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1) Sellers Paid Too Much.If a home sold for $500,000 a few years ago and is now for sale at $400,000, that
doesn't mean the buyer is picking up $100,000 of equity for free. It means the seller paid too much in a rising market and now the market has fallen. It means the seller has no
equity. 2) Sellers Borrowed Too Much.Banks that were eager to lend money in appreciating markets sometimes
allowed borrowers to over-mortgage the home, meaning the borrower's loan balance exceeded the value of the property. Appraisals are subjective, and not all appraisers will place the same value on a home. Although against the law, some appraisers are
pressured by banks to appraise at the amount the home owner wants to borrow. 3) Stringent Qualifications.Inexperienced
or unethical real estate agents might push a seller into considering a short sale when the seller does not qualify for a short sale. Sellers must prove a hardship and submit evidence of the hardship to the lender for approval. Some agents list homes as
short sales without ever talking to the lenders or pre-qualifying the sellers. 4) Homes Sell at Market Value.Lenders
aren't naive or unaware of the value of a home. Lenders will insist on a comparative market analysis, known as a CMA, or broker price opinion, known as a BPO. If a lender believes a better price can be obtained by taking the
property back in foreclosure over a short-sale offer, the lender may hold out for a higher price. That price will be close
to market value. Lenders accept short sales when the home is worth the short-sale price, which means market value.
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5) Homes Sell "As Is".If a mortgage company agrees to a short sale, it is most likely also paying
the closing costs in the transaction. Lenders ask buyers to purchase the home in its present condition. Lenders typically will refuse to pay
for: 6) Length of Time to Close.Depending on when the Notice of Default was filed, the lender's back-log of foreclosures and how much paperwork the seller has already submitted, it could take anywhere
from two weeks to two months to get a response on a purchase offer from a lender. In addition, if two lenders are involved because there are two loans secured to the property, it could take
longer to satisfy the demands of the second lender. 7) Lenders Can Change Conditions.Some lenders reserve
the right to renegotiate the terms of the short sale at the last minute. If the market changes, new laws pass or new information
crosses the lender's desk, the lender can attempt to change the terms of the contract. Lenders generally have lawyers at their
disposal, and ordinary buyers do not. 8) Lenders Discount Commission.Generally, only lenders who have sold
loans to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac are paying traditional real estate commissions to real estate agents. The rest may want a discount. Moreover, agents end up doing two to three times the work of a conventional
transaction and don't appreciate getting paid less to do more work. If you have agreed to pay your agent a certain percentage
under a buyer broker agreement, you could be liable for the difference between what the lender will pay and what your contract stipulates, if your agent
refuses to waive the difference.
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9) Higher Buyer Closing Costs.Because lenders rarely will pay for any extras, like a seller would be willing
to do, if you want any of those extras, you will pay for them yourself. Sometimes lenders will refuse to pay for standard
seller closing costs such as transfer taxes, too. If you want specific inspections, you will probably pay for them out-of-pocket.
10) Lose Control of Transaction.If you need to close escrow by a specific date, lots of luck with that. A
short sale home closing process takes an indefinite amount of time. The seller's lender calls the shots, not the buyer nor the buyer's lender. If you are
trying to close escrow concurrently with the sale of your home, it might not happen. 11) Little Seller Motivation.When
the seller discovers that the short sale effect on credit is close to that of a foreclosure, there is little incentive for a seller to cooperate with a short sale. Although sellers
may qualify to buy another home in 2 years after a short sale versus 5 (with restrictions) on a foreclosure, some have no
intention of ever buying another home again
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