Special offer

Often Overlooked Hardship Letter Issue...CRITICAL to Short Sale Success

Reblogger
Real Estate Broker/Owner with Realty Works Temecula BRE No: 01233850

Paddy Deighan, Esq. PhD from Encino, CA

Makes a great point about how, when and why to write a hardship letter, and when different letters make more of an impact!  A truly overlooked issue!

Original content by Paddy Deighan MBA JD PhD

 

There has been a lot of discussion regarding hardship letters and their importance in short sale negotiations.  However, there is a frequently overlooked aspect of them that is vitally important.  The hardship letters will be different in a loan modification than a short sale.  You may then ask, “That is true, by why do I care?”

 

You should care and you need to care – especially if the loan modification was submitted and you do not have a copy of it.  The issue is what I refer to as “synchronicity”.  If I were a short sale agent, I would want to see the submitted hardship letter before you submit one for the short sale. You are trying to avoid inconsistencies and discrepancies. 

 

The goal of a loan modification hardship letter is to discuss WHY or HOW the home owner was unable to keep up with payments and then to discuss HOW or WHY they will be able to make payments going forward, if the loan is modified.  A typical loan modification hardship letter will stress hope for the economic future.  It will detail why payments can be made and the basis for it (salary increase, expense dropping off, etc.).

 

A short sale hardship letter will probably not have this optimistic economic aspect to it.  It is very important to reconcile these inherent differences so that a lender can accurately assess the situation.  It is also important for the person negotiating the short sale to see what has been submitted in the loan modification package in order to avoid discrepancies.  The information that a short sale negotiator would need to know is the financials that were submitted.

 

The important thing to remember is that you are negotiating a short sale with the same lender (servicing agent) that also was involved in the loan modification process.  Hey will have whatever information was previously submitted and there is a tendency to believe that the lenders and servicing agents are unorganized and may not know what they have.  Do you want the success of your short sale to be dependent upon the lender’s lack of organization??

Comments (2)

Jon Zolsky, Daytona Beach, FL
Daytona Condo Realty, 386-405-4408 - Daytona Beach, FL
Buy Daytona condos for heavenly good prices

Jane - thank you for the reblog. I would have missed it and it is an interesting angle here. We do not do loan Modififcations, but I understand what the  author meant

Jul 31, 2011 04:32 PM
Greg Cook
Platinum Home Mortgage - Temecula, CA
Mortgage Consultant NMLS ID# 283159

Jane, this wwould be a good piece of documentation for the former homeowner to keep on file if they think owning a home again is in their future.

Lenders require applicants who have had a major credit derogatory to prove extenuating circumstances in order to qualify for a new loan in less than 7 years (generally).

Aug 02, 2011 11:46 AM