Daily Real Estate News |
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
The short-sale process is expected to get shorter starting June 15.
New guidelines issued under the Federal Housing Finance Agency will
require Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to give home buyers of short sales
notice of their final decision within 60 days. The new guidelines also
will require the mortgage giants to respond to initial short-sale
requests within 30 days of receiving an offer from a potential buyer.
The speedier process is expected to be a boost to the housing market,
Michael McHugh, president of the Empire State Mortgage Bankers
Association, told the New York Times. Home buyers and sellers often have
to wait months before they receive a decision from a lender on an offer
for a short sale. Some deals fall apart just from the long wait alone.
Short sales have been increasing in recent months, as many lenders
find them more appealing than foreclosures, which can be much more
costly and take longer to remove from their books.
Short sales now outpace foreclosure sales in many parts of the
country. Short sales represent more than 14 percent of existing-home
sales, according to CoreLogic housing data from March, the most recent
month available.
McHugh says that a faster short-sale process may be particularly
helpful in speeding the recovery in judicial states, where foreclosures
must go through the courts before they are approved. For example, in New
York, judicial foreclosures can take a year or longer to be approved.
Now short sales may be viewed by defaulting home owners as more of an
option in avoiding foreclosure.
“There should be a significant improvement in the turnaround,” McHugh
said regarding housing markets with judicial foreclosure processes.
Source: “Speeding Up Short Sales,” The New York Times (May 24, 2012)
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