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Real Estate Investing Forums  |  Real Estate Investing  |  Foreclosures, Short Sales, Tax Foreclosures, Tax Liens Forum (Moderators: $Cash$, Bluemoon06, kdhastedt, Mdhaas, motivatedceo)  |  Topic: Short Sale Negotiator « previous next »
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Author Topic: Short Sale Negotiator  (Read 7867 times)
cdodson
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« on: October 12, 2006, 08:49:47 AM »

How would I go about finding a good and experienced negotiator to represent my interest to the Lender?  I have a contract on a house in default valued at $360K with $260K owed on the balance.  Having taken a home course in Short Sales I know just enough to be dangerous and negotiate effectively with the Seller.  The bank however would probably eat my lunch.  I need someone who understands the nuances and language of Loss Mitigators.  TIA
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real estate 001
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« Reply #1 on: October 12, 2006, 10:45:21 AM »

just abit of  why not ?? If you are going to be doing this kind of real estate  may be look in to a lm course  as well to go with the short sale  course you have all ready ??

I know it is not much help now but is a food for thought .
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« Reply #2 on: October 12, 2006, 08:00:32 PM »

I'd say go for it yourself.  I am not saying to just wing it - learn as much as possible and get advice.  I am in the same position and my thinking is that if these are skills I need to develop, then I might as well start now.

Be confident and persistent.  By the way, there is an e-book on negotiating on this site called "Negotiate Foreclosures like a SWAT Team Leader" by Joseph Kaiser.  I found it quite helpful.

Besides, the principles of negotiation are the same.  They are just applied differently in different situations.

By the way, why short sale with equity?

Good luck!
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Dmitri (Boston, MA).
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If you think no one cares you're alive, miss three mortgage payments :-)
JOHNNY Q
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« Reply #3 on: October 12, 2006, 08:51:26 PM »

There are people that charges $2500 to negotiate the short sale.  If you have a complete short sale paackage ready and a structural bid and know what you are doing and can get thru to the right department you might be able to do it your self.
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John Quebedeaux-CEO-Quebedeaux Financial Investment Holding LLC
Residential, Commercial, Construction, Land Acquisitions, Lot Loans, Bridge Loan, Hard Money, Foreclosure Bailout & Short Sales.MTN, BG, SBLC etc...
cdodson
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« Reply #4 on: October 13, 2006, 08:28:12 AM »

I've been wondering all along if this is an ideal SS candidate.  The reason for pursuing it initially is to get the LTV from 72% to 60% to potentially attract a private lender.  But I'm not stuck on that notion.  The Seller has signed, notarized and witnessed the docs including Warranty Deed and faxed them to me.  The originals are in the mail.  (The property and Seller are out of town).  I thought it would be a good idea for someone other than myself to initiate the correspondence with the Lender.  But I'm open to suggestions.
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wheelema
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« Reply #5 on: October 13, 2006, 08:45:49 AM »

When a home has negative LTV (upside down) or LTV approaches zero and there are repairs needed a lender will negotiate, but, frankly, with $100,000 in equity I can't imagine any loss mitigation department being that hot to trot.
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« Reply #6 on: October 13, 2006, 08:58:55 AM »

I do on some occasion help rich friends by initiating contact with the mitigation department and not the collection department
and getting the deal for my clients. I get paid by doing their loan. I can tell you the process and what is needed, but I do not do paperwork. Yes, as from lender to another and knowing what to say is better than a private investors approaching them.
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wheelema
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« Reply #7 on: October 13, 2006, 10:03:36 PM »

If you know what... and what not... to say to a loss mitigation department Heaven knows I would be all ears!!!
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« Reply #8 on: October 13, 2006, 11:38:08 PM »

I know that I am not directly answering your questions, but here's how I look at it:

1. You bought a property for $360K.
2. Prior owner owes $260K.

Unless you have NOT executed the contract (#1), it is a done deal.  Correct?

What would you or someone else say to the bank (in whatever department), so that the proceeds from the sale will be less than what is owed?  Like wheelema said, I would be disturbed and somewhat excited if one can short 30% equity deal (aside from grossly inflating contractor's estimates).

Besides, even if the bank somehow decides to accept 5-10K less than the balance, it does not change your cost of purchasing at 360K.

Am I off base on these points?
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Dmitri (Boston, MA).
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« Reply #9 on: October 13, 2006, 11:43:03 PM »

Here is the deal! Loss mitigation department are there to cut the the bad loss of notes on the books.It cost them$ 30,000 to $80,000 to foreclose. Tack on property damage on top of that! By law they are suppose to have certain liquid capital / portfolio to lend etc.... The longer the bad note is on the books the interest that are accrued are increasing ..times that by the volume they have.. look at Option One losses..Hurting parent company.. HR Block.. Look at Ameriquest also...no SuperBowl ad ..... maybe? Na! Here is how I approach them.. My name is John with xxx. I need your loss mitigation department. Jack, This is John with xxx . I have rich investors with good credit.. fico 700Plus to do a win -win situation . Help the client save his credit ,his history , his pride.. infront of his kids.. put food on this guys table so the kids do not go hungry..he can not afford the house no more.. I have a complete SS package that will make your job easier.. God know how hard we all work for bare wages.. As one professional to another I am here to help you get this bad debt off your books and also need your expertise to get this done.( even if you are an expert.. be humble .. be respectful of thier time.. just kiss ass if you have to to get an approval.. Bottom-line.. that is money you can take it to the bank .. Collection department are their to collect debt. They can not do the deal. Make sure you are talking to the right department. Hell, the client have exhausted all his options to reinstate this loan... he do not have the 25%-to 50% of the arrears that you will require, Jack.. P.S. Get a structural bid too. Have the clients call contractors for free home remodel estimate... You know these guys will jack up the bill. Take a couple of these estimate..  be real estimate.. show the bank this is addition what it will take to bring the house to comps.. code to sell. get the idea?  Paint a picture.. Sell the sizzle..  not the steak! Have cofident and know your stuff.. Command respect .. people will give it. I do all this from my office. I can do all my business by laptop and satellite phone. Never have to ever go to the bank. Bank professional.. are required to be nice and represent the bank as a good image..Being on the phone .etc... get the picture?People chase after my business. I am not cheap. This is  an elite mens club.. I only deal with clients who make over 300,000 - 800,000and Plus a year who could afford my services.. You want to play .. you have to pay! Period. Hope this help you out. Hope you can join the club.
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cdodson
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« Reply #10 on: October 16, 2006, 11:15:50 AM »

I know that I am not directly answering your questions, but here's how I look at it:

1. You bought a property for $360K.
2. Prior owner owes $260K.

Unless you have NOT executed the contract (#1), it is a done deal.  Correct?

What would you or someone else say to the bank (in whatever department), so that the proceeds from the sale will be less than what is owed?  Like wheelema said, I would be disturbed and somewhat excited if one can short 30% equity deal (aside from grossly inflating contractor's estimates).

Besides, even if the bank somehow decides to accept 5-10K less than the balance, it does not change your cost of purchasing at 360K.

Am I off base on these points?

100K,

My contract with the seller is for the amount they owe which is 260K with an addendum that specifies that we will attempt to negotiate with their lender to discount this amount with no guarantees.  The property is assessed at 190K...something I'll be sure to specify to the BPO Agent.  Since the bank is owed 260K I believe an 18% discount of 215K is within their consideration.  As you pointed out, if the BPO comes in at appraisal value, then my chances of a discount are slim.  It speaks to the issue that Johnny Q made in the above post by attempting to sell the sizzle to the lender.  Plus the fact that we're in the last quarter of the year will not hurt my chances since banks are trying to clear the books for the new fiscal year.  Time will tell.
« Last Edit: October 16, 2006, 11:17:00 AM by cdodson » Report to moderator   Logged
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« Reply #11 on: October 16, 2006, 07:53:42 PM »

Oki.  I think I understand.  I think if the BPO comes in at 360K (fair market value), your chances for shorting a loan are none.  Just my opinion.  Is it possible to "influence" BPO from 360K to 260K?  I don't know, but I guess you'll find out and let us know, right?

Good luck!  And let us know how it goes!
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Dmitri (Boston, MA).
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munch5
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« Reply #12 on: October 17, 2006, 12:17:16 PM »

 ???

With 100k in equity, have you considered a Sub2 Sale? A Sub2 seems to be a better approach to this one from what you have said.


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Gregg975
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« Reply #13 on: October 21, 2006, 03:22:55 PM »



Hey cdodson,

Not to pile on or anything, but your  housing market cannot be so slow as to where the bank is going to negotiate with you when theres 100k in equity in the home. Frankly, I am surprised other investors haven't jumped on this one already.  If your numbers are correct, you should take this one on with a hard money lender.  Double check your numbers and make a move.


Good Luck,


Gregg
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reo360
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« Reply #14 on: October 21, 2006, 06:21:34 PM »

Short Sale are not a easy to negotiate as they appear.  I find better luck by hiring an REO Agent who is already familiar with REO and better when that agent has relationships with the servicer.    

REO Forum
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« Last Edit: October 21, 2006, 06:23:08 PM by kdhastedt » Report to moderator   Logged
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Real Estate Investing Forums  |  Real Estate Investing  |  Foreclosures, Short Sales, Tax Foreclosures, Tax Liens Forum (Moderators: $Cash$, Bluemoon06, kdhastedt, Mdhaas, motivatedceo)  |  Topic: Short Sale Negotiator « previous next »
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