
A short sale usually refers to a scenario in which the Seller's loans are greater than the than the house's market value. Simultaneously, the Seller is having trouble paying his mortgage and foreclosure may be around the corner. Even if the Seller sells the home, the money received for the home will come up short in covering the Seller's loan(s). That's why we call them short sales. Typically the goal of a short sale from the Seller's perspective is to have the bank forgive them the difference between the market value of the home and outstanding loan balance(s) of their mortgage(s).
Imagine going to a bank and saying, "Yeah, I'd like to sell my home for $100,000 less than what you loaned me last year and call it even. What do you say bro?" 

Since there are so many articles in the paper an online making short sales sound like the answer to everybody's problems, what is the fuss about--at least from my REALTOR perspective? Short sales in Arlington, Fairfax County and Northern Virginia real estate are a lot more cumbersome and rife with pitfalls than would be buyers and sellers realize.... 
Imagine having to bring $20,000-100,000 to the table to sell your home and move....Ouch 
Perspectives of the Players Involved:
LENDER--not motivated, not making money from this hassle, trying to minimize his losses begrudgingly. This means low customer service such as responding to offers. Very often it takes 8 weeks to receive a response on a contract for a short sale! No fun!#!#!!
SELLER--likely desperate and will say what they think the realtor or buyer wants to hear. So when you ask the seller has your bank approved doing a short sale on your home and said they would forgive some of your loan, he/she will be tempted to say "Yes of course my bank has said they would accept a short sale contract" even if he has not yet approached the bank on the matter.
BUYER--Likely see short sale as big opportunity but not realize the risks, unknowns and time involved.
SETTLEMENT AGENT--Knows that these deals take much more work and patience to execute but don't close as consistently as "normal" sales.
REALTOR--Well I'm still trying to figure out what to put in this slot--haha
PROBLEMS THAT OFTEN COME UP:
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PRACTICAL ADVICE FOR SHORT SALES TO ALL PARTIES:

Related Links:
Date: 2007-10-09 15:13:55My brother's home in Stafford, VA has been on the market for over 16 months. He has dropped the price over 100K and has no offers. His mortgage company said they do not participate in "short sales". Is he screwed or what? I told him to fire his agent but he said "she is a good lady" and it is just a bad time to sell a house.
sounds like it and it's not probably not the agent's fault. I don't do short sales due to how dysfunctional they are in general. Your best hope might be speaking with a real estate attorney if the lender is not open to it up front....
Jay, your opinions of the hassle of short sales is common. That is why so many agents turn their Short Sales over to transaction coordinator of short sales like the company I work for, National Short Sale Center (www.shortsalecenter.com). We would love to have you stop turning down listings and start making money. Contact me to discuss further if your interested.
Great article Jay. We saw a house we like in Arlington which is listed as a short sale and now we will approach it with caution.
Bill, are you working with a realtor? Didn't they educate on short sales? Or are you guilty of being a floater
Here's my article on that topic, Ouch! Buyer Loses $40,000--Don't Be a Floater!
http://www.justnewlistings.com/arlington-virginia-blog/jay-seville/ouch-buyer-lost-40000-dont-be-a-floater-dude/show/
Contact me through my contact button on the menu above this week.
On a totally different topic...my wife and I were viewing $2-3,000,000 homes in Arlington to get some ideas (kitchens, MBRs) for a home we'll be building in 2009. WOW!!! Those homes were amazing....
Great article. Our Loudoun Market is saturated with them. The greatest frustration of all is that some banks have not even approved the short sale before they are listed.
I had the great experience offering one seller full MLS asking price only to have it rejected by the bank.
Just received this message on plugoo:
This article sounds out of date in today's market. When did it come out? Thanks.
Well actually this article was written for this market and completely up to date. Maybe you don't understand that most short sales are not approved and anybody submitting a contract is merely a guinea pig for a desperate seller hoping that the lender after 6-8 weeks will agree to it.
There are exceptions in which the lender is already on board with the seller doing a short sale and will be responding in 5 days--this is one out of 20 or so short sales.
another great article is by my good friend and competitor Frank:
http://blog.franklyrealty.com/2008/02/va-short-sales.html
His conclusion is about 5% of short sales close.
How is that info out of date???? That is critical info/awareness for consumers to have that most realtors do not even have--even those being played by the banks to squeeze a few more payments out of the borrowers by waiting 8 weeks to respond.
Amanda
I have a few friends who got stuck from the allure of a short sell! No clue what they were thinking in the DC Housing Market being what it is these days!
Amanda