HAFA will Not End REO's

While the HAFA program may be another drop in the foreclosure prevention pool it will not stop the REO wave expected later this year from Shadow Inventory, ALT-A, and Option ARM's. Actually it may only postpone the invevitable. Many borrowers are on to the game now and understand that first you default, then you apply for HAMP, then HAFA, and even if you don't qualify for any of them you just bought yourself several months of free occupancy. I personally recently listed an REO property that had occupants that had not paid a mortgage payment or rent for over 12 months. I have now have a new tenant occupied REO listing that can not provide signed rental agreement or proof of payment for the last 3 months rent who were just given 45 more days and a $1000 CFK offer from the lender/owner just to insure vacancy. As the old saying goes the jig is up! While many have actual hardships the majority are just flat out working the system.

Add to this the second TD $3000.00 cap and release of future legal rights to pursue the former borrower at a later date. This just is not the real world. Many lenders are working up relationships with collection agencies and will play "when in doubt wait them out" to see if the borrower was honest about their "hardship". When they apply for a new car loan or a new mortgage in 3 years, stating a rise in income and newly aquired assets, the prior lender may go after their new asset pool. Most non purchase money loans in CA will be looking at this as a recoup alternative very closely. This is why the terms letter for short sales outside HAFA usually reserve the right to future actions.

Sure a $1000 check to the servicer and a $1500 check to the borrower makes the program attractive but it is still a short sale and has all the tax, credit, and legal ramifications as a traditional short sale. So I for one do not think this will be the do all end all that the Government, our Trade Associations, or the Lenders are cheerleading us to belive will be the case. Time will tell.

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Comments

  • CJ- Riverside and San Bernardino and I am no stranger to $69,000 sales. However I am glad to be working, with so many Realtors having a hard time.
  • Hey Mark: The media and internet chat is not helping either. As soon as they report that banks will pay $3000 for vacancy we are off to the races. No one tells the tenant/prior owner that this is for a million dollar property not the California City properties I list at $69,000 which $38.23 a square foot for 1800 SFT in good move in condition. What part of So Cal are you working?
  • CJ, Well said, this has gone on long enough that the defaulted borrowers are in such numbers that no one is embarressed to speak openly about strategy to occupying a property longer without paying. The last few CFK negotiations the occupants stated that their friends got more money to move than I was offering and countered the offer.Certainly this is a time of constant change in this industry almost weekly at times. -Mark southern California
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