I hope this will be the right forum to ask these questions as I can't find a good forum with as much info with SS and Equator knowledge. Let me start at where this house has been. The house was put on the market as a Short Sale January 28, 2010. Here's the timeline...
Apr 13, 2011 | Pending (Pending With Release) | -- | ||||
Mar 22, 2011 | Relisted (Active) | -- | ||||
Dec 27, 2010 | Pending (Pending With Release) | -- | ||||
Dec 23, 2010 | Price Changed | $309,000 | ||||
Dec 17, 2010 | Price Changed | $339,000 | ||||
Oct 01, 2010 | Relisted (Active) | -- | ||||
Aug 11, 2010 | Pending (Pending With Release) | -- | ||||
Aug 03, 2010 | Price Changed | $365,000 | ||||
May 05, 2010 | Relisted (Active) | -- | ||||
Feb 13, 2010 | Pending (Pending With Release) | -- | ||||
Jan 28, 2010 | Listed (Active) | $400,000 |
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Mar 11, 2005 | Sold (Public Records) | $729,000 | ||||
May 09, 2000 | Sold (Public Records) | $402,500 | ||||
Apr 16, 1997 | Sold (Public Records) | $236,500 | -- |
All prior contracts fell through-no fault of property just the wait time involved. We put an offer on April 10, 2010 along with 2 other cash offers (investors) that had already been in. The seller countered and we offered $314,000 and he accepted. Now, we are in the Equator system and have been approved on two of the tasks (offer task and personal info/pre-approval letter task). My agent has kept me up to date on all the "goings on" and the selling agent has been through Equator many times and is familiar with the system. He said the two tasks came in quickly and thinks the BOA will be next, My agent said this property has a sell date and is close to foreclosure (on Redfin 461 days) so she is confident the bank would like to see this property sold soon.
Here's my concern...the house is in good condition, only minor cosmetic things need done. I'm concerned on the BOA coming back much higher than we planned to offer. With short sales (with this house being so close to foreclosure) in your experience, what is the likelihood of the them counter-offering? Also, we are FHA and my broker said that the FHA appraisers are tough on appraising short sales. What's an easy fix to me (weeds 5 ft high, one bathtub needing a new water spout, rugs replaced) might lower his appraisal so we don't get the $304 loan we need. We've run comps in our area and similar homes are going for (including SS and foreclosures) are $25,000 more or less away from the offer we submitted). Why such a dramatic price reduction in the last year? We really want this house and can wait for it...my only concern is the BOA and our FHA appraisal screwing it up.
Replies
Thanks so much for the incite into this. I figured a wait would be imminent and I'm expecting counter offer(s), as well. I will take the advise, seriously. There was nothing said from my agent nor the selling agent about an auction...just that it's close to foreclosure. With the drops in housing prices due to the amount of forclosures and short sales in my very small community, what really is the best gauge on a Fair Market Value? Just doing comps? 5 years ago, the houses here were so over inflated (as many were) and it's has risen very little in the last 3 years since the bottom fell out. I don't have a house to sell (that's why we are willing to wait for this one) but I rarely hear of any "good" stories coming out of waiting for the home you want. I want the bank to know that we are serious but I'm not going to agree to an outrageous counter offer, either just to have it. I've read this forum up and down (as well as others) and noticed some people agree to as little as $500 to "appease" bank counter offers. Almost, to give them the upper-hand, so to say.
Thanks again Smitty & Harry!
I agree with Harry. They are looking for the "right price" to attract a buyer. We have adjusted price up and down before. We up'd the price $50,000 one time to appease BOA. Interestingly they accepted a lower offer than when we had it listed for a lower price, but go figure. When you see quick price drops, it's an agent trying to get a buyer in. Check public records. There could be an auction on the property as well. Many times the price drops dramatically to generate an offer if an auction is happening.
Again, what Harry said is true. You have a LONG way before you get an approval here with BOA. I also think you should be aware BOA loves to counter, so you could go back and forth many times.
If the property is a bit run down, you'll definitely have a harder time with an FHA loan. They are stringent on appraisals and even require the property to be fixed before approving loan.