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Home Loan Stop Foreclosure Article
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from: Buy for Less with Foreclosure Home ListingIf you are interested in buying a foreclosure, you could find yourself a great home with a low price. It can be done, it may not be easy—you may have to be patient with your search. The first thing you should do is obtain a foreclosure home listing from the REO department of any bank, and see what is listed. The foreclosure home listing includes the details of the homes in foreclosure; however you should do your homework. Do a little legwork and investigate the properties. Take a look at them. The foreclosure home listing may have a great asking price, but you will need to know if the home is worth the amount listed. What may look like a sweet deal on the foreclosure home listing may not be such a good deal after all if you have to sink twice the asking price into the home and the land it sits on. A house in disrepair will require a lot of work, so you need to take the amount of money you have to spend over and above the asking price.
The foreclosure home listing is a great tool, but it doesn’t tell you everything about the house or the person that owned it. Sometimes when a home is taken back by the bank or gone into foreclosure a homeowner may take his/her anger and frustration out on the house and cause damage to it. If something like this happened you would have to sink money into the house to make the repairs and renovations.
Should you want to buy a home that has been taken back by the bank, you can find them on the foreclosure home listing, or you can call any bank and ask what houses they have to sell. The bank wants to make money, and if the bank has taken back a house, that house is taking the place of the money it should have made. Depending on the state you are in, if you buy a home directly from the bank you may or may not get a guarantee with the property.
It can take quite a while to buy a house from a bank at a low price. You may or may not be able to get the bank to negotiate with you for a lower asking price. It is often beneficial to have a real estate agent help you with the negotiations. The agents know how to talk to the bank; they have experience negotiating. Just be patient, and let the house sit in the bank’s lap a little longer, and continue to check out the foreclosure home listing from different sources.
You can get a foreclosure home listing from your real estate agent, and you can have a foreclosure home listing sent to your email address every week; this way you can keep up with all the new properties that have been added. With a little time and patience you may be able to purchase a home at a significant discount.
Home Loan Stop Foreclosure News
Activists Protest Woodland Home’s Foreclosure
Activists from Occupy Sacramento and Woodland are going to battle this morning attempting to stop the eviction of Woodland family from their home after they say bank mistakes lead to foreclosure.
Read more...Preventing foreclosure the focus of seminars
Bank of America will provide one-on-one counseling service to its homeowner customers facing possible foreclosure or who want to explore home loan modifications and other alternatives.
Read more...SALE CONTRACT WON’T STOP FORECLOSURE PROCESS
Q: I listed my home for a short sale in October and recently received a contract from a buyer. I’m waiting for the bank’s approval. At the end of March, I was served with foreclosure papers. How is this possible if I have a contract on the property?
Read more...Lawyers prey on foreclosure-facing homeowners in San Fernando Valley and beyond
Paulette Breen sensed something was wrong when her home loan modification made her mortgage payments more expensive. Suspecting fraud, the Van Nuys resident hired a lawyer to sort things out. That only made things worse.
Read more...React & Act: What is second-mortgage debt?
To understand Rick Jurgens’ article on the second-mortgage debt and one Texas firm’s aggressive collection methods, you must first look at the origins of the mortgage crisis. Here, we provide an explainer, a glossary of terms, a guide to available resources and a recommended reading list. Explainer: The mortgage crisis Five years after the housing bubble burst in 2007, the mortgage crisis ...
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