Real Estate News & Updates from the Monadnock Region
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According to several industry sources the average value of bank owned, REO Properties, has actually increased in the last years while the value of non-bank owned real estate has dropped on average! There are several reasons in the realm of conventional wisdom as to why this is happening; the most common reason given is that REO properties are being bought up by investment groups and turned into rentals thus driving up the price of REO’s on average. While this certainly is a factor there are other factors that are probably more important to the change in real estate values that I see happening as a “boots on the ground REALTOR”.

Here’s how I see it. The initial wave of foreclosures was for the most part badly maintained and marginal properties: no real surprise that the most marginal home owners were the least able to maintain and upgrade their homes and least able to hang on through tough, tougher and tougher economic times. These homes languished off the market as so called “shadow inventory” for months and in many cases years due to a hostile regulatory and legal environment in which mortgage holders found themselves, thus slowing up the process of foreclosure, resale and return of these residential assets to productive use. No news there really. What the facts recently made public noted about rising REO prices and declining price on non-bank owned real estate indicates is not that we are “moving toward the middle” but in-fact indicate that we are continuing to crater the housing market in slow motion.

This pattern of rising REO value reflects exactly what many experienced REO REALTORS have noted over the last six to nine months: we are getting better quality inventory. The better quality inventory is the result of the economic damage moving up the food chain from the economic bottom into the middle and above. The middle class buyer that bought his house at a fair market price in 2009 is likely to find that when he goes to sell his home today it’s worth the same or a little less and that any improvements he made have added little or no value. So, if they can’t hang on and they can’t sell they let it go. Thus leading to a better class REO property and putting further and continuing pressure on the middle of the market.

What does it all mean? It means that there is no foreseeable improvement coming for non-REO properties and that REO properties will continue to dominate the residential real estate market. Warren Buffet is right: single family homes are likely to continue to be an excellent investment for those who can“buy and hold” but only for those who can buy and hold either as owner occupants or as investors looking at increasingly higher and higher rents over the foreseeable future.

 

By Dick Thackston CRB, ABR, ABRM

Broker NH, MA & VT

By Dick Thackston

I hear this question all the time from people who make offers on bank owned properties. The story generally goes this way: a buyer has been looking for a home in a certain area for six months, in a certain price range, let’s say between $150,000 and $170,000, then a property goes to foreclosure in their desired neighborhood. The buyer is aware of the foreclosure and contacts us about looking at the home before the bank puts it’s on the market. They wait a few weeks while the bank does appraisals to determine the Fair Market Value, FMV, of the property. The bank determines that the home is worth $165,000 so they put the home on the market at $159,900.

We schedule a showing with the buyers and they immediately are excited about the home after the look at it! Good News! They go home to think about it; the next day they call our real estate office for an appointment to make an offer.

When we meet to write up the offer they decide they want to offer $130,000 because they’ve “heard” that banks will take 20% off the asking price. As a buyer’s agent I advise them that their offer is un-realistically low but the buyer insists and I submit the offer.

The bank immediately rejects the offer without a counter proposal. The buyer is mad and says: “Why won’t the bank accept the offer I made?”

Here’s the answer to the question. The bank that owns the property has a responsibility to obtain the best price they possibly can to pay back the money owed on the property. They know, as does the buyer that the property is fairly priced. What the buyer doesn’t know or understand or believe is that the bank can wait.

The bank can wait because interest rates are at historic lows. Here’s what the bank sees financially: how much do they can how much do they loose by not taking this offer. The buyer’s offer is $29,000 below the asking price. The bank will figure how long it can carry the property to be in the same place assuming the bank’s cost to carry the property calculated at 3% their cost to carry the difference is $72.50 per month. So for a $29,000 difference the bank can carry the property for 400 months or thirty-three years and four months before they make up the difference.

That’s why the bank won’t accept or negotiate on un-realistically low offers. Banks are very sensitive to actual market conditions, they are making excellent “deals” with home buyers but they won’t leave money on the table if they don’t have to and it doesn’t make sense financially.

The best plan if you want to successfully negotiate with a bank on an REO property is to be financially organized, (have a pre-approval letter from your lender, have your down payment available), have a buyer agent in place to help your write a realistic offer – without unnecessary conditions, make a reasonable deposit and be the first person to submit your offer.

By Dick Thackston CRB, ABRM, ABR

Everybody’s talking about “all the foreclosures” on the market; we even see infomercials that talk about buying government and bank owned homes for as little as $500 so you find yourself thinking “Hey that could be cool! How do I get in on that action, I’ve got $500?”

First let me say: “Wake up Dorothy you’re not in OZ.”

I’ve sold real estate since 1982, I’ve been licensed in multiple states for years and I have yet to see a house sell for $500. You are not the one in 300 Million that gets a house for free.

Now that we’ve covered that let’s get to work on what really happens. To get involved in the REO Business, (Bank/Lender owned homes), you need a number of things: a strong stomach; high risk tolerance; spare cash; a good loan officer; a good lawyer and an excellent REALTOR. The first three you have to bring to the transaction yourself. An excellent REALTOR will know a good loan officer and a good lawyer that can help you get your deal done they way you want.

There is no single source of information on REO properties. Lenders all have different business models for disposing of these assets however 99% wind-up in the MLS. Some agents/agencies deal in larger numbers of these than others but almost all agencies deal in some.

The most successful way to begin the process is to find an Excellent REALTOR you know understands the process. Going from agent to agent and office to office is likely to produce poor results for you, not to say you shouldn’t switch agents if you feel whoever your dealing with isn’t into REO’s – some agents and agencies aren’t – but keep in mind most agents who ARE into REO’s have a regular list of customers and clients that they can and do make aware of excellent opportunities when they come on the market whether they are that agent’s or someone else’s listing. Excellent REALTORS tend to be loyal to their good customers and try and make sure that they keep an eye open for opportunities.

Trying to buy REO properties as a first-time home buyer with no money down and no real experience in ownership can and often does work but you will need to listen carefully to what your Excellent REALTOR tells you about the pitfalls of such a transaction and what information your loan officer will need to get the transaction to closing. There are undeniably excellent loan programs out there to make such dreams a reality but you need to make sure you’ve reviewed what your long and short term goals and abilities are with your Excellent REALTOR so you are all on the same page.

Buying REO’s is all about reality and all about having focused goals – remember you don’t want to be included in the next wave of foreclosures.