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nostradamus
ParticipantNot exactly answering the original question, this relates more to what kewp said: You can go to the bank websites and see what they have for sale. As you can see here, Countrywide has over $3B in foreclosed homes for sale. It does not list homes they own but are not selling, which would be a very interesting statistic indeed. The data in that link comes from Countrwide's own website:
nostradamus
ParticipantArticles abound.
bloomberg says:
17.9 million bank-owned homes sit vacant. Of those, 2.07M for sale => less than 9% of bank-owned homes have hit the market.Here’s another take.
nostradamus
ParticipantArticles abound.
bloomberg says:
17.9 million bank-owned homes sit vacant. Of those, 2.07M for sale => less than 9% of bank-owned homes have hit the market.Here’s another take.
nostradamus
ParticipantArticles abound.
bloomberg says:
17.9 million bank-owned homes sit vacant. Of those, 2.07M for sale => less than 9% of bank-owned homes have hit the market.Here’s another take.
nostradamus
ParticipantArticles abound.
bloomberg says:
17.9 million bank-owned homes sit vacant. Of those, 2.07M for sale => less than 9% of bank-owned homes have hit the market.Here’s another take.
nostradamus
ParticipantArticles abound.
bloomberg says:
17.9 million bank-owned homes sit vacant. Of those, 2.07M for sale => less than 9% of bank-owned homes have hit the market.Here’s another take.
nostradamus
ParticipantThis is all true and describes the inherent risks of buying foreclosures; however, it is also a great point to use when haggling over price.
nostradamus
ParticipantThis is all true and describes the inherent risks of buying foreclosures; however, it is also a great point to use when haggling over price.
nostradamus
ParticipantThis is all true and describes the inherent risks of buying foreclosures; however, it is also a great point to use when haggling over price.
nostradamus
ParticipantThis is all true and describes the inherent risks of buying foreclosures; however, it is also a great point to use when haggling over price.
nostradamus
ParticipantThis is all true and describes the inherent risks of buying foreclosures; however, it is also a great point to use when haggling over price.
nostradamus
ParticipantHey hunny bunny
It’s safe if you pay due diligence. You can’t be lazy about the inspections.
“Where is” seems a strange thing to say about a house. Are you going to buy a house then move it somewhere else?
“all it’s faults”. Is it located directly on an earthquake fault line?
The likely case is the house was totally thrashed by the previous owner when it got repo’d. This happens a lot.
nostradamus
ParticipantHey hunny bunny
It’s safe if you pay due diligence. You can’t be lazy about the inspections.
“Where is” seems a strange thing to say about a house. Are you going to buy a house then move it somewhere else?
“all it’s faults”. Is it located directly on an earthquake fault line?
The likely case is the house was totally thrashed by the previous owner when it got repo’d. This happens a lot.
nostradamus
ParticipantHey hunny bunny
It’s safe if you pay due diligence. You can’t be lazy about the inspections.
“Where is” seems a strange thing to say about a house. Are you going to buy a house then move it somewhere else?
“all it’s faults”. Is it located directly on an earthquake fault line?
The likely case is the house was totally thrashed by the previous owner when it got repo’d. This happens a lot.
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