One of the junior members of my family landed in the emergency room the other night—a skateboard trick gone awry. The triage nurse was asking question after question after question. “Did you hit your head? Did you lose consciousness? Did you black out?”
I was a little bit intolerant of the nurse’s incessant questioning because I felt that it had absolutely nothing to do with the mangled limb. However, her questions did prompt me to think about the triage of short sales.
When you take a short sale listing or begin to process your short sale transaction, you also need to do a bit of triage—not unlike my recent experience in the ER.
First off, it helps to know whether the property is owner-occupied. Investor owners participating in short sales, for example, will not qualify for certain programs (such as the government’s short sale program, HAFA).
It’s also helpful to know whether Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac is the investor. You can determine that by visiting the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac websites and using their loan lookup tools. Both of these GSE’s have their own versions of the HAFA program. Familiarizing yourself with the guidelines for submission for each of these programs will really go a long way toward the successful processing of the short sale.
Generally, it is also good to know whether the seller has attempted to qualify for a loan modification. Sometimes the mortgage lender may still be in the process of evaluating the short sale seller for the loan modification. A good listing agent will want to have all of the facts at his or her disposal before contacting the bank to hear that the seller is still in the midst of the modification.
And, of course, it is also helpful to know how many liens there are on the subject property. Collecting mortgage statements and then comparing those statements to information on a preliminary title report will assure that whomever is conducting the short sale negotiations is obtaining lien releases from all of the necessary lien holders.
Sometimes agents phone me to discuss their short sales and I begin to ask them a barrage of questions—not unlike the triage nurse did at the hospital the other night. However, unlike the triage nurse, I do not offer pain medication as part of my service—despite the fact that there are probably a few agents out there who are working on some pretty painful short sales.
Photo: flickr creative commons by TenSpeed Photography
Melissa Zavala is the Broker/Owner of Broadpoint Properties and Head Honcho of Short Sale Expeditor®, and Chief Executive Officer of Transaction 911. Before landing in real estate, she had careers in education and publishing. Most recently, she has been able to use her teaching and organizational skills while traveling the world over—dispelling myths about the distressed property market, engaging and motivating real estate agents, and sharing her passion for real estate. When she isn’t speaking or writing, Melissa enjoys practicing yoga, walking the dog, and vacationing at beach resorts.
Liz Benitez
February 8, 2011 at 11:35 am
That is just how it is though. Question after question and the clients don’t want to give truthful answers. (most people do not like to admit they can’t pay there mortgage) So after explaining that this is what so many others are going through, that they are not alone, and you will be helping them step by step through the process, you just have to hope they are honest with you. Regardless of the pain of it all.
Nevin
February 14, 2011 at 12:23 am
It is so true that navigating a short sale without asking questions and knowing which ones to ask is an accident waiting to happen.