

Welcome to Your Keys to Paradise and everything
you need to know about Lower Florida Keys Short Sales and Foreclosures.
Here are the Top 5 Misconceptions About a Short Sale:
Short Sale Myth #1: Short Sales Take 12 to 18 Months to Close
The fastest I have been able to close any of my Sacramento short sale
listings has been in 62 days. But I've also represented buyers who
were able to step into another buyer's position, after that buyer walked
away prior to short sale approval, and close within 28 days.
Here is the time frame for an average short sale when the loan is held
by a cooperative bank (and is not a former Countrywide loan):
· Seven to 10 days for the lender to acknowledge receipt of
the complete short sale package, which consists of personal seller
documents and related real estate items, including the buyer's short
sale offer.
· A negotiator is assigned. An additional 30 to 45 days for
a BPO or appraisal.
· Another 2 to 3 weeks for management / investor review and
short sale approval.
Short Sale Myth #2: Short Sale Buyers Pay Too Much
In some metropolitan areas, listing agents may deliberately price a
short sale below market value. It's a tactic short sale agents use
to attract multiple offers.
After all, a listed price on a short sale is fabricated, because you
won't know how much a bank will accept until the offer is submitted.
But many banks will consider a price at a minimum of 90% of market
value. Some banks reject short sales because the offers are unreasonable.
Short Sale Myth #3: Short Sale Banks Won't Accept a Severely Discounted
Payoff
Sellers are often astonished to discover that in markets where prices
have fallen over a 5-year-period, a home might be worth 50% or less
of its original value when the seller bought it. Banks understand declining
markets.
Moreover, banks will conduct their own research about value and come
to the same conclusion. The value of the home is not based on the amount
of the mortgage; it's based on recent comparable sales.
Short Sale Myth #4: Short Sale Sellers Must Be in Default Before the
Bank Will Approve a Short Sale
Banks approve a short sale based on the seller's hardship and the value
of the home. Some sellers may struggle to make the monthly mortgage
payment, yet have not fallen behind in their payments.
While it is true that sellers in default receive immediate attention,
a seller can also pay a mortgage payment on time each and every month
and still qualify for a short sale. An added benefit for being current
on the mortgage is a seller may qualify under Fannie Mae guidelines
to immediately buy another home.
Short Sale Myth #5: Agents Get Paid a Lower Commission
In the early days of the short sale boom, during the years of 2005
to 2008, banks were treating short sale commissions abominably, often
reducing the agent's commission to peanuts.
Most banks now pay a traditional or near-traditional commission to
agents. On top of which, Fannie Mae established a compensation policy
on February 24, 2009, to pay the amount of commission agreed to between
the listing agent and the seller, providing the fee does not exceed
6%.
http://homebuying.about.com/od/shortsale/qt/070309-Short-Sale-Myths.htm