Published: August 03, 2011
C.A.R. Lender Satisfaction Survey Finds Short-Sale Process Still Broken; Lenders Make No Material Improvement
LOS ANGELES - (BUSINESS WIRE) - More REALTORS characterized closing short-sale transactions
as "difficult" or "extremely difficult" than late last year, indicating
that lenders' and servicers' short-sale procedures have shown little
improvement in the past six months, according to the latest Lender
Satisfaction Survey conducted by the CALIFORNIA
ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS (C.A.R.).
More than three-fourths (77 percent) of California REALTORS
reported closing short-sale transactions as "difficult" or "extremely
difficult," up from 70 percent in December, according to the C.A.R.
survey. The survey, a follow-up to a survey conducted in December 2010,
gauges REALTORS' experience working with lenders in their
most recent transaction. The majority of those surveyed dealt with
short-sale transactions - transactions in which a homeowner with a
demonstrated hardship negotiates with the lender or lenders to accept
less than the balance owed on the mortgage.
"Despite promises by lenders to improve their short-sale processes,
clearly, they are not doing enough," said C.A.R. President Beth L.
Peerce. "Instead of helping struggling homeowners who need to sell and
willing home buyers who want to buy, lenders have created man-made
roadblocks that have caused real estate gridlock and hindered a
desperately needed housing recovery."
REALTORS continued to cite communication issues as the most
frequent obstacles in working with lenders and servicers during the
short-sale process. These communication issues include lenders' slow
response time to a short-sale package (cited by 66 percent of REALTORS),
poor communication with lender representatives (cited by 55 percent of
REALTORS), and repeated requests for documentation (cited by
51 percent of REALTORS). More than 15 percent of REALTORS®
indicated that the lender foreclosed on the home before the short-sale
transaction could be completed.
Two-thirds (67 percent) of REALTORS said it took more than
60 days for lenders or servicers to return a written response on the
approval or disapproval of the short-sale agreement submitted.
Additionally, 43 percent of REALTORS said it took the lender
more than five days to return any form of communication. Less than 20
percent said lenders responded "within one business day" or less.
Overall satisfaction with the lenders REALTORS worked with
in their most recent short-sale transaction remained extremely poor,
with 75 percent saying they were "not satisfied" or "not at all
satisfied," up from 67 percent in December. Moreover, nearly eight in 10
REALTORS (78 percent) said they were "not likely" or "not at
all likely" to refer buyers to the lender for future home purchases.
"With short sales accounting for a fifth of all transactions in
California, it's crucial that lenders improve their short-sale process
so that a meaningful recovery in the housing market and overall economy
can occur," Peerce added.
In an effort to educate consumers and its members about short sales,
C.A.R. created a website (http://www.shortsalescalifornia.org/)
earlier this spring to help clarify the process. The association
recently polled its members via the website and asked them to rate which
lender was the easiest to work with. Of the top four lenders, 40 percent
said Wells Fargo was the easiest, while 23 percent cited Bank of
America; 17 percent said JP Morgan Chase; and 11 percent said Citi.
C.A.R.'s Lender Satisfaction Survey was conducted in June 2011 to gauge
REALTORS' experience in working with lenders or
servicers during their most recent transaction, the majority of which
were short sales. Most of the REALTORS surveyed dealt with
Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and JP Morgan Chase in their most recent
transaction. The latest survey findings show that the situation has not
materially improved in the six months since C.A.R. first surveyed its
members.
Leading the way... in California real estate for more than
100 years, the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS (www.car.org)
is one of the largest state trade organizations in the United States,
with more than 160,000 members dedicated to the advancement of
professionalism in real estate. C.A.R. is headquartered in Los Angeles.

CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®
Lotus Lou,
213-739-8304
lotusl@car.org
Copyright © 2012, Business Wire, Inc., All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2012, NewsBlaze,
Daily News