- This topic has 25 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 5 months ago by
bonfire.
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January 7, 2008 at 1:32 AM #11425January 7, 2008 at 6:13 AM #130820
bonfire
ParticipantAhhah! I thought so!
January 7, 2008 at 6:13 AM #131000bonfire
ParticipantAhhah! I thought so!
January 7, 2008 at 6:13 AM #131006bonfire
ParticipantAhhah! I thought so!
January 7, 2008 at 6:13 AM #131102bonfire
ParticipantAhhah! I thought so!
January 7, 2008 at 6:13 AM #131067bonfire
ParticipantAhhah! I thought so!
January 7, 2008 at 7:36 AM #130845patb
Participantall those REO’s are offsetting existing home sales and then in march
as the banks move to clear, they will seriously pricecutJanuary 7, 2008 at 7:36 AM #131025patb
Participantall those REO’s are offsetting existing home sales and then in march
as the banks move to clear, they will seriously pricecutJanuary 7, 2008 at 7:36 AM #131128patb
Participantall those REO’s are offsetting existing home sales and then in march
as the banks move to clear, they will seriously pricecutJanuary 7, 2008 at 7:36 AM #131031patb
Participantall those REO’s are offsetting existing home sales and then in march
as the banks move to clear, they will seriously pricecutJanuary 7, 2008 at 7:36 AM #131093patb
Participantall those REO’s are offsetting existing home sales and then in march
as the banks move to clear, they will seriously pricecutJanuary 7, 2008 at 7:51 AM #131098SD Realtor
ParticipantI guess I don’t take this to be much of a revelation. When a home goes to a trustee sale the second is generally wiped out. Even in a short sale the agreement by both lenders to approve a short (if there were 2 mortgages) usually the case will be a token award of a thousand bucks to the second, while the first gets the rest.
In the trustee sales the home usually conveys back to the lender for the first amount. Then the pricing of the home when it is put on the market is determined by a BPO (usually done by a broker selected by the lender) with an appraisal. Then the home gets put on the market.
The important thing will be how long the home sits on the market when it is an REO. As we saw in more distressed areas they sit longer until the lender gets his finger out of his nose and prices it more aggressively.
SD Realtor
January 7, 2008 at 7:51 AM #131133SD Realtor
ParticipantI guess I don’t take this to be much of a revelation. When a home goes to a trustee sale the second is generally wiped out. Even in a short sale the agreement by both lenders to approve a short (if there were 2 mortgages) usually the case will be a token award of a thousand bucks to the second, while the first gets the rest.
In the trustee sales the home usually conveys back to the lender for the first amount. Then the pricing of the home when it is put on the market is determined by a BPO (usually done by a broker selected by the lender) with an appraisal. Then the home gets put on the market.
The important thing will be how long the home sits on the market when it is an REO. As we saw in more distressed areas they sit longer until the lender gets his finger out of his nose and prices it more aggressively.
SD Realtor
January 7, 2008 at 7:51 AM #131036SD Realtor
ParticipantI guess I don’t take this to be much of a revelation. When a home goes to a trustee sale the second is generally wiped out. Even in a short sale the agreement by both lenders to approve a short (if there were 2 mortgages) usually the case will be a token award of a thousand bucks to the second, while the first gets the rest.
In the trustee sales the home usually conveys back to the lender for the first amount. Then the pricing of the home when it is put on the market is determined by a BPO (usually done by a broker selected by the lender) with an appraisal. Then the home gets put on the market.
The important thing will be how long the home sits on the market when it is an REO. As we saw in more distressed areas they sit longer until the lender gets his finger out of his nose and prices it more aggressively.
SD Realtor
January 7, 2008 at 7:51 AM #131030SD Realtor
ParticipantI guess I don’t take this to be much of a revelation. When a home goes to a trustee sale the second is generally wiped out. Even in a short sale the agreement by both lenders to approve a short (if there were 2 mortgages) usually the case will be a token award of a thousand bucks to the second, while the first gets the rest.
In the trustee sales the home usually conveys back to the lender for the first amount. Then the pricing of the home when it is put on the market is determined by a BPO (usually done by a broker selected by the lender) with an appraisal. Then the home gets put on the market.
The important thing will be how long the home sits on the market when it is an REO. As we saw in more distressed areas they sit longer until the lender gets his finger out of his nose and prices it more aggressively.
SD Realtor
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