So you wanted a deal and you put an offer in on a short sale, perhaps even against your realtor's advice. 1 month went by, then another, and finally you hear back. The documentation is in order, the bpo was completed, and the Seller is countering your offer price $40,000 HIGHER! Huh? You thought that offer, while low, was enough to snag this home that is on the edge of foreclosure. The banks need people like you to unload these homes, right?
WRONG.
Like any other negotiation, dealing with banks on short sales DEMANDS you know their bottom lines, procedures, and rules of play. The first fallacy is that they NEED YOU. That is incorrect. Every bank has procedures for divesting themselves of bad investments and they stick to them UNLESS it's in their favor to take the shortcut, i.e. your offer. Even if a lender's REO department is flooded with inventory, it does not mean they will accept $.50 on the dollar for that beat-up 3/2 in need of a little TLC. Banks and servicers see only numbers, not rotted wood or broken windows. If the numbers don't work for the bank, then it's a waste of your time.
Which leads us to BPO's (Broker Price Opinions) and appraisals. While we all know the real estate sector is beat down, it doesn't mean that old 3/2 isn't worth a plug nickel. Lender's use appraisals (sometimes multiple appraisals) to arrive at a proper market value for the home, in accordance with their procedures. One lender I deal with automatically takes 5% off the BPO price to account for delays, time, and condition. So do yourself a favor...comp out the property BEFORE making your offer, ask the listing realtor for comps to justify value, and if you lowball, expect a counter (or someone else to slide a higher offer in after the bank counters yours).
If much time has elapsed since the property was last appraised, consider requesting a new appraisal. Guaranteed it will come in lower and closer to market value.
Just remember - the bank doesn't care if it needs new windows, the tile job was done poorly, or the cabinets are older and need freshening up. Heck, they don't even care about the age of the roof, the a/c system(s) or even the paint. Your negotiator is OVERWHELMED, OVERWORKED, and EXHAUSTED...there is very little motivation for them to work outside the framework that is set up. If they can't sell the home via short sale, the file is simply shipped over to their legal dept for foreclosure, then onto the REO dept for re-sale. No agnst, no emotion, etc...just a simple numbers game. So do yourself a favor and offer the RIGHT number so you, too, can be a winner in this market.
Sunday, May 03, 2009
Labels:
appraisal,
approval,
bank,
bpo,
counteroffer,
lender,
mortgage,
negotiator,
real estate owned,
reo,
short sale
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