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Updated about 5 years ago, 09/11/2019
Legal? $800k mortgage on a $60k property
A rural property with a run-down residential manufactured home worth $60k; is there any legal means the owner was able to take out a mortgage on it for $800k?
@Serenity Ji I have no idea about the legality of it but no one will lend you on it.
I’m asking because it has been done already (not by me).
I guess it depends on how large the rural property is. If its 320 acres of farmland, the house is only a small portion of the property value.
It’s a residential parcel; 5 acres total. Land valued at 50k, building on site valued at 10k.
- Real Estate Professional
- West Palm Beach, FL
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Read the mtg document.
@Serenity Ji. If I had to guess a bunch of “private investors” lended money on this property and no one checked to see what other liens there were. I believe this happened in Kansas City a while back. Don’t remember all the details but end result was dozens of mortgages on individual properties that were basically worthless
This could be part of a cross collateralization type loan, were several properties are part of the collateral for one large loan. For example each property may only be worth $200,000 and 10 of these properties are collateral for one $800,000 loan, while each property would be upside down and seem to be over encumbered but combined they are only at 40% LTV.... The loan recorded on each property will still show as $800,000 not a fraction of the total loan amount.
Textbook fraud.
They have been property flipping a handful of various residential
locations back and forth between their business partner, each time
increasing the supposedly sales price by 100-200k, and eventually take
out a large mortgage on said properties. No renovations are done, and
the properties are typical single family household types.
- Lender
- Lake Oswego OR Summerlin, NV
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Originally posted by @Caleb Heimsoth:
@Serenity Ji. If I had to guess a bunch of “private investors” lended money on this property and no one checked to see what other liens there were. I believe this happened in Kansas City a while back. Don’t remember all the details but end result was dozens of mortgages on individual properties that were basically worthless
marquis properties Chad Duetcher is who your probably thinking of.
this could be part of a cross collateral.. IE lender just securing up a bunch of different properties..
- Jay Hinrichs
- Podcast Guest on Show #222
- Lender
- Lake Oswego OR Summerlin, NV
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Originally posted by @Ryan R.:
This could be part of a cross collateralization type loan, were several properties are part of the collateral for one large loan. For example each property may only be worth $200,000 and 10 of these properties are collateral for one $800,000 loan, while each property would be upside down and seem to be over encumbered but combined they are only at 40% LTV.... The loan recorded on each property will still show as $800,000 not a fraction of the total loan amount.
sorry did not catch your reply and posted the same thing..
- Jay Hinrichs
- Podcast Guest on Show #222
@Serenity Ji move on.