Thursday, August 14, 2008

The Sellers Are All Banks!

Okay, not ALL the sellers are banks, but some days it seems like it. Yesterday, I showed six homes to one of my incredible buyers and half of them were bank-owned. It's a dynamic that is definitely a change from a couple years ago. Working with a bank to purchase a property is a little different than negotiating with a human. Here's what to expect:

1. Banks are not 'emotionally attached' to this property like normal homeowners may be. They are mostly interested in the bottom line net sales price and how quickly they can get it off their books.

2. In my experience, banks are not as 'desperate' as most buyers seem to expect. They are not likely to take an offer of 10% off the list price under most circumstances. If they were that motivated, they would have dropped the list price. They may be negotiable on price, but we'll have to go back and forth a few times to hash it out.

3. Typically, we'll write up the initial offer and send it to the bank's listing agent. They will then log into the banks online system and input the info from the offer and hit 'send'. We'll then wait a couple days and get a verbal counter offer. In one transaction I was working the listing agent said that she didn't even talk to anyone at the bank about the offer. It was all done through email. After the bank counter-offers we generally work out the details verbally.

4. Once all the terms have been agreed on verbally, the bank will send us a packet of their addendum. Often this is longer than the initial offer and will spell out all the terms. As one recent client rightly pointed out, the language is more bent toward the bank. I'm sure they have a team of lawyers that came up with it to protect them. We'll read it over very carefully! After we sign the addendum the listing agent will often have to overnight them to the bank's asset manager to sign and send back. Once the bank has signed off, you then have a binding contract.

5. Within the bank's addendum will be several pages telling you that they absolutely do not warrant anything about the property and that you are taking it "AS-IS". Of course, it is highly recommended to do a home inspection and make sure you know what you are buying. These properties are often in rough shape with the utilities off, so the inspections are an important step.

6. Because they are selling "AS-IS", don't expect them to fix anything that comes up in the inspection. You may be able to renegotiate the price or something, but the bank isn't likely to spend money repairing the HVAC.

Bank-owned properties can be a great value because:
A) Often these properties are on the market for less than the previous owner paid for them in the last couple of years. For example, I saw a great home in Madison yesterday that was built in 2001. Someone bought it in 2006 for $131k and got foreclosed on. Now this home is listed at $115k and still in great shape. In this case the next buyer should have some great equity when the market comes back. I see this dynamic all the time.

B) They may have a smaller pool of potential buyers because of the rough, AS-IS condition that most of these homes are in, and because the banks will often ask for a large earnest money check with the offer. That home in Madison required a 2% earnest money check or around $2500, weeding out some buyers.

It would be interesting to see how many homes in our housing inventory are bank-owned an how that has affected supply and demand. It seems like the human sellers that don't have to sell for some reason are waiting for the prices to go back up. I don't blame them for that, though I look forward to working with the humans again soon...

-Peter

www.NashvilleCityHomes.com

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