What Happens in a Short Sale When You Have Two Loans?

How Two Loans can Effect a Short Sale in Minnesota 

Two loans or a first and a second produce a different dynamic when working with a short sale.It doesn’t matter if you take out a second mortgage to help buy the home or if you have secured a home equity loan after the fact. The second lender will always be in second position, unless the first is willing to subordinate. Ordinarily, a mortgage lender who is in first position will not subordinate the position.

 First in position is first in the right to collect from foreclosure proceedings. This means when a Notice of Default is filed, if the second lender wants to be first in line to receive proceeds from the auction or sale or to take the property back, the second lender must initiate its own foreclosure proceedings.

In most parts of the country, this means the second lender must make up the back payments to the first lender, pay the first lender’s cost to file the Notice of Default and associated expenses, and then file its own Notice of Default. If the second lender does not do this, the second lender could get wiped out in the foreclosure and receive nothing, especially if there is not enough money to go around.
When the second lender receives a notice that states the first has foreclosed, after checking the value of the home, many second lenders do not initiate their own foreclosure proceedings. They take this stance because there might not be enough equity to make the cost of foreclosure profitable for the second lender. This non-action leaves the second lender in a vulnerable position. 
After determining that your situation fits short sale qualifications, and you have complied with all lender requests — plus, found a willing and qualified buyer — you’re not yet out of the woods.Let’s say that your closing costs are 5% or $4,250. After deducting the closing costs from the sales price of $85,000, you will have about $81,000 left. Now it becomes a tug of war between the two lenders.

 

Generally, the first negotiation is to offer the second lender a small amount, say $1,000. Now, that might not seem like much when compared to the second loan balance of $55,000 because you’re asking the lender to lose $54,000. On the other hand, however, if the second lender refuses, it may ultimately get nothing.
There are times, it seems, that junior lenders appear to cut off their noses to spite their faces. But this is where the first lender can give up a little more to make the deal work. In my experience, most lenders in first position are happy to receive at least 90%, which would mean on an $85,000 loan, the lender might agree to take $76,500.
If the net is $81,000, after closing costs, that would leave $4,500 that the first lender could offer to the second lender. The second lender must agree to release the loan. If not, the short sale will be denied, and the first lender will most likely get the property back in foreclosure, eliminating the second loan.Always hire a professional negotiator to help get the best deal for you and your family.
The author Jay Johnson is the owner / broker of Direct Realty. Direct Realty located in Minneapolis, Minnesota specializes in home listing and selling of short sale properties for sellers. His professional negotiators work on the seller’s behalf against the banks to reduce the seller’s financial liabilities. For questions and help selling homes on a short sale basis call Jay Johnson at 612 -965 -0937 or visit his web site at http://www.foreclosurefirstcallforhelp.com/ for more information.

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