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What real estate investors need to know about buying properties at foreclosure auctions

What real estate investors need to know about buying properties at foreclosure auctions

The other day I was talking to my brother and he mentioned to me that he was starting to educate himself about home auctions because he was interested in purchasing his next home at auction. This was a new concept to him, but the more he researched it, the more he like the potential deals. [...]

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ForeclosureRadar.com releases the California Foreclosure Report

ForeclosureRadar.com recently released its revamped California Foreclosure Report.

This is a must-read for the California real estate investor. The short report draws some interesting conclusions about foreclosure filing rates (123% over last year), inventory levels, discounting, and other statistics.

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5 Common Myths about buying REO / Bank-owned properties

Over on John Barry’s blog My Life in Real Estate, he mentions an article put out by the Southland Regional Association of Realtors, explaining 5 common myths regarding the sale of REO properties.

This reminder comes at a particularly handy time. With bank foreclosures representing such a large portion of the activity in the market, as real estate investors it’s very helpful to receive a deeper explanation of some of those things we begin to take for granted. Make sure to read the whole article if you have a chance; in the meantime, here’s a high level view of the five common myths that are cleared up.

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The Basics of Real Estate Investing: Buying Bank-Owned Properties

The practice of buying bank-owned properties is getting a lot of attention because it represents such a big, and growing, supply of ready-for-sale housing.

When a borrower stops paying, one of the principal recourses a lender has is to take over the property against which the loan was secured, and sell that asset to try to recover its money. Foreclosure can be a long process, but at the end of it, if no other way is found of settling that debt, the ownership of the property will fall to the bank. Banks are good at lending money but not at managing properties, so generally the banks don’t want to hold on to the properties and will usually try to sell them quickly. Traditionally the holding and selling of real estate this is handled by the “Real Estate Owned” department of the bank, thus today’s “REO” for short hand …

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