Written by Jim the Realtor

March 30, 2011

From Alejandro Laso at the latimes.com:

Major banks may be forced to let severely delinquent homeowners sell their houses for less than the loan amounts owed as part of a broad settlement of federal and state investigations into botched foreclosure paperwork, according to government officials involved in the negotiations.

The requirement to allow so-called short sales would be in addition to forcing mortgage servicers to reduce the amount some homeowners owe on their loans, said two officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because negotiations are ongoing.

The goal of short sales would be twofold: provide a quicker and more economical way for banks to dispose of distressed real estate and to help stabilize the real estate market by clearing out a backlog of defaulted mortgages that are poised for foreclosure.

They would be used in situations in which borrowers were so underwater that the more costly and time-consuming process of foreclosure would seem to be the only option.

“Short sales just command a better premium than foreclosures,” said Glenn Kelman, chief executive for online brokerage Redfin. “It’s like day-old bagels. They never sell for the same price. If they sit there for a while, nobody wants them because houses just break down when they are left alone.”

Foreclosures continue to drive down housing values, with prices in 20 major U.S. cities down an average of 3.1% in January compared with the same month a year ago, according to new data from a Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller index. Prices in Los Angeles were down 1.8%.

The latest proposal is among those to be discussed when executives from the top five mortgage servicers meet Wednesday in Washington with state and federal officials working on a settlement that could range from $5 billion to $25 billion.

Short sales would help accelerate the turnover of homes from borrowers who are months behind on their mortgage payments, Kelman said.

Some sellers are not eager to complete a short sale because it would force them out of their home. And lenders can withhold approval of a short sale if they don’t like the price.

Banks often resist such sales because they are difficult to execute, particularly when multiple creditors and other parties are involved. In addition, short sales lock in losses for the lender that might be reduced if the sale is delayed until the market improves.

Requiring banks to allow short sales could fuel further opposition from some Republican attorneys general and members of Congress who already have criticized the broad scope of the proposed settlement.

Some House Republicans have derided possible payments of $20,000 to encourage distressed homeowners — dubbed by some as “cash for keys” — as a bailout for irresponsible behavior.

Seven Republican attorneys general recently wrote to Iowa Atty. Gen. Tom Miller, a Democrat who is leading the negotiations for the states, saying the proposals go beyond resolving damages from foreclosure paperwork problems. Those problems include robo-signing, the practice of bank employees’ signing sworn documents without reading or understanding them.

“I think it’s morphed into something that’s bigger and different than what we talked about in the beginning,” said Oklahoma Atty. Gen. E. Scott Pruitt, a Republican who organized the signing of one of the letters.

 

4 Comments

  1. Jim the Realtor

    Clearly Glenn is not a realtor, nor been on the street trying to buy a short sale in the last couple of years.

  2. swm

    Pretty simple, I think. The banks get a set period of time (say, 24 months, for example) after default, not foreclosure, before they have to reset the value of a property from what they have been carrying it at to mark-to-market.

  3. sdbri

    As bad as the banks are, the state and federal government thinking they know better is just hilarious. It’s like blind people trying to direct people with only one eye.

  4. sdbri

    There’s no such thing as mark-to-market in short sales. It’s more like mark-to-whatevertherealtorsfriendwantstopay. I’ve seen too much fraud in short sales where they weren’t listed until sold. I’ve even been offered such unlisted short sales with the understanding that they’d be representing both buyer and seller. What a surprise.

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