Blogging Tulsa Real Estate

How To Qualify For HAFA Short Sale

 

Twenty years ago after the Oil Bust in Tulsa, Oklahoma, when a homeowner could not sell his home for enough money to pay the bank off and pay all the expenses from the proceeds of the sale, the homeowner took his checkbook to the bank and wrote a check at closing in order to get rid of his house.  Often the seller wrote a bigger check at closing than the buyer.

Things have changed.  Many homeowners lack the ability to cover the equity shortfall in their home.  They cannot write a check at closing to get the bank paid off and get on down the road.

To help homeowners in hardship situations, many homeowners are resorting to listing their homes with REALTORS® who understand how to do short sales. 

It is a complicated process and it is not fast, nor are there any guarantees.

I have successfully represented both Buyers and Sellers through the short sale process.

The following is a description of how a homeowner qualifies for a HAFA Short Sale -- a particular subset of the short sale family of transactions.

If you have questions, please call me at 918-712-4473 or send me an email at dsolano@cbtulsa.com

Via Dave Gubler - Foothill Ranch, Lake Forest, Ladera Ranch and Mission Viejo (Orange County California Short Sale Specialist-IMLShortSale):

How To Qualify For HAFA Short Sale

First let's start by defining exactly what HAFA is:

The government's Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives program, or HAFA as it is commonly known may provide you with some relief.  There are some hoops to jump through but working with an agent that understands the details and the process will ensure that you have an optimal chance for success.  (There are 43 pages of guidelines associated with this program so please choose your real estate agent wisely!)  Click Here For: HAFA Information Center

The three main benefits to you, the homeowner, are: (With respect to a Short Sale)

1. A formal timeframe to market and sell your home during which a foreclosure sale cannot occur. This, in my mind, is the main benefit.  It will take much of the uncertainty and fear of foreclosure away from homeowners that are financially distressed and make it very probable that they are able to remain in their home longer than they otherwise would be able to.

2. A monetary incentive to assist you with relocation expenses.  Although this is small, originally set at $1,500.00, it will help with the cost of relocating. It is presently set at $3.000.00.

3. Releases you from any future liability on the debt. This benefit has the most long-term benefit.  It eliminates the lender/servicers ability to secure a deficiency judgment or promissary note on the loss.

HAFA is an alternative to the Home Affordable Modification Program (otherwise known as HAMP).  To be eligible for HAFA the following criteria must initially be met:

1. Your lender/servicer must be participating in HAMP & HAFA:  This can easily be established.  You can look up whether your lender/servicer is participating in the government programs by following this link: Lenders Participating In HAFA

2. You must be HAMP eligible: What does this mean?  It is fairly simple.  All of the following must be true: 
A) The home must be your primary residence. 
B) Your mortgage must have been originated prior to January 1, 2009. 
C) Amount owed on your 1st mortgage must be equal to or less than $729,750 (For a one-unit property).
D) Your current monthly mortgage payment exceeds 31% if your gross income.

AND ONE OF THE FOLLOWING MUST APPLY TO YOU:  (Your lender/servicer is required to consider you for HAFA if the two stipulations above and one of the stipulations below are met)

1. You do not qualify for a trial period plan:   This is a bit trickier.  Participating lenders/servicers have to analyze your further eligibility.  The goal of HAMP is to provide a borrower with a loan payment (Principal, Interest, Taxes, Insurance, and HOA) of 31% of their gross income. This is the part that everyone knows about and it sounds pretty good (for most people)!  Unfortunately the lender has an out.  The bank is required to perform a Net Present Value Test (NPV Test) on each potential HAMP candidate.  The long and the short of the NPV Test is this:  If the bank will make more money by foreclosing than they will by modifying your loan (payment to 31% of gross income) then the bank is not required to offer you the loan modification.  This is where many potential loan modifications via HAMP are stopped.  Quite simply the modifications the bank would have to make (rate reduction, term extension, and principal forbearance) would make it more cost effective to foreclose.  Please feel free to contact me regarding how the NPV Test is performed and what the components of it are.

2. You do not successfully complete a Trial Period Plan: This is fairly straight-forward.  If you are offered a HAMP Trial Period Plan and reject it;  you do not provide the correct & complete documentation required to participate in the plan offered; you do not make all payments during the course of the Trial Period Plan.

3. You miss at least two consecutive payments during a HAMP modification:  Many people are unclear regarding this item.  If you have completed the Trial Period Plan and entered in to the final loan modification stage of HAMP but you miss two consecutive payments on the modified loan then you are HAFA eligible.

4. You request a Short Sale:  You have determined that you must move and you meet the first two criteria mentioned (Lender is participating in HAMP/HAFA, and you are HAMP eligible).

Although the HAFA process can be complex it may provide benefits to you that were not available previously.  To participate in HAFA you must utilize a licensed real estate agent.  For your own benefit make sure that you select an experienced short sale agent/negotiator.  Please contact me directly at (949)218-0952 if you need to consider a short sale.

Related Posts:
HAMP Failing To Prevent Delinquency: Is Failure The New Success?

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What is a Short Sale? -- A Definition and Some Reflections along with a bit of Sermonizing

What is a Short Sale?

A short sale is one among many strategies to avoid foreclosure.  For many homeowners it is a last ditch effort to sell a house at market value before it goes to sheriff sale.  It helps the seller stay out of foreclosure while the buyer gets a home that is priced by a motivated seller at a price point at or below market value. 

Usually a short sale cannot be negotiated until there is a contract to purchase the home.  Banks usually will not negotiate a short sale unless the seller has missed a payment or two.

A short sale is often seen

  1. in situations where the seller has not lived in the home long enough to have built up much equity,
  2. or in situations where the seller financed the home without a large down payment,
  3.  or in situations where the seller has taken out a second mortgage and the "drive-by appraisal" may have been somewhat inflated.  

Whatever the cause, in a short sale the homeowner owes more on the house than he can hope to sell the house for, especially after paying closing costs.  In lieu of a short sale, a seller can opt to take a check to closing or work out some kind of a payment plan with his lender in order to be able to sell the house and avoid foreclosure. 

In a short sale situation the buyer shops for a home and gets loan approval just as when purchasing any other house.  The seller negotiates the best deal possible.  Usually the seller has already given up and doesn't care how much the house is sold for, as long as it is enough for the bank to approve the deal.  The buyer and seller both sign an addendum which amends the contract so that the bank will have a bit of time to approve the purchase contract.  Then everybody waits and waits and waits.

 There is great disparity between the spirit, philosophy, theory, and intent of a short sale on the one hand, and the reality and practice of short sales, on the other hand.  The reality is that the banks can make more money if they let HUD, Fannie, and Freddie take the house back, and so the banks have been reluctant to help out the homeowners by negotiating with the realtors.  It's just too much trouble for the banks, and so they take their sweet time and frustrate everyone.  

While the banks are dawdling, the buyers get squirrelly and start looking at other houses.  In the end, 85% of buyers back out before the bank finally approves the deal.    

Most realtors have been there and done that, but have refused to buy the tee shirt.  Many have sworn never to get involved in another short sale again.  Why?  Short sales are a lot of work and provide little satisfaction or profit.  Most of us doing short sales feel like we are throwing the proverbial star fish back into the sea.  When we are successful in closing a short sale, all parties involved can feel joy at having helped a family avoid foreclosure and can truthfully say, "It made a difference for that one family." 

 Unfortunately the now famous October bailout by the federal government has only accelerated the foreclosure of many homes in Tulsa County.  I could give you many ugly examples to illustrate this statement.
   

The bailout has assured that the banks were taken care of, but unfortunaely home owners already in the foreclosure process have been shown no mercy.  The banks have had no motivation to help homeowners because the loans had been guaranteed or insured by the government. 
 

In my experience the banks that held their own paper without government involvement have been much easier to negotiate with and seem to be a bit more responsive to realtors' efforts to negotiate a short sale.

 So my suggestion is that if you are considering the purchase of a short sale, please only make an offer on a house that you really like.  It is unfair to the seller to keep the house off the market only to back out two months down the road.  For you see, the foreclosure clock keeps on ticking while the banks are sitting doing nothing or pretending that they are doing something.

 Sometimes the reason a short sale fails is because of the presence of a third party lien.  These seem to shut down all possibility of negotiation.  These liens do not show up in the county court records, but are attached to the house in the property records in the county clerk's office.  Usually the homeowner is unaware that such a paper exists in their records at the county clerk's office.  An extra run to the court house to the clerk's office can help everyone involved.  A seller can get around these liens by consulting a good bankruptcy attorney and getting a stay of bankruptcy prior to the sheriff sale.  

 In short, a short sale is a good opportunity to get a great deal on a house and help a family stay out of foreclosure.  I just beg you to be sure you love the house, because it is devastating for a family facing foreclosure to have a buyer back out.  I barely stop short at saying that a buyer has a moral obligation to buy a house they have contracted for, but I really can get up on my soap box on this one.  

Buyers:  Shop carefully, deal carefully, and know that you want the house.  Then go for it  - and stay with it.  Good luck and happy house hunting.

Sellers:  Find someone who has some knowledge and experience in dealing with foreclosures who can help navigate you through the short sale process.

 I hope this helps.

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