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Updated over 10 years ago,

User Stats

607
Posts
250
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Annette Hibbler
  • Real Estate Consultant
  • Brighton, MI
250
Votes |
607
Posts

10 REASONS FORECLOSURES ARE TOXIC

Annette Hibbler
  • Real Estate Consultant
  • Brighton, MI
Posted

10 REASONS FORECLOSURES ARE TOXIC

The following observations are based on my own personal experiences with foreclosures over the last three years.  They are my own opinion, thoughts and conclusions and is meant as "food for thought".  These are the many reasons why I now tend to avoid foreclosures more often than not.

  1. 1. Competition. It's the most popular place that newbie investors and not so new investors will go to. The key to any investment is to secure property at a discount. Many investors would rather avoid tracking down a property owner and calling him/her. What's easier to find than a bank REO property?
  2. 2. No guarantee the bank receives your bid. Because you have to go through a RE agent in order to place a formal bid on a foreclosure, you’re reliant on the RE agent’s sense of morality, honesty and work ethic. Most RE agents shy away from foreclosures because it’s too much work for too little commissions. Here’s another thought, how do you know that the listing agent is really submitting your bids and not their own? They have direct contact to with the bank. You just don’t know if the bank ever received your bid.
  3. 3. Too easy to overpay.  More often than not, your bidding against a lot of other investors or the listing agent. The listing agent could get you to raise your bid higher and higher, thereby, shrinking your profit margin. The listing agent is motivated to raise your offer and look like a rock star to the bank (and their broker) so the bank will send them more listings. It’s not unheard of for listing agents to submit a bid in order to get you into a “multiple offer” situation and encourage you to raise your offer at least once or twice. I’m not saying this happens frequently, quite frankly I don’t know if it does. I am just pointing out that the motive and opportunity does exist.
  4. 4. Long cumbersome closings!  More often than not, when it comes to banks, the right hand has no clue what the left hand is doing. By the time they wade through the mountain of paperwork they’ve accumulated your looking at six months to nine months.
  5. 5. Too much red tape and too many hoops to jump through. 
  6. 6. Banks Sometimes Try to Back Out. This has happened to me twice.  If the bank takes a second look at your deal and determines that actually you’re getting too good a deal, they will try repeatedly to cancel the closing using as many excuses as possible.
  7. 7. Not all lenders are in the USA. This just complicates matter ten times over because they are unfamiliar with your states particular closing practices. Even when banks are located in California, as is often the case, they don’t take the time to investigate the closing process in say, New Jersey or New York. Things that should have been done are neglected because they assume all states have the same procedures.
  8. 8. Deed Restrictions. Foreclosed properties often come with deed restrictions that will prevent an investor from flipping the property quickly. On the east coast, deed restrictions usually restrict buyers for a period of three months.
  9. 9. Off shore title agencies. Many banks use off-shore title companies that haven’t a clue what their doing and do not speak english fluently. Information often gets misdirected or lost and these title agencies are completely unfamiliar with the closing process of your particular state.
  10. 10.  "Don't Bother Me!"  Agents assigned by the bank are often uncooperative because their commissions are a fraction of what they would normally demand from a seller. They tend to be very “mouthy” and slow to respond.  In one instance, it took me nearly three weeks to get the bank assigned agent to let me into the property.

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