Posts Tagged “foreclosure”

When Can I Buy A Home Again After Foreclosure or Short Sale?
One of the concerns a consumer has after experiencing a bankruptcy, foreclosure, or short sale (referred to as a “preforeclosure sale” by Fannie Mae) is the ability to obtain credit to purchase another home. Fannie Mae has updated its credit guidelines. This legal article summarizes those guidelines.

Q 1. How long is the time period after a foreclosure before a consumer can be eligible to obtain credit to purchase a home?

A Five years from the date the foreclosure sale was completed.

Additional requirements that apply after 5 years and up to 7 years following the completion date are as follows:

. The purchase of a principal residence is permitted with a minimum 10 percent down payment and minimum representataive credit score of 680.

. Purchase of a second home or investment property is not permitted.

. Limited cash-out refinances are permitted for all occupancy types pursuant to the eligibility requirements in effect at that time.

. Cash-out refinances are not permitted for any occupancy type.

(Source: FNMA Announcement 08-16, 6-25-08 )

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Erin Bucaro had her eye on a four-bedroom home in Fairway Canyon, a golf community in Beaumont, Calif.

Driving around the neighborhood, she noticed papers posted on the door, a sign that a bank had taken it over. She’d have to move fast.

Bucaro lost out on a nearby foreclosure in February. By the time she put in an offer a week after it listed for sale, it had already gone to escrow.

This time the 29-year-old nurse made sure her offer would be first on the table the morning it listed.

The 3,000-square-foot home went up for sale at $227,000 — less than half of what it sold for brand-new a couple of years earlier.

Bucaro agreed to the list price, but asked the bank to pay $8,500 in closing costs. It countered at $234,000, including costs. Bucaro accepted.

Buyers are out in force — and aggressive — in many markets hard-hit by foreclosure, such as Riverside and San Bernardino counties in Southern California’s Inland Empire, where Beaumont is. Other major foreclosure spots are Las Vegas, South Florida and Phoenix.

With prices cut up to 50% from their peaks, low interest rates and $8,000 tax credits for first-time buyers like Bucaro, people are vying for bank-owned bargains as hungrily as speculators during the housing boom. Multiple bids are common.

“Supply and demand takes over,” said Mark Stark, owner-broker at Prudential American Group Realtors in Las Vegas, which has the highest foreclosure rate in the U.S.

Troubled Properties Sell

Homes banks took back and are selling off make up anywhere from 40% to 80% of the inventory in these markets. Many go at prices that barely cover construction costs.

“If you’re Mr. and Mrs. Smith and you want to sell your house, you can’t compete with the bank properties,” said broker Bob Wasson of ReMax Results in Moreno Valley, Calif.

Distressed homes made up a third of May sales, downwardly distorting the U.S. median existing-home price, the National Association of Realtors said this week. The median fell 16.8% from a year ago to $173,000.

In just the last year, purchase prices in top foreclosure markets dropped nearly 30%, by various first-quarter estimates. Miami fell even more.

Foreclosed homes in Riverside and San Bernardino counties are selling at 2000 prices. It’s the same in Las Vegas. South Florida is back to 2003.

“Foreclosures are devastating for values,” said Peter Zalewski, principal of Condo Vultures, a brokerage in the Miami area. “That said, as first-time buyers pick off properties, it’s working to stabilize prices.”

And clear out inventory: The number of unsold homes on the market at the end of May fell 3.5% from April to nearly 3.8 million, the NAR said.

Price Risk Persists

Some surveys suggest month-to-month price drops in hard-hit markets are getting less severe. But an expected new wave of foreclosures as payment-option adjustable rate mortgages reset higher, plus more job losses, might stall a recovery and push prices down further.

For now, though, demand for bank-owned homes in foreclosure-heavy spots is so high that contracts are being signed at prices above original, albeit deeply cut, listings. It’s especially true for homes in good shape.

“We have qualified buyers who are willing to pay more than the listed price,” said Garey Teeters, a broker with Coldwell Banker-Teeters in Yucaipa, Calif.

But appraisals often come in under the agreed-upon sales price, quashing the deal. “It’s the biggest problem we have now,” Teeters said.

Close to 20% of contracts over the last two months have been canceled due to low appraisals, he says, as new government appraisal guidelines make appraisers more cautious.

Prices have dropped the most — and are still falling — in exurbs farthest from urban coastlines. They include new developments bordering the Florida Everglades and the easternmost reaches of the Inland Empire in California, like Beaumont.

Taking advantage of the steep dip, a Jamaican banker is assembling a portfolio of $40,000 homes in Homestead, some 20 miles south of Miami. In this region, new housing tracts reach to the brink of the Everglades.

In Las Vegas, as other foreclosure markets, the low end is seeing the steepest drops. Here, homes going for $70 per square foot are common.

“If I had a bucket full of money, I’d buy 10 myself,” said Heidi Kasama, broker-owner at Windermere Summerlin Real Estate.

Investors Flash Cash

Stark says about 38% of Las Vegas deals are cash, indicating investor activity. Most financing is through government-insured Federal Housing Administration loans.

Bucaro says she “got into the perfect storm” of motivating factors. As first-time buyers, she and her ironworker husband get an $8,000 federal tax credit. And as an Air Force veteran, she qualified for a zero-down Veterans Affairs loan. She got a 30-year fixed mortgage at 4.85%. The couple and their two young children plan to move in by July 1.

“I’m so happy,” Bucaro said.

But real estate agents complain that moratoriums on foreclosures have kept back a lot of new inventory, limiting the number of homes they can sell to now-eager buyers. Also, they say banks are releasing foreclosed homes to the market in a slow and controlling way.

Bank Buys Take Time

Complicated guidelines for selling bank-owned homes also are slowing what would otherwise be a much faster sales pace, says Mike Novak-Smith, a broker with ReMax Results in Riverside, Calif.

In Las Vegas, inventory is about half what it was a year ago, brokers say. “If we got it back to 25,000 or 30,000, I’m very confident we could handle it. The market is selling about 3,500 homes a month,” Stark said.

But Teeters said, “The dam is about to break. We’re told that in July, banks will release more REOs (real estate owned by banks).”

Las Vegas broker Kasama sees more bank supply coming on as well.

“Banks have a large backlog of inventory they will bring back on the market,” she said. “That will continue to keep our prices low.”

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Scottsdale, Arizona-based National Short Sale Center says more than 50 percent of the homeowners it is working with to secure short sales have been approached by “circumspect individuals or companies” proffering fraudulent foreclosure rescue services.

With 20 percent of the nation’s homeowners underwater, the Obama administration recently introduced a new component of its Making Home Affordable program, aimed at steering struggling homeowners who do not qualify for a federal loan modification toward short sales. The government’s new plan will pay a servicer $1,000 for completing a successful short sale and will pay the borrower $1,500 to assist with relocation expenses.

While a short sale can prove to be a practicable alternative to foreclosure, National Short Sale Center says many struggling homeowners are confused about short sales and fall for deceptive offers, including phone calls, letters, advertisements, and e-mails (also known as phishing).

Travis Hamel Olsen, president of National Short Sale Center, stressed, “Under no circumstances should anybody be paying an upfront fee to complete a short sale. Unscrupulous companies use myriad ways to take advantage of unsuspecting homeowners. Usually if the deal seems too good to be true, then it probably is.”

FORECLOSURE SCAMS

Foreclosure and loan modifications scams are a growing area of concern for lawmakers, investigators, and the industry. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is currently looking into more than 2,100 mortgage fraud cases-a 400 percent increase from five years ago. The recently enacted Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act of 2009 allocates $500 million to the FBI, Justice Department, Secret Service, and Postal Service to combat mortgage fraud.

The types of fraud circulating include sale-leasebacks, quitclaims, stripping homeowner equity, and misleading homeowners into signing over deeds. And with the administration’s mortgage relief initiatives and its recent push for modifications, dozens of bogus companies with official-sounding names and fake Web sites mimicking the fonts and layouts of government sites claim to help struggling homeowners modify their mortgages. Some unsuspecting borrowers have fallen prey to unscrupulous con artists that take them for up to $7,000 before disappearing.

Olsen said, “The fraud usually comes through in the fine print, but foreclosure rescue teams and highly suspect scammers are basically taking homes through a variety of means, resulting in foreclosure and eviction.”

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Trying to cut its losses, Bank of America Corp. has changed its policy on short sales, making it easier for borrowers to sell their homes instead of going into foreclosure.

Until a month ago, B of A and its Countrywide Financial Corp. had required that 10% of a home’s sale price go toward paying off home equity lines of credit before they would agree to a short sale. But Terry Francisco, a spokesman for the Charlotte company, said Monday that it changed its policy last month, agreeing to accept 5% of the sale price when there is no equity available to holders of the first or second liens.

The new policy “is based on the assumption that it is in the best interest of all parties involved to accept a short sale, as opposed to proceeding to a foreclosure,” Francisco said. “We believed that the previous policies set an arbitrary amount that did not take into account the savings derived from proceeding with a short sale.”

B of A expects the change to increase the number of short sales, he said, and even though it is releasing the liens, it reserves the right to pursue deficiency judgments against borrowers.

With foreclosure moratoriums being lifted in the past month, bankers are looking for ways to deal with an anticipated flood of distressed properties and are trying to determine which borrowers will get loan modifications and which will go into foreclosure.

Experts on short sales say they have been difficult to negotiate with lenders that are often reluctant to accept discounted payoffs when a home is sold for less than the balance due on the mortgage. But losses on foreclosures can be as much as 30% higher than on short sales, and housing prices are still falling, so servicers are slowly starting to change their policies, experts said.

One critical issue is second liens, particularly home equity lines of credit; these lenders are even more loath to permit a short sale, knowing that the primary lien will likely receive almost all the sale price, leaving little or nothing for holders of secondary notes.

Raffi Tal, chief operating officer at IShortSale Inc. in Woodland Hills, Calif., said holders of second liens are often offered payoffs of $1,000 to $3,000 in short sales, and many such deals are held up because the lenders refuse to accept these payoffs.

“The banks are holding short sales hostage,” Tal said. “They don’t care that a year from now they will have to take over the property and sell it for 30% less when they could have sold the property in a short sale in 30 to 90 days.”

Experts have long complained that the largest lender-servicers – B of A, Wells Fargo & Co., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Citigroup Inc. – are also the largest holders of second liens.

The four largest banking companies own 52% of residential revolving lines of credit, or $441 billion of loans in the second lien position, according to Laurie Goodman, senior managing director at Amherst Holdings LLC’s Amherst Securities Group LP. That includes $92.6 billion of second liens on their balance sheets, she said.

Tom Kelly, a spokesman for Chase Home Finance, said it has a “disciplined process” for handling short sales with HELOCs.

The process includes determining if the offer is at fair market value, which may require a new appraisal, requiring that borrowers submit hardship information to determine their ability to contribute to the shortfall and investigating for misrepresentations and “non-arm’s-length transactions,” Kelly said. “This doesn’t happen overnight.”

Norm Miller, a professor of real estate at the University of San Diego’s Burnham-Moores Center for Real Estate, said 77% of foreclosures in California have second mortgages, most of them HELOCs, which often scuttle short sales.

There are other factors holding up short sales, including the commissions paid to real estate agents and mortgage insurance.

Some servicers have cut real estate commissions on short sales from the standard 6% to 3% or less, experts said. To combat that practice, Fannie Mae adopted a policy March 1 saying the sales “may not be conditioned upon a reduction of the total commission” paid to real estate agents.

Matt McCabe, the president of Loan Resolution Corp., a Scottsdale, Ariz., company that helps lenders resolve defaulted loans, said servicers “put themselves in a position” to get a short sale rejected. “Some realtors were shying away from short sales because it takes so long and commissions were being cut, even though it saves lenders a lot of money.”

Rich Rollins, the president and chief executive of National Quick Sale LLC, a Jacksonville, Fla., start-up that specializes in short sales, said mortgage insurance companies also are holding up the process, because the insurers take the first 25% loss on a short sale.

Experts agree that many servicers are ill-equipped to handle the negotiations that typically involve several lenders, a defaulted borrower and a willing buyer, who typically waits months before a package is approved. In some cases, short sale offers are rejected because the calculation for the property’s fair net value does not match the buyer’s offer – even if that offer is higher.

“Short sales have always been the last tool that servicers ever use, because they have to coordinate with too many stakeholders in the loan, and it takes a lot of follow-up,” said Cheryl Lang, the president of Integrated Mortgage Solutions, a Houston consulting firm.

Servicers typically have a small staff with knowledge of short sales working out of the loss mitigation department, which is separate from real-estate owned specialists with expertise valuing properties. Many servicers “just don’t have the technology and infrastructure to deal with short sales,” Lang said.

Because the majority of short sales involve multiple lien holders, a buyer often waits at least 90 days before getting a response from a lender on an offer. In a rapidly changing housing market where prices are falling every month, many buyers are unwilling to wait that long and often walk away.

“The banks really need to get short sales done faster,” McCabe said.

Some specialists said the government should not have given the largest lender-servicers money through the Troubled Asset Relief Program, because they were then unwilling to accept short sale offers and are waiting for the housing market to recover.

Tony Renzi, the president of GMAC Mortgage and chief operating officer of Residential Capital LLC, said servicers are starting to see “more flexibility from second lien holders,” largely because of the sheer volume of foreclosures expected. “There’s more of a recognition, given that the second lien would rather take something than see the property go through liquidation and have the second lien charged off. Getting something is better than nothing.”

Courtesy of Kate Berry – Financial Planning

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In these difficult financial times, more and more sellers are finding they need to sell their homes for less than they owe on their mortgages, known as a “short sale .” This can be a good deal for you as a buyer, as long as you’re aware of the extra time and work required to make it happen.

The Mortgage Lender’s “Short Sale” Factors

The seller’s mortgage lender will be considering many factors in deciding whether to approve a short sale, including:

* Whether the seller is deserving of a break, due to financial hardship caused by unforeseen circumstances such as          layoffs, divorce or illness
* Whether it would be cheaper to simply repossess the house, make any necessary repairs and sell it through a real estate agent
* How many other properties the mortgage lender currently has in default
* Whether there are co-signors who can be held responsible for the balance owed on the mortgage

The Short Sale Process

Your chances of success with the seller’s mortgage lender improve if your communication with them is organized and complete. Your first contact with the seller’s mortgage lender’s “loss mitigation department” is crucial in making a good impression. You’ll want to send them what’s called a “Release” or “Authorization to Release Information” already signed by the seller, which allows the mortgage lender to talk with you about the seller’s mortgage.

In your first talk with the mortgage lender’s loss mitigator, you’ll want to find out:

* Whether they think a short sale might be a possibility
* What information they’ll need to complete the process

Loss mitigators sometimes receive bonuses based on how many defaulted loans they can clear up, so they’re more likely to pay attention to your sale if you can show them you’re taking care of as many details and objections as possible.

It will be necessary to be specific about the seller’s financial difficulties with what’s called a “hardship letter.” The mortgage lender may also require paystubs, copies of medical bills, checking account statements and other appropriate evidence from the seller. The seller’s mortgage lender will look at the seller’s credit reports to verify the seller’s financial predicament. This will all take extra time.
Broker’s Price Opinion

The mortgage lender will order what’s called a “broker’s price opinion,” which gives the mortgage lender some idea of what the property is actually worth in the current market. A broker’s price opinion will be based on:

* the value of comparable properties in the same neighborhood
* the general condition of the neighborhood
* the condition of the specific property in relation to neighboring houses

If the person who is inspecting the property needs to look at the interior of the house, you’ll want to be sure someone is there to let him or her in. You may also want to provide the inspector with copies of low comparable houses in the neighborhood, and high estimates on any needed repairs. The lower the broker’s price opinion, the more likely the mortgage lender will approve a short sale.

Settlement Statement Scrutiny

The seller’s mortgage lender will want to have an advance look at what’s called the ” Settlement Statement” or “Settlement/Disbursement Estimate.” The mortgage lender will be carefully reviewing:

* Commissions going to real estate brokers
* Where your financing is coming from (Cash? A loan?)
* Payments to cover outstanding liens and taxes
* Approximate date of the closing
* Any cash to the seller (a definite no-no)
* Any other expenses which may raise a red flag

While buying a home on a short sale can be frustrating and time consuming, your hard work can pay off in a home that’s worth considerably more than you paid for it.

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Poor Strategy When Facing Foreclosure

In some markets more than 1 out of 10 homeowners are dealing with a pending foreclosure.  The most common initial reaction is to avoid the lender and bury one’s head like an ostrich hoping to avoid danger.  It is impossible to hide from mortgage obligations without dire consequences but a proactive strategy can produce positive results.

The first step is to stare the problem right in the face.  You’ve got to deal honestly with the questions at hand.  For instance:

  • Could you afford to stay if the payment was lower?
  • Are you expecting that you can catch up on arrears?
  • Do have the money to move if evicted or sold as a short sale?
  • What would be the effect of a deficiency judgment on your financial condition, both present and future?

Next is to determine the goals of your strategy.  Where do want to be when this is over?

  • Do you want to stay in the house if the payment can be made affordable?
  • Do you owe much more than the house is worth and just want a way out with some damage control?
  • Do you need to stay in the house for as long as possible without being able to make any mortgage payments?

Your options will be dictated by how you have addressed the above questions and defined your immediate goals.  The most common options include a refinance or modification of the mortgage, a sale of the property, negotiating a deed in lieu of foreclosure or just stalling what may be an inevitable foreclosure.  Most important to remember is that in most states a foreclosure is a legal procedure.  Richard Weinstein, an attorney in Jupiter, Fl specializes in foreclosure defenses and explains that, “there is much too much at stake for the average individual to try to properly address all the issues of the foreclosure process.  The homeowner has rights they must demand and possibly assets they need to protect.  Unrepresented borrowers very often find themselves unnecessarily homeless and still hopelessly in debt.”

I couldn’t agree more!  I have seen too many regretful real life experiences with disastrous results that could have been averted if the homeowner in distress had gotten proper advice before it became too late.  The sooner the dangers are acknowledged the more options that remain available, both practical and legal.

Some have advised that the first person to talk to is your lender.  Here I disagree.  Doesn’t it make more sense to first speak with someone who is already prepared for your lender’s response and knows what information should be shared?  If you find yourself in the position that you cannot meet your mortgage obligations I encourage you to speak to a mortgage professional that is well versed in all possible remedies.  Elite Lending offers free consultations for homeowner’s in need.  Please call 516-575-5626 for more information and visit www.EliteLending.biz.

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There are many ways to lose a home but signing away ownership in a manner that destroys credit, embarrasses the family and strips an owner of dignity is one of the hardest. For owners who can no longer afford to keep mortgage payments current, there are alternatives to bankruptcy or foreclosure proceedings. One of those options is called a “short sale.” The term has become very commonplace, due to the escalating number of owners facing foreclosure.

When lenders agree to do a real estate short sale, it means the lender is accepting less than the total amount due. Not all lenders will accept short sales or discounted payoffs, especially if it would make more financial sense to foreclose; moreover, not all sellers nor all properties qualify for a short sale.

If you are considering buying a short sale, there could be drawbacks. For your protection, I suggest that all borrowers:

* Obtain legal advice from a competent real estate lawyer
* Call an accountant to discuss short sale tax ramifications

Only work with realtors / investors who fully understand the process.

As real estate agents and investors, we are not licensed as lawyers or CPA’s and cannot advise on those consequences. Except for certain conditions pursuant to the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007, be aware the I.R.S. will consider debt forgiveness as income, and there is no guarantee that a lender who accepts a short sale will not legally pursue a borrower for the difference between the amount owed and the amount paid. In some states, this amount is known as a deficiency. A lawyer can determine whether your loan qualifies for a deficiency judgment or claim.

Although all lenders have varying requirements and may demand that a borrower submit a wide array of documentation, the following steps will give you a pretty good idea of what to expect.

* Call the Lender
You may need to make a half dozen phone calls before you find the person responsible for handling short sales. You do not want to talk to the “real estate short sale” or “work out” department, you want the supervisor’s name, the name of the individual capable of making a decision.

* Submit Letter of Authorization
Lenders typically do not want to disclose any of your personal information without written authorization to do so. If you are working with a real estate agent, closing agent, title company or lawyer, you will receive better cooperation if you write a letter to the lender giving the lender permission to talk with those specific interested parties about your loan. The letter should include the following:

o Property Address
o Loan Reference Number
o Your Name
o The Date
o Your Agent’s Name & Contact Information

* Preliminary Net Sheet
This is an estimated closing statement that shows the sales price you expect to receive and all the costs of sale, unpaid loan balances, outstanding payments due and late fees, including real estate commissions, if any. Your closing agent or lawyer should be able to prepare this for you, if you do not know how to calculate any of these fees. If the bottom line shows cash to the seller, you will probably not need a short sale.

* Hardship Letter
The sadder, the better. This statement of facts describes how you got into this financial bind and makes a plea to the lender to accept less than full payment. Lenders are not inhumane and can understand if you lost your job, were hospitalized or a truck ran over your entire family, but lenders are not particularly empathetic to situations involving dishonesty or criminal behavior.

* Proof of Income and Assets
It is best to be truthful and honest about your financial situation and disclose assets. Lenders will want to know if you have savings accounts, money market accounts, stocks or bonds, negotiable instruments, cash or other real estate or anything of tangible value. Lenders are not in the charity business and often require assurance that the debtor cannot pay back any of the debt that it is forgiving.

* Copies of Bank Statements
If your bank statements reflect unaccountable deposits, large cash withdrawals or an unusual number of checks, it’s probably a good idea to explain each of those line items to the lender. In addition, the lender might want you to account for each and every deposit so it can determine whether deposits will continue.

* Comparative Market Analysis
Sometimes markets decline and property values fall. If this is part of the reason that you cannot sell your home for enough to pay off the lender, this fact should be substantiated for the lender through a comparative market analysis (CMA). Your real estate agent can prepare a CMA for you, which will show prices of similar homes:

o Active on the market
o Pending sales
o Solds from the past six months.

* Purchase Agreement & Listing Agreement
When you reach an agreement to sell with a prospective purchaser, the lender will want a copy of the offer, along with a copy of your listing agreement. Be prepared for the lender to renegotiate commissions and to refuse to allow payment of certain items such as home warranty plans or termite inspections.

Now, if everything goes well, the lender will approve your short sale. As part of the negotiation, you might ask that the lender not report adverse credit to the credit reporting agencies, but realize that the lender is under no obligation to accommodate this request.

In summary, it is best to work with a “short sale” specialist such as Total Real Estate Solutions who deal with lenders on a regular basis, and are experts in negotiating the “short sale” on a homeowner’s behalf.

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Foreclosure

Foreclosure is a legal process (in most states) that results in the lender regaining title to the property due to nonpayment by the borrower.

When applicable, the court awards a deficiency judgment to the lender the amount of which is determined by the difference between what the house is eventually sold for (minus expenses) and the borrower’s mortgage balance.

The foreclosure remains on the credit report for 7 years. The statute of limitations on the judgment varies from state to state and 20 years is not uncommon. New lending guidelines extend the wait period for a new mortgage to 5 years BUT the judgment would need to be satisfied before any mortgage financing is allowed.

The combination of the foreclosure and the open judgment is devastating to the borrower’s credit score.

Deed-In-Lieu of Foreclosure

The borrower must document economic hardship and an inability to pay. If there is equity in the property (the home is worth more than the balance due) and there are no other liens, the lender may consider an exchange whereby the borrower surrenders the deed and is released of any obligation to the mortgage note.

If it is reported as a foreclosure (lender’s discretion) it will remain on the credit report for 7 years but there will not be an unpaid balance reported

Short Sale

If the lender is convinced that they cannot collect payment from the homeowner due to financial hardship they may accept a sale price of less than what is owed on the property.

The price is normally discounted from a quick sale price in an effort of avoiding the costs and risks of the foreclosure process. In some cases, usually where there are second liens involved, the borrower may still be obligated for an amount owed but the loan would be unsecured.

There are various ways for the lender to report the short sale, the most common of which are  “satisfied mortgage” or “paid settlement”. As a satisfied mortgage the only damage to the credit score is due to any late payments prior to the sale. A settled account is more damaging as it reflects it was not paid as agreed but, in both cases the damage pales in comparison to a foreclosure and deficiency judgment.

How the lender is going to report the short sale is rarely, if ever, a negotiable item.New mortgage lending guidelines require a 2 year wait after a pre-foreclosure sale.

Bankruptcy

Bankruptcy involves a settlement of debts through a variety of means. Bankruptcy is severely damaging to a credit score and remains on the credit report for 10 years.

Because there are no judgments involved the borrower may generally be eligible for new mortgage financing in as little as 2 years from the date of discharge.

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