Serving Lake Oswego and the Portland Metropolitan Areas
< Go Back 
 

What is a Short Sale?
Information for Buyers

What is a Short Sale?

 A short sale is the sale of a property for less than what is owed on it. The lenders  voluntarily accept less than full payment and forgive the unpaid balance. This happens when a property is worth less than what is owed, the owner is insolvent, and can’t make up the difference. In the sale of the property, a lender is paid off with a dollar value short of what it is owed, thus the term short sale. The root of this issue is in collateralization. The vast majority of properties are purchased with the aid of financing. In order to pay for a property, a homeowner places a small down payment. Since the down payment is not sufficient to purchase the property, a loan is used to pay the remainder of the acquisition value.  The homeowner finances part of the purchase value of the property with a loan from a lender. To guarantee payment, the homeowner pledges the property as collateral. This is called collateralization. This is an agreement between the owner and the lender, such that in case of default, the lender has the right to dispose of the property in order to get paid. Complete and timely payments incrementally reduce the loan payoff value. That is called amortization. The longer payments are made, the more amortized the loan becomes. A fully amortized loan is a loan with zero balance and paid off. On the other hand, because of interest, missed payments increase the loan payoff. That is called accrual. At sale, unless the loan is fully amortized, the homeowner needs to pay off the remaining debt balance. If the property sale value is high enough, the proceeds of the sale will be sufficient to pay off the loan and for the homeowner to earn a profit or break even. If not, there will be a shortfall. To make up for this shortfall, either the homeowner will have to make up for the amount needed to pay off the loan, or the creditor will have to take less than the amount owed. A property worth less than what is owed is “over-mortgaged”. The main reasons properties become over-mortgaged include the owner paying too much, refinancing for too much, market decline, damage, deferred maintenance, negative neighborhood changes and disasters. Often, owners of over-mortgaged properties needing to sell are unable to make up for the loan payment shortfall. It gets worse if they are insolvent. Usually, seeing only losses, they sooner or later get discouraged and become uncommitted to the property. This leads to default.  The loan starts to accrue. Unpaid property taxes, utilities, and other costs also accumulate and usually maintenance is deferred.  Once the property enters into this cycle, it becomes the lender’s problem.  Urgently, the lender needs to recover as much of the debt as possible. Lenders in this situation have only two alternatives. One of them is to foreclose. The other is to allow the homeowner to sell the property for less than what is owed. This is a short sale. Either way, the creditor will take a loss. That is why they happen and why they are so common.

 

 

Francesca Novak, ABR
Windermere/Bridgeport Realty Group
Ph: 503-639-7914
17660 SW Upper Boones Ferry Rd. #103
Portland, OR 97224 US
www.francescanovak.com
Home Property Search Featured Listings Sold Listings Mortgage Center Calculators My Blog Contact Me About Contact Open Houses Commercial Listings Relocation Rental Home Finder Home Value Request Instant Home Value Buyer Reports Sell Your House VIP Home Request Seller Reports Company Info Meet our Agents Local Schools Local Weather Local Area Info Articles F.A.Qs Links Link Directory Daily Cartoon Investor Reports Mortgage Reports Reports for Renting Link to Me Commercial Reports F.A.Q's for Rentals Preferred Partners
LinkUAgent Partner
Powered by LinkURealty - Real Estate Web Design & Websites