Overcoming the new obstacles of selling your home


by Dan Krell © 2009

The 2008 National Association of Realtors Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers reports that 93% of home buyers surveyed indicated they financed their purchase (Realtor.org). Real estate agents have become accustomed to and usually can anticipate most hurdles that came with a typical transaction; agents can usually prepare home sellers for home inspections, FHA appraisals, and shaky buyers.

These days, however, home sellers may feel as if they are trapped in an obstacle course. If finding a home buyer isn’t enough, home sellers are finding that closing the deal is getting more difficult as changes in the mortgage industry creates new obstacles.

Changes in home buyer sentiment and mortgage underwriting guidelines have created a new trend – uncertain closings. A continued disparity between the price home sellers are asking and what home buyers are willing to pay, along with increasingly tightening mortgage guidelines and indeterminate appraisals would make any home seller skittish.

Tightening mortgage guidelines are increasing the pool of unqualified home buyers, while questions of home values have made some closings problematic. Such obstacles have forced some real estate agents to using creative techniques to get their clients to close; some of these techniques have not been used since the 1980’s, when lenders also tightened underwriting guidelines in the wake of the S&L crisis.

One technique is the use of seller financing and land contracts. Home sellers looking to sell to a home buyer who does not qualify for a mortgage and/or get a higher sales price can possibly bypass the mortgage lender by offering seller financing. Once the note is consummated, the seller may decide to sell it to an investor; there are many investors who specialize in purchasing private mortgage notes.

Seller financing is not for everyone. Besides the fact that many home owners need the proceeds of the sale to purchase another home, it requires the seller to assume the risk of the home buyer defaulting. Additionally, sellers looking to cash out their notes may only get a percentage of the sale because investors purchasing these notes usually offer a percentage of face value. If considering seller financing, it is a good idea to consult an attorney to assist you and ensure you comply with local and federal laws.

Another creative technique that is gaining in popularity is “permanent” home swapping. Home swapping has been around for a long time, and has been popularized as a means of ensuring short term accommodations for vacations and sabbaticals. In fact, home swapping has become more chic as evidenced in its use in a recent episode of “Million Dollar Listing” (Bravo Channel; www.bravotv.com/million-dollar-listing) when two parties liked each other’s properties but couldn’t agree on terms. Due to an increasing number of home sellers consider permanent home swapping, more resources are becoming available to identify like minded home sellers. Of course, an experienced attorney should be consulted to facilitate such a transaction.

Although market conditions continue to stabilize, home sellers are encountering new obstacles to selling their homes. Real estate agents and home sellers are increasingly considering alternative and creative means to overcome problems. Before you embark on non-traditional means to sell your home, consult an attorney and other professionals for information that will help you determine if creative home selling is for you.

This article is not intended to provide nor should it be relied upon for legal and financial advice. This article was originally published in the Montgomery County Sentinel the week of November 30, 2009. Copyright © 2009 Dan Krell

Creative financing can lead to creative trouble

by Dan Krell
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Several weeks ago, my client encountered The Amazing Criswell of real estate. Without knowing anything about my client’s home, this real estate agent professed to know how many homes are for sale in his neighborhood, the price the home would sell for, and time it would remain on the market. Much to my client’s dismay, the agent expressed an interest to discuss a proposal to sell his home quickly and for more than the list price. Needless to say, my client did not call him.

There is always someone pushing their angle on how to sell your home faster, make more money, or buy with no money. Some of these “real estate solutions” could even be called schemes; many schemes are not practical, some are outrageous, and some are blatantly illegal. Presently, the temptation to think outside the box tends to be more prevalent since financing guidelines are more restrictive, and for many it means needing more cash for a higher down payment, closing costs, or reserves.

Aside from creative financing options that offer seller financing, land installment contracts, or leases with the option to purchase, there are schemes that provide creative gifts of money to the home buyer so they can qualify for their loan. One of the more blatantly illegal schemes involves a “gift” from the home seller to the home buyer while increasing the sale price to exceed the listing price; the gift is not disclosed to the lender as well as exchanged outside of settlement. This scheme essentially creates a 100% financing loan from a loan that technically requires some form of down payment.

A graduate student who researched this type of transaction for his Ph.D. in finance (as reported in the New York Times “The Cash-Back Mortgage,” June 10, 2007) found that the “cash back” scheme is more prevalent than previously thought. He found that people advertised such deals through advertising and through key words in the MLS (the study revealed 150 keywords were used).

Additional findings suggested that this type of transaction would occur when homes were on the market for long periods of time, yet sold above the original list price. Furthermore, these types of transactions tend be executed by the same real estate agents (who are either the seller and/or they are the only agent in the transaction). Ironically, most of these deals were perpetrated through loans packaged in bundles and sold on Wall Street.

A subtler form of this cash back scheme occurs when the seller provides closing help to the buyer, but raises the sale price beyond the list price to make up the difference. Although the closing help is disclosed to the lender and recorded on the settlement sheet, this transaction could be illegal. Federal law (18 U.S.C. 1014) forbids providing false statements and/or willfully overvaluing land to influence a lender’s behavior in providing a loan. In fact, a New Jersey State Judiciary committee stated that an attorney knowingly participating in such a transaction is ethical misconduct.

In today’s market, it is tempting to look for creative methods to sell or buy a home. However, before you agree to any creative financing proposal, consult with an attorney to determine its validity and legality.

This article is not intended to provide nor should it be relied upon for legal and financial advice. This article was originally published in the Montgomery County Sentinel the week of March 17, 2008. Copyright © 2008 Dan Krell.