Life Cycle of a Note
How a mortgage note is originated, becomes non-performing, gets charged off, sold to investors, and resolved.
Every mortgage note begins the same way: a borrower needs money to buy a home, and a lender provides it. What happens next -- whether the loan performs for 30 years or defaults in 18 months -- determines where note investors enter the picture and how they generate returns. Understanding this full life cycle is the foundation for every strategy covered in this course.
Origination: The Note Is Born
When a borrower purchases a home with financing, they sign two documents. The promissory note is the borrower's promise to repay the debt under specific terms -- principal amount, interest rate, monthly payment, and maturity date. The mortgage (or deed of trust, depending on the state) creates a lien against the property, giving the lender the legal right to force a sale if the borrower defaults.
The mortgage is recorded in the county's public records, making the lien visible to the world. The promissory note is not recorded -- it stays in the lender's collateral file as a private contract between borrower and lender.
At this point, the loan is performing. The borrower makes monthly payments of principal and interest. The bank earns its return. Everything is working as designed.
The Two Paths
Once originated, a mortgage note can only go in one of two directions:
Path 1: The loan performs. The borrower makes every payment on time, the loan amortizes down to zero, and the mortgage is released from the property title. The lender earned its interest, the borrower owns their home free and clear, and the transaction is complete. Performing loans that have never missed a payment rarely appear on the secondary market as individual sales -- they trade in large securitized packages among institutions.
Path 2: The borrower defaults. Life happens. Job loss, medical bills, divorce, death in the family, economic downturns. The borrower stops making payments. This is where the story gets interesting for note investors.
From Default to Charge-Off
When a borrower misses payments, the loan moves through escalating stages of delinquency:
| Stage | Timeline | What Happens |
|---|---|---|
| 30-day late | 1 missed payment | Late fee assessed; servicer sends notices |
| 60-day late | 2 missed payments | Additional notices; lender begins tracking closely |
| 90-day late | 3 missed payments | Loan is considered seriously delinquent; loss mitigation options begin |
| 120+ days late | 4+ missed payments | Loan approaches charge-off threshold |
| Charge-off | Typically 120-180 days | Bank removes loan from balance sheet as an earning asset |
The charge-off is a critical event. It is an accounting action, not a legal one. The bank writes the loan off its books and takes an accounting loss on the non-performing debt. But the debt itself does not disappear. The borrower still owes the money. The lien is still attached to the property. The loan is still legally enforceable.
What changes is the bank's incentive. Once a loan is charged off, the bank has already absorbed the hit. Now they want to recover whatever cash they can. And for most banks -- especially large institutions dealing with thousands of defaults simultaneously -- the most efficient path is to sell these non-performing loans (NPLs) into the secondary market.
The Bank's Options
Before selling, the bank has several options to deal with a defaulted loan. Understanding these is important because they are the same options available to you as a note investor:
- Loan modification -- Restructure the terms (lower the rate, extend the term, forgive arrears) to get the borrower paying again
- Short sale -- Allow the borrower to sell the property for less than the amount owed, with the lender accepting the proceeds as settlement
- Discounted payoff (DPO) -- Accept a lump-sum payment for less than the full balance owed
- Deed in lieu of foreclosure -- The borrower voluntarily signs the deed to the property over to the lender, avoiding foreclosure
- Foreclosure -- The lender forces a sale of the property through the legal process to recover its secured interest
- Sell the loan -- Transfer the debt to another investor at a discount
Large banks often lack the resources, flexibility, or institutional desire to work with individual defaulted borrowers one by one. A bank with 5,000 non-performing loans cannot have a personal conversation with each borrower about their situation. Foreclosing on all of them is expensive and slow, especially in judicial foreclosure states where the process takes one to three years.
So they sell. In bulk. At steep discounts.
Institutional Bulk Sales and the Private Note Buyer
When banks sell non-performing loans, they typically sell in large pools -- hundreds or thousands of loans at a time. The initial buyers are often hedge funds and large institutional investors who have the capital to acquire these bulk portfolios.
These institutional buyers then do one of two things:
- Resolve the loans themselves -- working out modifications, payoffs, and foreclosures at scale
- Break the pools into smaller packages and resell them to smaller private investors
This is where individual note investors enter the picture. You are buying loans that originated at a bank, were charged off, sold in bulk to an institution, and then broken down into smaller packages for resale. In some cases, you are buying directly from banks or credit unions that sell in smaller quantities. Either way, you are purchasing the debt at a significant discount to the unpaid principal balance.
Typical NPL pricing: Non-performing first liens trade at roughly 8% to 83% of the property's fair market value, depending on equity, condition, and borrower status. Non-performing second liens trade at roughly 5% to 65% of the unpaid principal balance, depending on senior lien status, equity, and borrower cooperativeness.
The Three Questions
Once you own a non-performing note, the resolution process begins. And it starts with three simple questions you ask the borrower:
- What happened? -- Why did you stop paying? Job loss? Medical emergency? Divorce?
- Where are you now? -- Are you still in the home? Do you have income? Are you in bankruptcy?
- What do you want to do? -- Do you want to keep your home? Are you ready to move on? Can you make a payment?
These three questions drive every resolution strategy. The borrower's answers tell you which path to pursue.
Exit Strategies: Through the Borrower vs. Through the Property
Resolution strategies fall into two broad categories based on whether the outcome involves the borrower keeping or leaving the property:
Borrower-Centric Resolutions (Through the Borrower)
These are outcomes where you work directly with the borrower to resolve the debt:
| Strategy | How It Works | Best When |
|---|---|---|
| Full payoff | Borrower pays the entire balance owed | Borrower has access to funds (savings, family, 401k) |
| Discounted payoff (DPO) | Borrower pays a lump sum for less than the full balance | Borrower can access partial funds; you bought at a deep discount |
| Loan modification | You restructure the terms to make payments affordable | Borrower wants to stay, has income, but cannot afford original terms |
| Structured settlement | Borrower makes several lump-sum payments over a short period to pay off the loan | Borrower can gather funds but not all at once |
Property-Centric Resolutions (Through the Property)
These are outcomes where the property itself becomes the path to recovery:
| Strategy | How It Works | Best When |
|---|---|---|
| Short sale | Borrower sells property to a third party; you accept proceeds as settlement | Property has value but borrower wants to move on |
| Deed in lieu | Borrower signs the deed to you voluntarily | Borrower has no interest in the property; you want the real estate |
| Cash for keys | You pay the borrower to vacate and sign over the deed | Borrower is occupying but has no financial means to resolve the debt |
| Foreclosure | Legal process to force a sale and recover your secured interest | Borrower is unresponsive or unwilling to cooperate; last resort |
In practice, second lien investors tend to pursue borrower-centric resolutions far more often. The borrower is usually still paying their first mortgage, which signals they want to stay in the home. That emotional equity -- their desire to keep their house -- is the leverage that makes modifications and payoffs possible.
First lien investors encounter more property-centric resolutions because the stakes are higher and the borrower may have already abandoned the property.
Re-Performing Loans: The Flip Strategy
One powerful strategy combines resolution and resale. When you modify a non-performing loan and the borrower starts making consistent payments, that loan becomes a re-performing loan (RPL). After 6 to 12 months of consistent payments -- called seasoning -- you can sell the re-performing note to a passive investor who wants cash flow.
This is the "fix and flip" of note investing. You buy a broken loan cheaply, fix it by working with the borrower, and sell the now-performing asset at a premium. The returns can be substantial because your cost basis (what you paid for the NPL) is far below what a passive investor will pay for a seasoned, cash-flowing note.
Why This Matters
The life cycle of a note is not just background information. It is the operating framework for every decision you will make as a note investor:
- Your acquisition strategy depends on where in the life cycle a loan sits when you buy it
- Your pricing depends on the borrower's status, the property's value, and the likelihood of each resolution outcome
- Your due diligence is designed to verify exactly where the loan is in this cycle and what options are available
- Your returns are determined by how effectively you move a loan from its current state to a resolved state
The next lesson explores how this entire system came to exist -- the history of the secondary mortgage market and how private note investors found their place in it.
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