HAFA (Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives) short sale rules may help Minnesota home sellers

Posted: February 24th, 2010 | Author: admin | Filed under: Misc Real Estate | 2 Comments »

Minnesota homeowners struggling to sell their homes in a short sale are getting some relief, thanks to the federal government’s Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives, or HAFA, program. Up to now, many short sales — in which the lender accepts a sale of the property for less than the full amount owed — have taken months to complete. Sometimes, the complex and lengthy process has failed, resulting in foreclosure.
 
HAFA establishes streamlined short sale rules and incentivizes borrowers and lenders to work together to avoid foreclosure. The rules — in effect between April 5, 2010, and Dec. 31, 2012 — also are intended to speed up the short sale process.
 
Prior to HAFA, homeowners often listed their home for sale without an idea of what the lender would accept.  Under HAFA, borrowers receive preapproved short sale terms from the lender prior to putting the home on the market.
 
Eligibility requirements
The HAFA guidelines apply to lenders who voluntarily participate in the HAMP program. The Department of Housing and Urban Development says more than 100 servicers have signed up to participate in HAMP, covering more than 89 percent of mortgage debt outstanding in the country.
To be eligible for HAFA, homeowners must first apply for a loan modification through the Home Affordable Modification Program, or HAMP. Owners who do not qualify for a loan modification or miss payments during the initial loan modification period qualify for HAFA.
Other HAFA requirements include:
·         Property is principal residence.
·         Mortgage originated before Jan. 1, 2009.
·         Mortgage is owned or guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.
·         Borrower is delinquent or default is foreseeable.
·         Homeowner demonstrates hardship.
·         Borrower’s total monthly housing payment exceeds 31 percent of gross income.
·         Unpaid principal does not exceed $729,750.
 
According to HAFA rules, lenders now must offer a short sale in writing to the borrower within 30 days if the borrower does not qualify for or complete a loan modification. Borrowers then must respond within 14 days to the lender’s short sale agreement.
 
When a purchase offer is made, borrowers must submit the sales contract to the lender within three days, along with the buyers’ mortgage preapproval and the status of negotiations with other lien holders on the seller’s property.
 
Finally, lenders must approve or deny the contract within 10 days.
 
HAFA rules also state that lenders must release borrowers from the obligation to repay the difference between the sales price and the loan amount. No deficiency judgments are allowed for a first or second loan.


2 Comments on “HAFA (Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives) short sale rules may help Minnesota home sellers”

  1. 1 Jennsellshouses said at 9:25 am on February 24th, 2010:

    This sounds nice on the surface but the problem with this is that they make borrowers attempt a loan modification first. I have clients who have waited over a year to get accepted into that program. There is going to be a huge backlog of loan mod applications because of this. No money has been allocated to create jobs so there are more personal to help deal with this crisis.. If your home is so far underwater no type of modification will save it. It only delays the inevitable. I can understand why the banks created this provision but it\’s only creating a bottleneck.

  2. 2 Steele V. Propp said at 10:55 am on February 24th, 2010:

    Just a clarification but these are guidelines as opposed to statutes or rules. The lending institution is voluntarily agreeing to follow these.

    It is also important to note that secondary lien holders do not have to agree.

    The good news is that most of the major lenders out there have signed on for the program.

    We’ll see…


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