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Several areas in particular have
been hardest hit by this glut of foreclosures, including parts
of California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona. In all of these
areas, prices increased dramatically during the housing boom
and are now falling just as dramatically.
In Merced, Calif., "Houses vacated by their insolvent owners
have become damaged eyesores on many blocks. Businesses such as
plant nurseries and paint stores have seen sales plummet as
construction and remodeling work has stalled. The local
association of real estate agents has seen its membership drop
to 650 from more than 1,000 two years ago," according to the
Los Angeles Times.
Merced was chosen as the location for the newest University
of California campus during the housing boom, but now the
benefits to the housing market from the new university are
probably years away, according to the Los Angeles Times.
(For more on real estate in college towns, please see our
previous article,
College Town Real Estate.)
In the Orlando area, about one third of bank-owned
properties receive more than one offer, but the properties
often return to the market after a deal falls through,
according to the AP.
A record number of Americans—close to 3 million—are at least
one month late on their mortgages in the first quarter,
according to numbers released earlier this month by the
Mortgage Bankers Association. Nearly 450,000 Americans had
reached the final stages of foreclosure—also a record.
As foreclosure numbers keep setting records, many lenders
are likely to keep slashing the prices of the foreclosure
properties they hold until the housing bust bottoms out.
Investors with cash available could take advantage of this
situation by choosing among the foreclosure properties at
auction or by finding deals on REOs. For investors, REOs are
often preferable to foreclosure properties bought at auction.
Investors pay cash at an auction when purchasing a foreclosure
property and don't get to see the interior of the home or have
it inspected prior to purchase, which means that purchasing
such a property is riskier than purchasing an REO.
The Foreclosure
Fraud Alert Website http://www.foreclosurefraudalert.com/
The
Foreclosure Fraud Alert
Blog
http://www.foreclosurefraudalert.com/fraudblog
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