Non-Performing Notes · Asset Management · Full-Cycle Execution
How Non-Performing Notes Get Resolved: A Real-World Case Study
Key Takeaways
- Non-performing notes don’t always require borrower cooperation to resolve — when a borrower is deceased and heirs are unresponsive, foreclosure is often the necessary and appropriate path.
- Full-cycle execution means moving from loan onboarding through foreclosure, REO acquisition, and final disposition — potentially creating a brand new performing loan in the process.
- In this real case, a non-performing HECM loan with a book value of $114,973 was resolved and the property sold for $129,000 via seller financing — resulting in approximately $13,806 in recorded gain.
- Asset condition drives disposition strategy — a poor-condition inspection led to an as-is sale rather than rehabilitation, accelerating timeline and reducing carrying costs.
- Professional note fund management requires coordination across servicers, legal counsel, custodians, and asset managers — complexity that passive investors in a fund don’t manage directly.
- For passive investors in a mortgage note fund, non-performing loan resolution is handled entirely by the fund management team — monthly distributions continue from the performing portion of the portfolio.
When most investors hear “non-performing note,” they picture a problem. A borrower who stopped paying. A legal process. Uncertainty. And in many cases, that picture isn’t wrong — non-performing loans require more work, more expertise, and more time than their performing counterparts. But the other side of that picture is what experienced note fund managers understand well: a non-performing loan purchased at the right discount, resolved through disciplined execution, can become a significant return driver for the portfolio.
This post walks through a real deal from the Labrador Lending portfolio — a non-performing HECM loan with a deceased borrower that was resolved through foreclosure, REO acquisition, and a seller-financed resale that created a brand new performing loan. Along the way, we’ll explain the key concepts, resolution strategies, and investor takeaways that make this case instructive for anyone evaluating how a mortgage note fund actually manages its assets.
What Is a Non-Performing Note?
- Non-Performing Note (NPN)
- A mortgage note where the borrower has defaulted on payments — typically defined as 90 or more days past due. Non-performing notes trade at a significant discount to face value (often 30–60% below the outstanding loan balance) because the buyer assumes the risk, work, and cost of resolving the default. Resolution may involve borrower engagement, legal process, or property disposition depending on the circumstances.
Non-performing notes sit at the higher-risk, higher-potential-return end of the mortgage note investing spectrum. The discount at which they trade creates room for experienced managers to generate returns even after absorbing the costs of resolution — but only when that resolution is executed competently and systematically.
The most important thing to understand about non-performing note resolution is that there is no single path. The right strategy depends entirely on the borrower’s situation, the property’s condition, and the legal landscape. Experienced note fund managers evaluate all available options before committing to a resolution approach.
Case Study Overview: The Asset
This case study is drawn from a real asset in the Labrador Lending portfolio. Deal specifics reflect actual acquisition, resolution, and disposition data. Property address details are omitted for privacy.
Deal Snapshot
At acquisition, the borrower was deceased with no confirmed or responsive heirs. The loan was non-performing. The property’s condition was unknown and required inspection. The combination of a deceased borrower, unclear estate status, and a loan type (HECM) with specific legal requirements created a resolution puzzle that required systematic, coordinated execution across multiple parties.
What Are the Main Non-Performing Note Resolution Strategies?
Before documenting what happened in this specific case, it’s worth understanding the full menu of resolution strategies that note fund managers evaluate when a loan goes non-performing. The right strategy depends on borrower status, property condition, equity position, and state law.
Restructuring the loan — reducing the rate, extending the term, or capitalizing arrears — can restore the loan to performing status without legal process.
The borrower (or estate) voluntarily transfers the property to the note holder, avoiding foreclosure. Faster and less costly than legal process when viable.
The borrower sells the property for less than the outstanding loan balance with note holder approval. Avoids foreclosure while recovering partial value.
Legal process transfers title to the note holder, who then controls the asset and determines the best disposition strategy.
The note holder accepts a lump-sum payoff at a negotiated discount to the outstanding balance, converting the asset to cash quickly.
The note holder sells the REO property using seller financing — creating a new performing loan and reintroducing an income-producing asset to the portfolio.
In the Dove Lane case, the combination of a deceased borrower, unresponsive heirs, and estate uncertainty eliminated the first three options from viability early. Foreclosure was the necessary path — and seller-financed resale was the optimal exit once the property was acquired.
What Is a HECM Loan and Why Does It Complicate Resolution?
- HECM (Home Equity Conversion Mortgage)
- A federally insured reverse mortgage available to homeowners aged 62 and older, administered by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). Unlike a traditional mortgage, a HECM does not require monthly payments from the borrower — instead, interest accrues and is added to the loan balance. The loan becomes due when the borrower dies, permanently vacates, or sells the property.
HECM loans introduce specific resolution complexities that standard mortgage notes do not. When a HECM borrower dies, heirs technically have options — they can sell the property, pay off the loan, or refinance into a conventional mortgage. But when heirs are unclear, unresponsive, or have no financial stake in the property, none of those options are available. The note holder must proceed through foreclosure to gain control of the asset.
HECM loans comprise a meaningful portion of the non-performing note market because their structure — no monthly payments, accruing balance — means they become due in circumstances (death, vacancy) that often don’t involve willing, cooperative parties. Experienced note fund managers with HECM resolution expertise can navigate the specific documentation, legal, and custodial requirements these loans involve, turning assets that others pass on into performing investments.
Full Deal Timeline: August 2025 – February 2026
This deal moved from onboarding to a new performing loan in approximately six months — a testament to systematic execution across multiple coordinated teams. Here’s the complete timeline:
- Title reports ordered for multiple HECM loans in the batch
- Loan onboarding initiated with servicer
- Skip tracing and insurance verification completed
- Heir search initiated; deed-in-lieu support requested
- Law firm engaged for foreclosure proceedings
- Borrower confirmed deceased; loan confirmed delinquent
- Servicing agreements finalized
- Collateral and recording process initiated
- Foreclosure path confirmed; deed-in-lieu evaluated and ruled out
- Foreclosure sale scheduled for December
- Legal process progressing on schedule
- Recording and collateral coordination continuing
- Foreclosure confirmed as sole viable resolution path
- Payoff and bid instructions prepared
- BPO (Broker Price Opinion) and property inspections completed
- Foreclosure sale completed
- Property reverted to REO — title vested in note holder
- Transition to asset disposition phase initiated
- Loan deboarded from servicer; converted to REO asset management
- Property inspected — condition determined to be poor (structural concerns and mold)
- Decision made to sell property as-is rather than rehabilitate
- Property listed at $119,000
- Property placed under contract at $129,000 — above list price
- Sale structured with seller financing
- Underwriting and closing completed
- New performing loan created for buyer
- Asset reintroduced to portfolio as income-producing investment
Outcome: From Non-Performing to New Performing Loan
Following foreclosure and REO acquisition, the property was sold for $129,000 through a seller-financed structure — $10,000 above the original listing price. The full-cycle resolution produced the following results:
A non-performing HECM loan with a deceased borrower — one of the more complex resolution scenarios in the note market — was converted into a new performing loan and a recorded gain in approximately six months through systematic, coordinated execution.
The property was listed at $119,000 and sold at $129,000 — 8.4% above asking. The seller-financing structure was a key factor: buyers who cannot qualify for conventional bank financing are often willing to pay a premium for seller-financed terms because it’s their best or only path to homeownership. This dynamic is one of the strategic advantages of seller financing as a disposition strategy for REO properties.
What Is REO and How Does Seller Financing Create a New Performing Loan?
What Is REO?
REO — real estate owned — refers to property that has reverted to the lender or note holder following a foreclosure sale where no third-party buyer met the minimum bid. The note holder takes title and becomes the property owner, responsible for insurance, taxes, maintenance, and eventual disposition.
How Seller Financing Converts REO into a Performing Loan
Rather than selling the property for cash and removing it from the income-generating portfolio, seller financing allows the note holder to sell the property while retaining a new note — creating a fresh income stream from a buyer who makes monthly payments under the agreed terms.
| Factor | Cash Sale | Seller-Financed Sale |
|---|---|---|
| Immediate capital recovered | Full proceeds at closing | Down payment only at closing |
| Ongoing income | None after sale | Monthly payments from buyer |
| Buyer pool | Limited to conventionally qualified buyers | Expanded — includes non-bankable buyers willing to pay premium |
| Sale price achievable | Market rate | Often above market due to financing premium |
| Portfolio impact | Asset exits portfolio | New performing loan enters portfolio |
| Speed of closing | Typically faster | Requires underwriting of new buyer |
What This Means for Passive Investors
For passive investors in a mortgage note fund, a case like this illustrates something critically important: non-performing loan resolution is not a failure state. It is an active management process — and when executed well, it can produce meaningful gains for the portfolio while ultimately creating a new performing asset.
When borrower-side resolution isn’t possible — as with a deceased borrower and unresponsive heirs — foreclosure is not a last resort. It’s the appropriate tool for regaining asset control and enabling a clean exit strategy.
The inspection revealed poor condition — structural issues and mold. Rather than investing in rehabilitation, the team chose to sell as-is. This decision accelerated timeline and avoided cost overruns that often erode returns on distressed property rehab projects.
Seller financing allowed the team to attract buyers outside the conventional mortgage market, achieve a price above listing, and convert an REO asset into a new income-producing loan — all in the same transaction.
This deal required alignment between servicing, legal, custodial, and asset management teams across six months. For a passive investor in a fund, this complexity is managed entirely by the fund operator — not the investor.
Passive investors benefit from a fund manager’s experience across dozens or hundreds of resolution scenarios. A fund that has successfully navigated HECM resolutions, deceased borrower situations, and REO dispositions brings institutional-grade expertise that individual note investors rarely develop on their own.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a non-performing mortgage note?
A non-performing mortgage note is a loan where the borrower has stopped making payments — typically 90 or more days past due. Non-performing notes trade at a significant discount to face value (often 30–60% below the outstanding balance) because the buyer assumes the risk and work of resolving the default. Resolution strategies include loan modification, deed-in-lieu, short sale, foreclosure, or seller-financed resale depending on the circumstances.
What happens to a mortgage note when the borrower dies?
When a borrower dies, the loan does not disappear — it becomes the responsibility of the estate or heirs. If heirs are unresponsive or there is no viable path to a negotiated resolution, the note holder may need to proceed with foreclosure to take control of the property. Once the property is acquired through foreclosure, it becomes REO and can be sold or resold using seller financing to create a new performing loan.
What is a HECM loan?
A HECM (Home Equity Conversion Mortgage) is a federally insured reverse mortgage for homeowners 62 and older. Unlike a standard mortgage, no monthly payments are required — interest accrues onto the loan balance instead. The loan becomes due when the borrower dies, moves out, or sells the property. When a HECM borrower dies with no responsive heirs, the note holder typically proceeds with foreclosure to recover the asset.
What is REO in real estate investing?
REO stands for real estate owned — property that has reverted to the lender or note holder following a foreclosure sale. The note holder takes title to the property and is responsible for its management and disposition. REO properties can be sold as-is, rehabilitated and resold, or sold via seller financing to create a new performing loan and ongoing income stream.
What is seller financing in real estate?
Seller financing is a transaction where the property seller acts as the lender — providing a loan directly to the buyer instead of the buyer obtaining a bank mortgage. The buyer makes monthly payments to the seller under agreed terms. In non-performing note resolution, seller financing allows the asset owner to sell REO property — often at a premium — while converting the asset into a new income-producing performing loan rather than a cash-out exit.
Do non-performing notes always lose money for investors?
No. Non-performing notes purchased at the right discount can generate positive returns even after the costs of resolution. Because NPNs trade at significant discounts to face value, there is often margin to absorb legal and carrying costs while still producing a gain. In the Labrador Lending Dove Lane case, a non-performing HECM with a book value of $114,973 was resolved and the property sold for $129,000 — resulting in a recorded gain of approximately $13,806.
How does this case study apply to passive investors in a mortgage note fund?
For passive investors in a mortgage note fund like the Integrity Income Fund, non-performing loan resolution is handled entirely by the fund management team. Investors do not manage servicers, engage legal counsel, or make property disposition decisions. The fund’s performing assets continue generating monthly distributions during any resolution process, while the fund manager works to recover and reinvest value from non-performing positions. This is one of the core advantages of investing through a fund versus buying individual notes directly.
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The Bottom Line
Non-performing notes are not a liability to be avoided — they are an asset class to be managed. When a fund acquires NPLs at the right discount and applies systematic, experienced resolution processes, the result can be positive returns, new performing loans, and a stronger portfolio.
The Dove Lane case illustrates what full-cycle execution looks like in practice: six months from onboarding a non-performing HECM with a deceased borrower to closing a seller-financed sale at above-list price, recording a $13,806 gain, and adding a new performing loan to the portfolio.
For accredited investors evaluating mortgage note funds, this kind of transparency — real deal data, real timelines, real outcomes — is the most important signal you can look for in a fund manager. It demonstrates not just that a fund has a strategy, but that the team has the experience and infrastructure to execute it.
References & Further Reading
- U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development — HECM (Home Equity Conversion Mortgage) Program Information
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — What Is a Reverse Mortgage?
- American Association of Private Lenders — Private Lending Industry Resources
- Labrador Lending — What Is a Mortgage Note? The Complete Guide