Investigating short sale in Wallingford
I am happily renting in Wallingford and never really got serious about trying to buy a place in the last year. However Century 21 sign caught my eye for a house that was FSBO for a while. I was further surprised to see "SHORT SALE NOTICE" on the flyer. Being an avid bubble reader, I am keen to these kind of things... but who the heck gets caught short in Wallingford. I am but a novice in sleuthing stuff like this, so I would love a concise list of all the ways you all seem to get info so quickly.
3835 Corliss Ave
MLS #27102302... that was on the flyer but it is pretty easy to find on the CBBain map. Listed same as the flyer at $649,721
Easy enough to Zillow... $804,946 (mm-hmm) and sold in 1999 for $406K.
Soooo... trying to find out why they are short. The KC parcel viewer isn't much help other than giving some names. Is there another source of info???
3835 Corliss Ave
MLS #27102302... that was on the flyer but it is pretty easy to find on the CBBain map. Listed same as the flyer at $649,721
Easy enough to Zillow... $804,946 (mm-hmm) and sold in 1999 for $406K.
Soooo... trying to find out why they are short. The KC parcel viewer isn't much help other than giving some names. Is there another source of info???
Comments
It looks like a couple who are active in real estate investment. I count twelve properties purchased between 1993 and today. They are likely quite wealthy.
From what I understand, if a home is listed in the NWMLS and the sale is expected to be a "short sale," the listing must disclose this.
Some lenders will take a loss and others may not. Hope that helps.
PS. Some homes that are short sales are not necessarily a candidate for a good buy. In fact, many homes that have sold as a "short sale" have a history of enormous increases in sales prices over a very short period of time, say less than 5 yrs for example. While you may stumble upon a home marketed as a short sale, it would be very wise to see the chain of title/sales over the last few years. With the recent appreciation gains over the last few years, recently lenders have been scrutinizing chain of title/sales on the subject property being appraised. This is to help cut down on the fraud. Just slighly too late in my opinion.
I am familiar with what a short sale is and everything else that a year of reading seattlebubble will teach you. This seems like an odd property in that you both had completely different reads. Alan, the thought had crossed my mind that they were using "SHORT SALE" as a ploy because, really, who gets short in Wallingford right now? The fact that the listing and flyer say that all offers have to be approved through the bank sounds pretty convincing though.
One used to be able to see all of the HELOC loans and 80/20 100% LTV loans, but that is no longer available as far as I know. S-crow, I respect your knowledge and experience in the profession... how did you come to the conclusion that it was a subprime loan/lender?
Thanks again.
Sorry for the redundancy. Yes, this is a short sale and the home appears quite encumbered. Long Beach Mortgage is the subprime arm of Washington Mutual. I have not looked up if any of the loan (s) were reconveyed (paid off)., but if the agent is marketing the home as a short sale, the likely hood of it being otherwise is low... thus I didn't bother to look up the reconveyance records.
Being in escrow affords access to records that we need in the course of work everyday and there are a lot of people in the business (agents and title companies, mortgage companies etc..) that we call for quick queries when we need it.
This house isn't doing so well. It's apparently been sitting vacant for quite some time. Asking price is down $100,000, sold "as-is, without warranties or representations of any kind".
Relisted as a lender owned repo at $551,000
3835 Corliss Ave N
Seattle, WA 98103
MLS: 27175515
http://www.redfin.com/stingray/do/print ... id=1167384
Assume structural damage or something, because it's way below market for that neighborhood.
Was interesting to learn about ReconTrust for the first time. Could they become the Starbucks of repo men? Their website proudly claims: Heck, I bet by end of 2008 they can be in all 50 states, plus Guam, and two offices kitty-corner from each other in Vancouver, B.C.
How about "something" is the new paradigm...much lower prices!!!
Nah, Wallingford is "special"...just like Ballard (miss ol Baby Blue)
Interestingly, for the states Recontrust services, WA comes in third for foreclosures in process.
http://www.ctcres.com/
They're not the only game in town, though. We have Regional Trustee Services and NW Trustee Services that make up the bulk of the market share in this sector. Yes, these companies are probably in super growth mode. Any laid of production worker (not LOs) could apply to work in this sector.
So it sounds like this property is headed to auction, with the homeowners trying to sell short ahead of the trustee sale. I give chances of this short sale going through as: zero.
If the homeowners have other assets, like other real property, it's not a short sale. It's a "seller signs a new deed of trust at closing, secured against one of the other properties" transactions.
If they have other assets, a lender cannot approve a short sale. Competent real estate agents know this. This real estate agent is going to spend time and money trying to market the property all for nothing.