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Banks and REOs – The Guide to Monetizing Foreclosures

There’s some money to be earned buying and selling real property, especially REOs, or real estate owned. These are real properties foreclosed by banks and unredeemed by the former owners within the allotted redemption period. Therefore they are now assets owned the bank and may be sold to interested buyers, the former owners included, at usually prices relatively lower than those in the regular real estate business. So the profit potential can be substantial for the intrepid broker.

However, dealing with banks on the matter of REOs can be very frustrating: banks are often terribly painful where REOs are concerned. When a REO property goes for sale, it is usually sold through bidding. The list of REOs is published or posted and a minimum bid is indicated for each piece of property as well as the end date of the bidding. The interested buyer then submits his bid for that property, not knowing if there are competing other bids or none at all.

That’s easy as pie and buying an REO should thus not be a hassle at any stage. But it is, in almost every aspect. Consider my recent example:

A REO came on the market, my first-time homebuyer bid. The bank sent him a series of counteroffer letters stating in effect he should make his ‘best and highest’ bid. The buyer might have been bidding only against himself, because if there were other bids they were not disclosed by the bank to my buyer, but he nevertheless submitted his ‘highest and best’ bid and ‘won’. We requested for an early sales closing and my buyer proceeded to arrange for his loan to purchase the REO property.

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