a realtor allocation of costs are generally defined on page 2 of the rpa. In a “standard” transaction a seller and buyer will split the cost of escrow. Seller will purchase title insurance for the buyer. Buyer will pay for his own closing costs. Seller will pay for a home warranty, an nhd report, clue report, all satutory costs, hoa docs if need, county transfer costs, termite inspection and repairs identified as section 1 on the report. Buyer pays for any additional reports or inspections including appraisals and physical inspection. I am probably missing lots of stuff as I am sitting here at the auction listening to about 200 postponements. You get the idea though. You can ask the seller for credits for clsing costs as well. Maybe he plays and maybe not.hope this helps
SD Realtor
ParticipantWith or without a realtor allocation of costs are generally defined on page 2 of the rpa. In a “standard” transaction a seller and buyer will split the cost of escrow. Seller will purchase title insurance for the buyer. Buyer will pay for his own closing costs. Seller will pay for a home warranty, an nhd report, clue report, all satutory costs, hoa docs if need, county transfer costs, termite inspection and repairs identified as section 1 on the report. Buyer pays for any additional reports or inspections including appraisals and physical inspection. I am probably missing lots of stuff as I am sitting here at the auction listening to about 200 postponements. You get the idea though. You can ask the seller for credits for clsing costs as well. Maybe he plays and maybe not.hope this helps
SD Realtor
ParticipantWith or without a realtor allocation of costs are generally defined on page 2 of the rpa. In a “standard” transaction a seller and buyer will split the cost of escrow. Seller will purchase title insurance for the buyer. Buyer will pay for his own closing costs. Seller will pay for a home warranty, an nhd report, clue report, all satutory costs, hoa docs if need, county transfer costs, termite inspection and repairs identified as section 1 on the report. Buyer pays for any additional reports or inspections including appraisals and physical inspection. I am probably missing lots of stuff as I am sitting here at the auction listening to about 200 postponements. You get the idea though. You can ask the seller for credits for clsing costs as well. Maybe he plays and maybe not.hope this helps
SD Realtor
ParticipantWith or without a realtor allocation of costs are generally defined on page 2 of the rpa. In a “standard” transaction a seller and buyer will split the cost of escrow. Seller will purchase title insurance for the buyer. Buyer will pay for his own closing costs. Seller will pay for a home warranty, an nhd report, clue report, all satutory costs, hoa docs if need, county transfer costs, termite inspection and repairs identified as section 1 on the report. Buyer pays for any additional reports or inspections including appraisals and physical inspection. I am probably missing lots of stuff as I am sitting here at the auction listening to about 200 postponements. You get the idea though. You can ask the seller for credits for clsing costs as well. Maybe he plays and maybe not.hope this helps
SD Realtor
ParticipantWith or without a realtor allocation of costs are generally defined on page 2 of the rpa. In a “standard” transaction a seller and buyer will split the cost of escrow. Seller will purchase title insurance for the buyer. Buyer will pay for his own closing costs. Seller will pay for a home warranty, an nhd report, clue report, all satutory costs, hoa docs if need, county transfer costs, termite inspection and repairs identified as section 1 on the report. Buyer pays for any additional reports or inspections including appraisals and physical inspection. I am probably missing lots of stuff as I am sitting here at the auction listening to about 200 postponements. You get the idea though. You can ask the seller for credits for clsing costs as well. Maybe he plays and maybe not.hope this helps
September 3, 2009 at 7:50 AM in reply to: Banks to Flood the Markets with Foreclosures – CNBC Reports #452336SD Realtor
ParticipantYou mean you don’t work in porn TG? darn…
September 3, 2009 at 7:50 AM in reply to: Banks to Flood the Markets with Foreclosures – CNBC Reports #452529SD Realtor
ParticipantYou mean you don’t work in porn TG? darn…
September 3, 2009 at 7:50 AM in reply to: Banks to Flood the Markets with Foreclosures – CNBC Reports #452869SD Realtor
ParticipantYou mean you don’t work in porn TG? darn…
September 3, 2009 at 7:50 AM in reply to: Banks to Flood the Markets with Foreclosures – CNBC Reports #452942SD Realtor
ParticipantYou mean you don’t work in porn TG? darn…
September 3, 2009 at 7:50 AM in reply to: Banks to Flood the Markets with Foreclosures – CNBC Reports #453132SD Realtor
ParticipantYou mean you don’t work in porn TG? darn…
SD Realtor
ParticipantYes I agree. I didn’t doubt that this person was telling me the truth about the mod. Who knows, the attorney may have dug up the loan docs and found something.
I have not done the heaviest volume of short sales and the two I am in now where I am representing the listing side have been really tough moreso because the buyers have come and gone several times. The current two do represent a dichotomy though, one is a very tough hardship case. The seller has had health issues which caused him to lose his job and subsequently the home. It is a very real hardship case and it has been hard but we have finally got a buyer who is in for the long haul after 3 previous buyers. As you know with each buyer and entirely new package needs to get sent in and basically everything resets (at least with the lender I am working with). The second case is opposite. This is a seller who bought at the peak, then basically bought another home a few months ago and decided to either let the first one go to foreclosure or try to short sell it. He is not distressed and has not missed any payments but by the same token he doesn’t have a huge pile of money either. He has been very cooperative with the lender and we got approval on his short sale but again, it took several buyers to get someone who stuck it out for the long haul. Now the appraisal came in low so we just submitted it to the lender for a price adjustment. They gave a verbal approval but we don’t have the letter yet. In both cases there were two lenders so it was a friggin grind.
In case 1 the sellers really anguished over whether they wanted to sell the home. Actually they listed in the spring of last year, then pulled the plug in September, then tried to do a loan mod, then didnt like the loan mod terms, then called me back to try again. So like you said, it comes down to do you really want the home or not?
However, I have not yet run across a case where the lender flat out denied a short sale but I have not had any cases where the lender was preconditioned by some event with the seller. So yes I suppose it can happen but I have not experienced it yet.
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