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What to know as a buyer purchasing a short sale Part 2 of 3

Posted by Romeo Manzanilla on Monday, November 1st, 2010 at 12:36pm.

So you’ve been hard at work with your Austin Realtor searching for the perfect piece of real estate and then one day, you find the home of your dreams at an unbelievable price! The only problem is that it is a short sale.  So what does that mean to the buyer? As I’ve discussed before, a short sale is basically, when a mortgage lien holder agrees to accept less than the full amount owed on a mortgage. The seller has to qualify to put his home on the market as a short sale, but what is required of the buyer? The number one thing is PATIENCE. A short sale does not follow the normal route that a typical resale would. Even though a seller is not going to get anything out of the short sale other than salvaging a piece of their credit, they may still have some emotional attachment to their home. Try and put yourself in their shoes. They may be going through some trying times including, death, divorce or a loss of job, so they might not be at their most rational state. Some buyers, especially investors, feel that a distressed situation requires a low ball offer, kind of a “hit them while they’re down” mentality. In reality, once the seller signs off on any contract, the bank with the mortgage lien must sign off on the transaction as well and this is where your patience as the buyer will be tested. Banks may take weeks, months or in some extreme situations, even years to come to terms that they are not going to be paid in full on a mortgage loan. That translates to slow responses or even no responses to the offers that potential buyers have submitted. A good short sale listing agent will be on top of keeping all of the parties involved in the transaction informed about where the process is. One of the biggest problems that potential buyers may face, is the inexperience of the listing agent in completing short sales. Typically, only about 25% of all short sale transactions are successful, due in large part, to the inexperience and inability that most agents have in “trying” to do a short sale. Before even considering putting in an offer on a home that is a short sale, make sure to have your agent do some research on the listing agent to make sure that he or she knows what they’re doing so as to not waste your time submitting an offer that will fall on deaf ears. In most cases, having an experienced short sale buyers agent and an experience short sale listing agent involved in the transaction will increase the chances of the transaction being approved by the bank as well as cut the wait time dramatically. From a personal perspective, I’ve been able to get a short sale completed in under 30 days from start to finish.

Read my next blog post at http://www.romeom.com to learn about the final steps required to complete the short sale process.

Thanks for visiting.

Romeo Manzanilla

(512) 743-7820

www.GreatHillsAustin.com

 

 


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Realty Austin


Austin, TX 78717
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