Foreclosures are down to their lowest levels in nearly five years. One reason: Lenders are increasingly using short sales, instead.
The number of foreclosures in April fell to their lowest level since 2007 –
and one reason is that lenders are getting smart.
Instead of foreclosing on people, a costly and lengthy process, they're
increasingly using short sales to move people out of homes they can no longer
afford. Short sales are not only faster than foreclosures, they often turn out
to be cheaper. By forgiving part of the loan up front (a loss they would take
anyway during foreclosure, lenders can get possession of a house faster and sell
it before it has had time to deteriorate. Homeowners get to shed their mortgage
debt faster – and with less damage to their credit rating.
Short sales began outpacing foreclosures in some states late last year. Six
states saw more preforeclosure sales – typically, short sales – than
foreclosures in the fourth quarter, according to RealtyTrac, an online
marketplace for foreclosure properties based in Irvine, Calif. In
preliminary first quarter data for 2012, that total jumped to 12 states,
including traditionally big foreclosure states like California and Arizona,
RealtyTrac reported Thursday.
"I think we will see more states with short sales outnumbering foreclosure
sales in the coming months," says Daren Blomquist, RealtyTrac vice president, in
an e-mail. " In addition to the government incentives they can get for a short
sale through the HAFA [Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives] program,
lenders are realizing they can often recover more of their losses through a
short sale than through foreclosure, and also that they can avoid any
accusations of improper foreclosure procedures."
Bank of America, for example, announced this week that it will
offer its short-sale incentive program, piloted in Florida, nationwide. Under the
program, delinquent homeowners can get up to $30,000 in relocation expenses once
they complete a short sale.
One challenge with short sales is that they're complicated. They involve
negotiations among three parties (the bank, the seller, and the buyer) over what
price the house will sell for and what loss the homeowner and the bank will
take. These talks can drag on for months, with the buyer eventually walking away
for lack of a clear decision.
Next month, mortgage-backers Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac aim to speed up the process with new guidelines that will require
lenders to make a decision within 30 days of receiving a short-sale offer.
Accepting an offer is no trifling matter, because homeowners in a short sale
typically owe more on the home than the home will sell for. Banks are likely to
lose that difference whether they agree to a short sale or foreclose.
"Short sales are a more efficient way for the market to absorb the distressed
properties and that should help pave a quicker path to market recovery," Mr.
Blomquist says.
Still, they're a drag on the market, he points out. On average, short sale
homes sell for 21 percent less than nondistressed properties. They're just not
as much of a drag as foreclosure homes, which typically sell at a 34 percent
discount.
By Laurent
Belsie, Business editor
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