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Florida Realtors says Banks making short sales tougher... What's your experience?

By
Real Estate Agent with Allison Ables Real Estate

Are banks really making short sales tougher? Florida Realtors thinks so... what's your experience?

NEW YORK - Oct. 12, 2009 - Banks are backing away from short sales, forcing sellers to pay extra at closing or demanding a promissory note for the amount due. One-third of borrowers owe more on their mortgages than their properties are worth, according First American CoreLogic.

When their situations were really tough, most banks preferred short sales because they were their best opportunity to get the most money back. But with an improving economy, and because the losses on many of these properties have already been written off the books, banks are increasingly reluctant to negotiate a short sale.

Today, banks demand 9.5 weeks to respond to a short-sale request compared to 4.5 weeks a year ago, according to research firm Campbell Communications. The banks' reluctance is frequently stymieing sales and frustrating real estate practitioners.

"It drives me up a wall," says Robert G. Hertzog of Summit Home Consultants in Phoenix. "(The bank is) holding my client hostage."

Source: BusinessWeek, Christopher Palmeri (10/09/2009)

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Comments (3)

Steve Andrascik
Lake Mead Area Realty - Boulder City, NV

Allison, I think banks are making it harder to complete short sales. They make more money on foreclosures.

An interesting fact I read on AR today is that Bank of America, Wells Fargo and JP Morgan Chase are writing almost all of the new mortages, but only keeping about 5% of them. Our govenment is buying the rest. Very interesting.

 

Oct 12, 2009 06:33 AM
Allison Ables
Allison Ables Real Estate - Gainesville, FL
Gainesville Realtor

Yep... what happens when the US government stops buying all that paper?!

Oct 12, 2009 06:49 AM
Dawn Maloney
RE/MAX Trinity Northeast Ohio Real Estate Specialist - Hudson, OH
330-990-4236 Hudson & Northeastern Ohio

Yes ma'am, I think they are. I have been working much harder and making less headway. If I don't see some approvals soon, I'm not sure what will happen. The climate is definitely changing. I know that the banks want to make sure people try for a loan mod first, but overall...I'm pretty upset with the elongated timeframes.

Why, oh why, did we give all this money to the banks? They are NOT helping the American people.

Oct 15, 2009 02:31 PM