How to Get $10 a Day for a B of A HAFA Short Sale
We just closed a Bank of America HAFA short sale yesterday that had started in January. This was my second Bank of America HAFA short sale closing this month. The one that closed last week was much worse by comparison. In this particular HAFA, I was fortunate to represent an extremely detail-oriented seller who had completed all of her paperwork immaculately and upon receipt. This escrow should have flowed just like clockwork, yet it took 10 months to close. Within 30 days of opening the file in Equator, we had approval from the second lender, Green Tree, and all documentation submitted and verified, including two completed BPOs. Still, it took 10 months.
By the time Bank of America gave us its first B of A HAFA short sale approval in May, the approval at Green Tree had expired. Despite our pleas, Green Tree closed the file. We reopened the file at Green Tree and started over. There were the usual battles at Green Tree: calling the seller at work, harassing the seller for payment, threats of short sale charge off, and finally we said: fine, send the file to charge off. See, this is the thing — Green Tree can reopen and re-approve a file in 2 to 3 weeks, what it takes Bank of America 3 to 4 months to do.
To add to the horrors, Bank of America then abruptly closed the file early July. It was a mistake. We had asked for an extension but no, they closed the file. We tried to reverse the soft decline, Tweeted the Social Media Team, escalated the file to the Executive Office, but to no avail. Of course, by this time, Green Tree approved the short sale a second time, while we started the process over with Bank of America.
Bank of America assigned an escalation specialist to the file. This negotiator managed to get approval two months later, insisting her performance was perfectly satisfactory. You’re telling me that a HAFA initiated in January and closing in October is perfectly satisfactory? This is why many sellers would rather poke out their eyeballs than do a Bank of America HAFA short sale. The only benefit to a seller is that $3,000 payment. Which worked out to a return of $10 a day.
I reflect on this and wonder what we could have possibly done differently. The answer I come up with is not to have applied for a B of A HAFA short sale at Bank of America. But when a seller insists on a HAFA, that’s what I do. It’s not my decision to make. This particular seller figured she had 10 months to wait, so it didn’t matter. As long as she closed by the end of the year, she was satisfied, but I wouldn’t go so far as to say she was happy about it.
The other element in this transaction was the buyer. The extremely patient, dedicated and committed buyer. We selected the right buyer, which is always key to a successful closing. It could have been much, much worse. I could have had to sell this Elk Grove short sale three times instead of only once.
As an experienced Sacramento short sale agent, I have been closing Bank of America HAFA short sales for a long time. I am Equator Platinum Certified and a Certified HAFA Specialist. If you absolutely want to do a HAFA short sale through Bank of America, I doubt there is much I haven’t seen, and I’ll be happy to help you close it. Just be forewarned.