creative real estate investing

Click Here For The Special Offer
  Search REIClub Website
Site Navigation

Investor Information
 Home
 Investing Newsletter
 Real Estate Articles
 Success Stories
 Real Estate Blog
 Free Books, Audios
 Recommended Books
 Investing Glossary
 Investing Abbreviations

Real Estate Products
 No Risk Guarantee
 Best Sellers
 All Investing Products
 Real Estate Courses
 Real Estate Books
 Real Estate Ebooks
 Real Estate Seminars
 Real Estate Games
 Special Offers

Investor Resources
 Hard Money Lenders
 Real Estate Clubs
 Proof of Funds Letter
 Property Value Reports
 Business Tools
 Cashflow Clubs
 Tax Appraisal Districts
 State Property Codes

Newsgroup Forums
 Beginners, Carlton Sheets
 Bird Dogs, Wholesaling
 Foreclosures, Short Sales
 Sub2, Lease Options
 Rehabbing, Landlording
 Financing, Hard Money
 Asset Protection, Legal
 Commercial, Mobile Homes
 Real Estate Marketing
 Random Ramblings

Site Information
 About Us
 Advertise on REIClub
 Contact REIClub
 Link to REIClub



Great Shopping Cart
For Your Website
Click Here Now!

--------------------------
Proof of Funds Letter
Immediate Download
Click Here Now!


Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
March 19, 2010, 01:47:52 PM

Home Help Search Calendar Login Register
Free Newsletter
Name:
Email:

Click Here to Register for the Discussion Forums
Real Estate Investing Forums  |  Real Estate Investing  |  Foreclosures, Short Sales, Tax Foreclosures, Tax Liens Forum (Moderators: $Cash$, Bluemoon06, kdhastedt, Mdhaas, propertymanager, fadi)  |  Topic: negotiating a 2nd lien « previous next »
Pages: [1] Print
Author Topic: negotiating a 2nd lien  (Read 920 times)
finally
Member
*
Offline Offline

Posts: 14


« on: November 19, 2009, 07:33:50 PM »

Can someone please tell me how to approach a bank when they are in the 2nd place. Who do I ask for, what do I say, do I send them a short sale package.

HELP...!!!

Monique in Texas
Report to moderator   Logged
SDForeclosureRelief
Member
*
Offline Offline

Posts: 2


WWW
« Reply #1 on: November 19, 2009, 11:37:54 PM »

Hey Monique, have you already submitted the short sale package to the 1st? I send a full short sale package to the 2nd after I receive the payoff or approval letter. I include the HUD-1 that has the amount the 1st lender will allow to pay the 2nd. Then you have to negotiate with the 2nd to see what you can get them to agree to. Most will agree to 1-15k on loans over 100k in my experience depending on the amount owed. They know they'll get nothing if the property goes to foreclosure.
Report to moderator   Logged

Clinton Young
www.SDForeclosureRelief.com
(858) 271-4848
LyonelK
Member
**
Offline Offline

Posts: 61


« Reply #2 on: November 20, 2009, 02:51:00 PM »

Monique I have to strongly disagree with SD Foreclosure relief. Once a first Mortgage approves your short sale they will only want to extend your approval so many times before they close your file and you must start over. Both the 1st and the 2nd must be negotiated simultaneously. If not, you have a buyer who is waiting to long and may eventually walk.

The way explained above by the previous person only increases pit falls. Depending on who the first is with and depending on who holds the second will depend on how much you need to offer the 2nd. The 2nd could be with a particular holder who generally asks for a high amount or could even be charged off.

I work in an office of short sale negotiators, hundreds of files run through here. Once you see enough files and get a feel for particular banks and you already know what you should offer.

Let me know if you have any questions.
Feel free to PM me. Good Luck!
Report to moderator   Logged
finally
Member
*
Offline Offline

Posts: 14


« Reply #3 on: November 20, 2009, 04:26:11 PM »

The first is with Litton Loans amount owed 119000
The second is with EMC amount owed 20000

The BPO will be in early next week and I dont know what to do with the 2nd. I have not submitted a Hud1 yet.I have been advised to submit this once I understand what the numbers would look like.. Dont know what to do

On zillow the house could go for 160000, I offered 80,450. Please advise if you know anything. flush
Report to moderator   Logged
LyonelK
Member
**
Offline Offline

Posts: 61


« Reply #4 on: November 20, 2009, 05:38:53 PM »

If you submitted your offer now its time to wait and negotiate the numbers.

A word of advice is to submit your package to the 2nd and get moving or it might screw everything up.
Report to moderator   Logged
obiwan1250
Member
***
Offline Offline

Posts: 139


« Reply #5 on: November 20, 2009, 07:41:26 PM »

The 1st is with Litton Loans -- 119000, the 2nd is with EMC -- 20000

The BPO will be in early next week and I dont know what to do with the 2nd. I have not submitted a Hud1 yet.I have been advised to submit this once I understand what the numbers would look like.. Dont know what to do

On zillow the house could go for 160000, I offered 80,450. Please advise if you know anything. flush

I'd submit the 2nd at the same time, or shortly after you submit the SS package on the 1st.   The 2nd will think they are very important and could refuse to cooperate.  They're going to be ticked, because who wouldn't be!  The borrower gets a 2nd only because they were believed credit worthy, yet when the borrower defaults, they know they're hosed at the foreclosure auction.  However, most have the right to release the lien with or without a full settlement.  Some will chase after the deficiency judgment, some will not. 

Try to see what it will take to get a full settlement on that 20K with EMC.  It's worth it to get a full settlement even if it means your profit will drop dramatically, because you're in this to help out the borrower, AND make some profit, right?   
« Last Edit: December 20, 2009, 12:39:10 PM by obiwan1250 » Report to moderator   Logged
mloughlin
Member
*
Offline Offline

Posts: 7



WWW
« Reply #6 on: December 19, 2009, 08:30:13 PM »

The HUDs to each should show different numbers.  The 1st HUD should show just the net payoff to the 1st loan (leave off the 2nd).  It is much more advantageous to not have the 1st leinholder to not know that a 2nd loan exists.  On the 2nd HUD list the full payoff amount the 1st (not the discounted payoff you're offering - the actual full payoff of the loan) and then for the 2nd offer them 10% of the $20K.  You'll also want to submit two different purchase contracts to each lender as the purchase price will differ. 
Report to moderator   Logged

Michael Loughlin
HAF, LLC
www.sellyourplacefast.com
360-674-6936
obiwan1250
Member
***
Offline Offline

Posts: 139


« Reply #7 on: December 20, 2009, 12:50:09 PM »

The HUDs to each should show different numbers.  The 1st HUD should show just the net payoff to the 1st loan (leave off the 2nd).  It is much more advantageous to not have the 1st leinholder to not know that a 2nd loan exists.  On the 2nd HUD list the full payoff amount the 1st (not the discounted payoff you're offering - the actual full payoff of the loan) and then for the 2nd offer them 10% of the $20K.  You'll also want to submit two different purchase contracts to each lender as the purchase price will differ. 

I'm curious about your post, mloughlin.  If you're right, then I've been doing this wrong.  That would not be good, so I'd be curious to see what everyone else does, but this is what I do.

I prepare one HUD, showing the complete story for payoffs, including all expenses.   Then I forward another HUD to the 2nd lienholder, showing the discounted payoff for to the 2nd ... actually, I'm going to have to pull this up at my office to see what I typically do.  I might just be sending the same HUD to both parties, so that the 2nd will see that the 1st is taking a discount off the mortgage amount. 

I hope others comment on this thread because I'd like to know what is the best practice.   
Report to moderator   Logged
mloughlin
Member
*
Offline Offline

Posts: 7



WWW
« Reply #8 on: December 20, 2009, 02:57:48 PM »

I'm sure there are numerous different strategies on how to handle submitting HUDs to two different lenders.  However this is the best way to not get stuck in the conundrum of each lender wanting to see an approval from the other.  An example of this is if each lender knows the other exists (which typically doesn't happen unless you let them know or put it on the HUD).  If they know about each other, most likely the 1st will insist they receive the approval from the 2nd before they will approve a shorted payoff and the 2nd will insist an approval from the 1st before they will issue an approval letter.  Obviously this is not a good scenario.  I'm sure you will come across other strategies, however historically this strategy has proven most effective for myself and other associates. 
Report to moderator   Logged

Michael Loughlin
HAF, LLC
www.sellyourplacefast.com
360-674-6936
short sale girl
Member
*
Offline Offline

Posts: 26


« Reply #9 on: January 15, 2010, 11:04:42 PM »

MLOUGHLIN - What are you doing?

How is the first not knowing about the second and vice versa?  What you are doing does not make sense at all!  You are submitting two different contracts to the two lenders?  They have to know about each other, how are you going to close? What happens when they pull title? How is the fianl HUD going to be prepared?
Report to moderator   Logged
Pages: [1] Print 
Real Estate Investing Forums  |  Real Estate Investing  |  Foreclosures, Short Sales, Tax Foreclosures, Tax Liens Forum (Moderators: $Cash$, Bluemoon06, kdhastedt, Mdhaas, propertymanager, fadi)  |  Topic: negotiating a 2nd lien « previous next »
Jump to:  



Login with username, password and session length

Powered by SMF 1.1.8 | SMF © 2006-2010, Simple Machines LLC

 
Anti-Spam Policy | Compensation Disclosure | DMCA Notice | Earnings Disclaimer | External Links Policy | Privacy Policy | Terms And Conditions | View Cart
©2002-2010 All Rights Reserved. REIClub.com