I am also concerned about this. My landlord bought this place about 2 – 3 years ago, so he is losing about $1K every month.
I was talking with a couple other neighbor ladies the other night, and told them I was wondering what the landlord might do if the bank foreclosed on him. One said she didn’t think it would happen, that he had so many rentals, that he’s really rich. I said that would make him even more vulnerable, as the prices on all those investments start to fall.
She said he probably put a lot down. I didn’t tell her this, but I saw how my previous landlord financed her house (bec. I took her to Small Claims Court to get my deposit back – P.S. she has to pay back the deposit plus a penalty to me). That lady took a home equity line from her own house to buy that rental.
So the landlords are highly leveraged, in my opinion.
Now my landlord was a little too smart, and he outmaneuvered me. The lease is for 6 months, with a monthly option. So he is not locked in. Furthermore, he made me initial a box in the standard CAR Rental Agreement, which allows him to put the house on a lockbox. This happened 2 days before we moved in, our house was closing escrow, and I just went along with it. That may have been a mistake.
Your post is making me think that I need to call him to lock in the rental for a lot longer. On the other hand, if he thinks he “has us”, he may become less cooperative on the repairs.
Oh, and the other rental in our neighborhood ($300 more than mine, same floorplan but bigger yard) is still vacant. And another house is listed.
Any real estate lawyers reading this? What happens to the tenant during a foreclosure? I heard that a new buyer has to buy out the lease or continue the rental contract. But a foreclosure?
And if speculators dump their rental properties, will that increase the rental costs, as fewer properties are available? It’s better to lock in for a long lease, right?