Thursday, September 24, 2009

Housing: Short sales spread across real estate market, leaving frustration in their wake

Offers may roll in, but banks often slow to respond, prompting buyers to walk away

A few years ago, few people in the housing market had ever heard of a short sale.

Mention the term today and people, whether they are homeowners or real estate agents, just roll their eyes.

The practice, which involves selling a property for less than the amount owed on the mortgage, has grown in popularity as an exit strategy for financially strapped homeowners because it doesn't ding a credit report as deeply as a foreclosure. But because the transactions have to be approved by first and second lien holders, they are languishing. Some real estate agents try to steer clear of them entirely and even specify in their listings that a property is not a short sale.

The Obama administration is aware of the frustrations. In mid-May, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner announced plans to streamline the process by offering financial incentives to mortgage servicers and investors that accept short sales, much in the same way that they are rewarded for refinancing or modifying troubled mortgages.

Four months later, homeowners, real estate agents and lenders are still waiting for specific details of how the plan would work. A Treasury Department spokeswoman said an update on the program is expected in a few weeks.

Meanwhile, homeowners like Dallas O'Day are in limbo.

O'Day, a Chicago attorney, and his family relocated from California in June 2004 and bought a Mediterranean-style home in Chicago's Beverly neighborhood for $395,000. They rewired the house, stripped and refinished the wood floors and the woodwork and did other work to restore its charm.

Last year, personal circumstances prompted them to list the home for sale just as the housing industry's meltdown was picking up steam. With no takers and no longer even expecting to break even on his investment, O'Day relisted the 2,700-square-foot home in January as a short sale.

Four months and three price reductions brought the house down to $384,900, at which point a potential buyer made an offer in late May. O'Day accepted it and submitted the paperwork to the lenders holding first and second mortgages on the home.

He has yet to receive a response. Meanwhile, the family has moved into a North Side apartment, the refrigerator has broken in the home and there's evidence of mold in the basement.

"The only thing we keep hearing is they keep wanting current payroll stubs, bank statements and taxes," said O'Day's real estate agent, Pam Decker at Prudential Biros Real Estate in Evergreen Park.

"What has astonished me is that in the presence of one of the softest housing markets I can remember, we're hitting up on four months and they've just had a person assigned to look at it, that they would move at such a glacial pace," O'Day said. "My expectation is I'll be renting until whatever blemish is gone. I've just accepted the fact that at some point it'll be foreclosed upon because I just don't think the banks will pull it together. I feel like I've done everything I can do."...

To read the original article click here

Other articles of interest...
A Coming Flood of Bank Owned Homes
“There’s going to be a flood of bank-owned homes listed for sale at some point.”
Housing Crash to Resume on 7 Million Foreclosures, Amherst Says
about 7 million properties that are likely to be seized by lenders have yet to hit the market,
MSM: Nice Try, Two Years Later
If Bernanke gave Paulson the slightest hint of what he was thinking, Paulson would have been in possession of very valuable information.
Obama to world: Don't expect America to fix it all
"Those who used to chastise America for acting alone in the world cannot now stand by and wait for America to solve the world's problems alone,"

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