Archive for March, 2010

Homes for Sale in St. Augustine: Mythbusting the Short Sale

Saturday, March 27th, 2010

by Sean Hess (www.SeanHess.com), Broker and Manager for St. Augustine Team Realty (www.StAugustineTeamRealty.com)

I ran across a blog post about vetting a short sale agent by a guy named Michael Davis from Annapolis, Maryland.  Basically he’s teed that agents are running around getting this Realtor designation called a CDPE which stands for “Certified Distressed Property Expert.”  The upshot of his post is that no 3-day class can prepare you for the realities of working a short sale or foreclosure, only experience can.  I agree with some of the points he makes and disagree with some others, so  I’ve excerpted some of his post here along with my comments.

Just an FYI, by our count Kate Stevens and Ron Barry (my two partners at St. Augustine Team Realty) and myself have sold or are in the process of selling 42 short sales/foreclosures, and we lost another six to banks or lenders that rejected the offers we brought them and then foreclosed.

My comments below are in italics

HOW TO EVALUATE A LISTING AGENT IF YOU ARE REPRESENTING A BUYER (excerpted from Michael Davis’ “Top 10 Questions to ask a Short Sale Agent” link above)

 1. What is your experience representing sellers in short sales? 

 I agree, this is a good question to ask, but buyer agents that have worked short sales bring valuable expereince to the table as well.

Dealing with a knowledgeable and experienced agent who has successfully closed many short sales is the sine qua non for a successful short sale. 

 I agree, but short sales are kind of measured in dog years.  Three successful short sales are like 7-9 successful straight sales, as much work and as stressful as they are.

Thousands of agents are now taking short sale certification programs and presenting themselves as short sale specialists.  Many of these agents have never closed a short sale in their lives.  In fact many of the people teaching certification classes have themselves never closed a short sale.

I don’t know the qualifications of the individuals teaching these courses, but bookwork in real estate is about 15% of the knowledge.  The rest is hard-earned experience.  Like coaching basketball.

 Knowing the mechanics of a short sale is not enough.  Lots of agents now have this information from taking one of the many certification classes now prevalent.  It will not get the job done.

Yeah, but it sure helps.  Just knowing the roadmap and the process can keep people calm and working towards an eventual successful sale.  But really knowing the roadmap comes from experience.   

 Ask the agent how many short sales they have closed representing sellers in the last year.   I would also ask them if they have closed any representing a seller with the particular loan servicer who is the third party approver(s).

This is a seller specific question, but I still believe buyer agents that have worked these transactions bring a lot to the table, because in the end everyone goes through it together. Heck, the seller in a succesful short sale transaction will know more than agents that have the “CDPE” badge but no actual closings, because these sellers lived it, filled out the pertinent paperwork, and dealt with the lender themselves to a certain degree.

(Representation of buyers in a short sale counts for nothing in terms of short sale experience since all the approval action goes on with the listing side.)

 Complete and utter bullshit.  There are lazy agents out there who learn nothing from any transaction.  And true, the buyer agent doesn’t handle any of the list side paperwork and shenanigans that go on with the lender. BUT, a buyer’s agent who can keep a buyer on board through a process where there is no information on the status of the offer with a minimum close date of 120 days is a rare agent and a special agent. 

The listing agent needs to know how to escalate a deal to get an approval.  Some loan servicers – BOA immediately comes to mind – reflexively decline short sales and, I believe, manufacture values, notwithstanding what their appraisal or BPO says, hoping to extract the maximum dollars from the buyer and agents. 

Yes, you have to know how to game the system, or these things will never get done.

The agent needs to know how to get to management to get an approval with Servicers like this. In fact the listing agent needs to know how to do this just as reflexively as the servicer who is going to reflexively decline the deal. 

As an agent you could learn how to do this.  Or you could hire pros who know what the hell they are doing to do this for you (we do), and focus your complete and total real estate energy getting ALL your listings sold, not just one or two.  Additionally, after the approval there’s work to do getting the listing sold that the negotiator has nothing to do with: the standard nuts and bolts of all real estate transactions.     

Negotiating price prior to getting to the Management level is going to prolong the process, not shorten it.  But the listing agent has to know how to get around the lower level negotiators.

That’s why we hire pros to do this for us.  I need to be out there selling your listing, or getting a backup offer on your short sale in case buyer #1 can’t wait 90 days for an answer on their offer and walks (which happens all the time).  Not waiting on hold with a bank for three hours.

Homes for Sale in St. Augustine: When You Should Make and Stick by a Lowball Offer

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

by Sean Hess (www.SeanHess.com), Broker and Manager for St. Augustine Team Realty (www.StAugustineTeamRealty.com)

In a post last week on the company site we made a statement that if you are looking at a price $40,000 or $50,000 above your range JUST STOP

I forgot to add a very important caveat.  You should be looking at higher price points if the home in question should be in a lower price bracket.

Example: a neighborhood is consistently selling for $200,000 and someone has their home priced at $250,000.  Now, I’m sure this home has wainscoting and crown molding, but it’s still a $200,000 neighborhood.  And if you’ve seen other homes in that neighborhood and this home ain’t any better, make that lowball offer and stick by it.

It’s not even technically a lowball offer, it’s a market offer. 

For your trouble you’ll probably get a counter offer at full price.  But at least you did a public service in getting the seller on the long road to reality.

I go into listing appointments all the time and have a seller want to price it far above what the market will bear.  And they always say, “Well, someone can bring an offer.”

But no one wants to bring an offer, because hard experience tells buyers it’s just a waste of time.  There’s a deadline coming on April 30 for a significant tax credit: buyers don’t have time play games or have time to waste.  They need to buy now. 

So if you find that house and it’s legitimately overpriced, make that lowball/market offer and stick by it.  But be prepared for a counter offer from Fantasyland.  And have home #2 in the wings ready to write an offer on.

Vacant Land for Sale in St. Augustine Beach: Land East of A1A, Less than 300 feet from Beach

Friday, March 19th, 2010

by Sean Hess (www.SeanHess.com), Broker and Manager for St. Augustine Team Realty (www.StAugustineTeamRealty.com)

I just did a post on the company site about a trio of lots we have at St. Augustine Beach, all east of A1A, and none is further than 300 feet from the dune line.  If you’ve ever dreamed of living with the sweet sounds of the surf in the background, one of these lots could be the first step in realizing that dream.  I hope you enjoy the post!

Homes for Sale in St. Augustine: Tips for Not Looking Like an Amateur

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

by Sean Hess (www.SeanHess.com), Broker and Manager for St. Augustine Team Realty (www.StAugustineTeamRealty.com)

There are a lot buyers hitting the market to take advantage of the tax credit that expires April 30, which is wonderful.  What is not so wonderful is that a lot of these folks are completely unprepared.   On the company site this morning we compiled some tips to help keep you from looking like an amateur when you enter the St. Augustine real estate market.

Here’s one tip I didn’t put on the company site: if you’re buying a short sale and your Realtor doesn’t use an “as-is” contract or an “as-is” rider, chances are it’s the first time he/she has done a short sale.  Now, don’t dump your Realtor, but understand it’s going to be a learning experience for you both. And yes I know you can take a regular contract and zero out the repair limits to effectively make it an “as-is.”

Homes for Sale in St. Augustine: Tales from the Subprime Crisis

Monday, March 15th, 2010

by Sean Hess (www.SeanHess.com), broker and manager for St. Augustine Team Realty (www.StAugustineTeamRealty.com)

Back in the day we thought the banks knew what they were doing.

I would have a buyer prospect come in and get qualified with a mortgage broker, and then I’d get a call back from the broker who would say, “not a chance in h*ll on this one.”  So I would call the prospect back, after the mortgage person broke the bad news, and say, you know I’ll stay in touch and we’ll get something when things improve.

And then darned if not three months later you would find out this person bought a house.  They ditched you, went shopping for another Realtor and mortgage broker who would tell them what they wanted to hear.

The mortgage brokers were not allowed to tell us why a prospect didn’t qualify, but if you plied them with enough drinks at a mixer you could usually find out.  Eight bankruptcies, a year of late payments, and no job, that would usually mean a person wasn’t qualified for a loan at the immediate moment. 

But get a loan they did, and the house would be destined for the foreclosure pool.

We just thought, at the time, the banks knew what they were doing.  That they had some fantastic mathmatical algorithm that could tell despite all rational data to the contrary, these people with credit issues were good risks.

In the end it just turned out that Wall Street wanted more and more subprime loans to bundle together and sell as packages.  Wall Street had such an insatiable demand for these things, the banks literally scraped the bottom of the barrel to find candidates for the subprime loan pool. 

And then it came crashing down rather quickly.  In February 2007 major subprime lenders were going down every hour.  I remember sitting at a closing table one day that month, waiting into the early evening for funds to arrive, and wondering if the lender we were working with in the morning had already gone out of business (which had happened to other Realtors that month).   The funds did arrive…this was not a subprime loan.  But the lender, Indymac, went under a few months later anyway because they had so many of their subprimes default.

It turns out the explanation for the subprime disaster was the easiest one: giving loans to persons with terrible credit was a bad idea.

The banks ignored that to sell more subprimes to Wall Street.  Wall Street ignored it by getting their bond agencies to rate the subprime packages they were selling as “AAA” or “lowest risk.” 

And so here we are, still digging out three years later.  It’s a lovely business that we’re in, isn’t it?

Condos for Sale in St. Augustine: Two Great Ones in Conquistador

Friday, March 12th, 2010

by Sean Hess (www.SeanHess.com), broker and manager for St. Augustine Team Realty (www.StAugustineTeamRealty.com)

We feature two great condos on the company site today at 43 Veronese Court and 38 Tarragona Court43 Veronese is direct Intracoastal front with sweeping views of the water ($119,000), and 38 Tarragona is a 2nd floor corner unit that is clean and comfortable with all new kitchen appliances. I hope you enjoy the post!

Homes for Sale in St. Augustine: First Time Buyer Gets a First Time Mortgage

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

by Sean Hess (www.SeanHess.com), broker and manager for St. Augustine Team Realty (www.StAugustineTeamRealty.com)

I just did a post on the company website this morning for all those first time buyers who are unsure about how to get their first mortgage.  I hope you enjoy it!

St. Augustine Homes for Sale: Maybe You Don’t Deserve a Home?

Monday, March 8th, 2010

by Sean Hess (www.SeanHess.com), broker and manager for St. Augustine Team Realty (www.StAugustineTeamRealty)

Last week we posted that one of the reasons we think the Buyer’s market is coming to an end is the sudden rise of amateur buyers coming into the market.  We classify an amateur buyer as one who either cancels a good deal or fails to launch altogether for non-rational reasons.  For example, making an offer on a beach home, then canceling it during the due dilgence phase when they realize it needs flood insurance (is there any other type of home that screams “flood insurance” more than a beach home?).

This may have a lot to do with the upcoming April 30 deadline for the first-time and repeat buyer tax credits: a lot of folks who have been on the fence or have never been in the St. Augustine housing market are starting to jump in.

But we’re also starting to see the income-less, asset-less and credit-less clamoring to be let back in.

It usually starts with a phone call with an individual on the other end of the line demanding to view a property, as if a Realtor is some type of public service. 

“I am a serious buyer,” they say.

In the old days of the boom market we would have showed property to this person.  The rationale was that pretty much anyone with a pulse could get a loan.  With bill collectors calling for my dog Cecil all day long, I strongly suspect that even he, a cocker mix, was able to obtain a no-doc loan on his dog house back during the boom.

But the day of the no-income, no-asset, no-document (“no-doc”) loan are dead and gone, because of the massive foreclosures that followed in their wake.

Easy loans had a noble purpose.  Historically, a person’s greatest investment was his home.  He bought it, held it for 20-odd years, it increased in value steadily during that time, and it was a wonderful nest egg.  So loan regulations relaxed to get more people into home ownership, in order to help increase wealth for all Americans.

But everyone abused the process: bankers, buyers, sellers, and Realtors. 

The mortgage broker made a commission on the loan.  The Realtor made a commission on the sale.  The seller or builder made a killing.  And the buyer kept his mouth shut, suddenly a Jed Clampitt moving to Beverly Hills.

But at least Jed and kin had oil to back their buy in California.  A buyer that didn’t have the credit to buy a laptop at Best Buy could qualify for the no-doc loan, and suddenly found himself in a half-million dollar home without the means to pay for it.

But the market was going to keep rising, wasn’t it?  In a year he could sell for double what he signed for, couldn’t he?  And make a killing, wouldn’t he?

No that didn’t happen.  The economy happened.  And all that money that people made on the sales didn’t even stay in the United States.  The profit all went to China in the form of giant plasma screen TV’s.  I haven’t viewed a pre-foreclosure home yet that didn’t have at least one Plasma screen TV.

And so the rules have changed, and some folks haven’t got the news.  The no-doc is dead.

“You want us to lend you how much?”

Let’s see your: income, assets, credit and down payment. 

To my income-less, asset-less, credit-less friends there will be a time in the future that you will indeed have all three, plus a down payment, too.  But until then, for the sake of all of us and our economy: LET THERE BE RENT!

St. Augustine Land for Sale: Exclusive Lot Deals in Palencia at Unheard of Prices!

Friday, March 5th, 2010

by Sean Hess (www.SeanHess.com), Broker and Manager for St. Augustine Team Realty (www.StAugustineTeamRealty.com)

If you’ve ever wanted to build that expansive estate home in Palencia, now is the time to get the land to construct it on.  I just did a post on the company site about two new short-sale listings in the Santa Teresa and Reserve sections of Palencia I have that will just blow you away.

I hope you enjoy it!

Homes for Sale in St. Augustine: Tax Credit & Short Sale = Potential Train Wreck

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

by Sean Hess (www.SeanHess.com), Broker and Manager for St. Augustine Team Realty (www.StAugustineTeamRealty.com)

We did a post here earlier this week on the $8000 first time buyer tax credit, and the $6500 repeat buyer tax credit, both of which expire on April 30.

Today on the St. Augustine Team company blog I did a post about trying to mix a short sale and the tax credit.  I’ll give you a hint about it…think of a movie in which Tom Cruise dances around the living room in his underwear.  That’s right.  Risky Business.

I hope you enjoy the post!