Florida Villa for Sale To Buy or Rent in Orlando
CONTACT US
Residential Property for Sale    Investment Property for Sale    Free Relocation Information    Property for Sale in Retirement Adult 55+ Communities    Long term Rental in Davenport, Clermont, Kissimmee and Haines City Florida
Information on buying Florida Property
Information on selling property in Florida
Information on Investment Property in Florida
Featured listings in short term rental communities in the Disney Area
Feature Retirement Property near Disney Orlando
Featured Residential Homes in the Disney Four Corners Area
New and Resale Property for Sale near Disney Orlando Florida
Pre Construction and New Development Opportunities
Full MLS Property Search for Mid Florida Region
Long Term Rental & Property Management Services in the Clermont, Davenport, Kissimmmee and Haiones City areas in Central Florida
Interactive Community location maps for the Disney Area
Florida Real Estate News Articles
MarketWatch Community Reports
Contact Information for your Disney Area Specialist
Links to valuable resources
 

Banks: No Exceptions For Short Sales

 

Sept. 22, 2008 – Increasingly, sellers seeking short sales are encountering a new twist.

Lenders are agreeing to let some short sales go through, but they want the home owners to sign a note promising to pay some or all of the balance due – debts that could burden borrowers for the rest of their lives.

Moody’s Economy.com estimates that about 10 million homeowners have negative equity, a condition known colloquially as being upside down or underwater. By next June, the forecasting company expects the total to rise to 12.7 million – a quarter of all homeowners who have mortgages.

“The first wave of foreclosures involved a lot of investors who just disappeared,” says Lance Churchill of Frontline Seminars, which teaches real estate practitioners how to negotiate with lenders on short sales. “Now, homeowners with jobs and assets are underwater and want to sell. The banks want as much as they can get, today or in the future, and the owners want to get away clean.”

If the lender does a short sale without extracting anything from the seller, everyone in the country who is upside down could try to wiggle out from under and banks will take a fresh wave of hits. But if the lender pushes too hard, the borrower will default, leaving the bank in worse shape.


Source: The New York Times, David Streitfeld (09/18/08)

Copyright © Bardell Real Estate 2006

Sitemap     Buying    Selling    Property for Sale    Residential    Location Map    About Us