Home › Forums › Closed Forums › Buying and Selling RE › Realtors Explanation
- This topic has 30 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 4 months ago by
SD Realtor.
-
AuthorPosts
-
August 10, 2009 at 10:36 PM #444213August 10, 2009 at 10:43 PM #443443
jpinpb
ParticipantNeed a username and password to sign in to your link
August 10, 2009 at 10:43 PM #443637jpinpb
ParticipantNeed a username and password to sign in to your link
August 10, 2009 at 10:43 PM #443976jpinpb
ParticipantNeed a username and password to sign in to your link
August 10, 2009 at 10:43 PM #444045jpinpb
ParticipantNeed a username and password to sign in to your link
August 10, 2009 at 10:43 PM #444223jpinpb
ParticipantNeed a username and password to sign in to your link
August 11, 2009 at 12:11 AM #443527BGinRB
Participant[quote=jpinpb]Need a username and password to sign in to your link[/quote]
You can register, it is free.
Ray, it sold to a 3rd party for $358,100.00.
What is confusing you?
With fidelityasap, if it says ‘sold’, it got sold to a 3rd party.
If there was no buyer it says ‘back to bene’.
‘Cancelled’ – cured or more likely short sale that went through.August 11, 2009 at 12:11 AM #443722BGinRB
Participant[quote=jpinpb]Need a username and password to sign in to your link[/quote]
You can register, it is free.
Ray, it sold to a 3rd party for $358,100.00.
What is confusing you?
With fidelityasap, if it says ‘sold’, it got sold to a 3rd party.
If there was no buyer it says ‘back to bene’.
‘Cancelled’ – cured or more likely short sale that went through.August 11, 2009 at 12:11 AM #444061BGinRB
Participant[quote=jpinpb]Need a username and password to sign in to your link[/quote]
You can register, it is free.
Ray, it sold to a 3rd party for $358,100.00.
What is confusing you?
With fidelityasap, if it says ‘sold’, it got sold to a 3rd party.
If there was no buyer it says ‘back to bene’.
‘Cancelled’ – cured or more likely short sale that went through.August 11, 2009 at 12:11 AM #444130BGinRB
Participant[quote=jpinpb]Need a username and password to sign in to your link[/quote]
You can register, it is free.
Ray, it sold to a 3rd party for $358,100.00.
What is confusing you?
With fidelityasap, if it says ‘sold’, it got sold to a 3rd party.
If there was no buyer it says ‘back to bene’.
‘Cancelled’ – cured or more likely short sale that went through.August 11, 2009 at 12:11 AM #444308BGinRB
Participant[quote=jpinpb]Need a username and password to sign in to your link[/quote]
You can register, it is free.
Ray, it sold to a 3rd party for $358,100.00.
What is confusing you?
With fidelityasap, if it says ‘sold’, it got sold to a 3rd party.
If there was no buyer it says ‘back to bene’.
‘Cancelled’ – cured or more likely short sale that went through.August 11, 2009 at 8:36 AM #443608SD Realtor
ParticipantRay it is no different then any of the transactions. The opening bid has nothing to do with the amount owed on the loan. Sometimes the opening bid is as high as the loan balance and sometimes it is not. Sometimes, as in this case, the home is purchased by a private party and sometimes it is not. All you can see here is the sales price. You don’t know if there are tax liens on the home, you don’t know if there is a cracked slab, you don’t know if it is owner or tenant occupied, you don’t know the shape of the home, you don’t know if there are IRS liens… In short there are so many mitigating factors that we do not know, that it is hard to tell if this is aggressive pricing or not. Chances are, the lender did get a BPO done prior to the auction to assist them in pricing.
If the answers to the above questions are no, then the buyer may have got a pretty smoking deal…
Most sales fall into postponed due to mutual agreement, or bene request. Some of them are cancelled, this is usually due to an accepted short sale or mod. Still others are cancelled due to bk.
August 11, 2009 at 8:36 AM #443803SD Realtor
ParticipantRay it is no different then any of the transactions. The opening bid has nothing to do with the amount owed on the loan. Sometimes the opening bid is as high as the loan balance and sometimes it is not. Sometimes, as in this case, the home is purchased by a private party and sometimes it is not. All you can see here is the sales price. You don’t know if there are tax liens on the home, you don’t know if there is a cracked slab, you don’t know if it is owner or tenant occupied, you don’t know the shape of the home, you don’t know if there are IRS liens… In short there are so many mitigating factors that we do not know, that it is hard to tell if this is aggressive pricing or not. Chances are, the lender did get a BPO done prior to the auction to assist them in pricing.
If the answers to the above questions are no, then the buyer may have got a pretty smoking deal…
Most sales fall into postponed due to mutual agreement, or bene request. Some of them are cancelled, this is usually due to an accepted short sale or mod. Still others are cancelled due to bk.
August 11, 2009 at 8:36 AM #444141SD Realtor
ParticipantRay it is no different then any of the transactions. The opening bid has nothing to do with the amount owed on the loan. Sometimes the opening bid is as high as the loan balance and sometimes it is not. Sometimes, as in this case, the home is purchased by a private party and sometimes it is not. All you can see here is the sales price. You don’t know if there are tax liens on the home, you don’t know if there is a cracked slab, you don’t know if it is owner or tenant occupied, you don’t know the shape of the home, you don’t know if there are IRS liens… In short there are so many mitigating factors that we do not know, that it is hard to tell if this is aggressive pricing or not. Chances are, the lender did get a BPO done prior to the auction to assist them in pricing.
If the answers to the above questions are no, then the buyer may have got a pretty smoking deal…
Most sales fall into postponed due to mutual agreement, or bene request. Some of them are cancelled, this is usually due to an accepted short sale or mod. Still others are cancelled due to bk.
August 11, 2009 at 8:36 AM #444209SD Realtor
ParticipantRay it is no different then any of the transactions. The opening bid has nothing to do with the amount owed on the loan. Sometimes the opening bid is as high as the loan balance and sometimes it is not. Sometimes, as in this case, the home is purchased by a private party and sometimes it is not. All you can see here is the sales price. You don’t know if there are tax liens on the home, you don’t know if there is a cracked slab, you don’t know if it is owner or tenant occupied, you don’t know the shape of the home, you don’t know if there are IRS liens… In short there are so many mitigating factors that we do not know, that it is hard to tell if this is aggressive pricing or not. Chances are, the lender did get a BPO done prior to the auction to assist them in pricing.
If the answers to the above questions are no, then the buyer may have got a pretty smoking deal…
Most sales fall into postponed due to mutual agreement, or bene request. Some of them are cancelled, this is usually due to an accepted short sale or mod. Still others are cancelled due to bk.
-
AuthorPosts
- The forum ‘Buying and Selling RE’ is closed to new topics and replies.
