Union County, Oregon Homes For Sale. Find a Wholesale Bank-Owned REO in Union County, Oregon, OR:


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Featured Topic: REO


REO agents need to submit an offer along with a buyer package that may include deposit and proof of funds to the bank.

In a foreclosure situation, the amount owed to the bank is almost always more than what the property is worth, very few foreclosure auctions result in a successful sale and the property instead reverts to the bank, thus becoming an REO, or Real Estate Owned property.

Before submitting an offer on an REO it is prudent to for the investor to be pre qualified and clear about their financing.

Although speculative investing is blamed for many of the current economic problems, knowlegeable investors will ultimately end up being a large part of the the solution and help liquidate the bank owned inventory.

The majority of recent closed sales in Southern California are REO wholesale purchases.

It is important for investors to follow the sales statistics in the area they are buying in so they can make confident and competent REO offers.

When buying REOs from a lender the investor must submit their offers on standard realtor forms. The banks do not like to see custom investor looking contracts.

Due to high opening bid prices most homes do not sell at the trustee sale and go back to the banks, becoming REOs.

REO investors must visually inspect houses for the structural integrity of major components such as the foundation, roof, walls, plumbing and electrical. The bank will not take responsibility for the investors mistakes.

Giving the current state of our economy, factoring a decline in rents over the next few years is a good idea when calculating cash flow.

Fannie Mae's HomePath database includes only properties that are owned by Fannie Mae

REO buyers should be aware of the following basic FHA loan qualification guideline: Foreclosure's must be at least three years old, with perfect credit since. Remember that these guidelines are subject to change at anytime and you should stay abreast of current loan programs.

Buyers chasing after bank repos are sadly discovering that some REO lenders will not sell a bank repo to them, and they don't know why. The truth is banks can name the terms and conditions under which they will sell a bank-owned home. If buyers don't fit those qualifications, they are out of luck.

REO Homes, because they’re sold in “as-is” condition, can often be a great, affordable opportunity for the fixer-upper.

An REO house becomes the property of the lender (usually a bank), and needs to be sold as soon as possible.

The competition and short time on the market before and REO goes pending has many REO buyers feeling discouraged. But many of these escrows will not close and the REO house will be back on the market.

Many of the successful REO buyers are leveraging relationships with REO listing agents and buying inventory that is not on the MLS.

Many investors believe that the current drop in Southern California REOs mean that the market has bottomed.

A common misconception is that foreclosures and REOs are the same. Although they are similar they are in fact different with the REO being the direct result of a foreclosure option sale. An REO is a property that has been foreclosed on and has reverted back to the ownership of the bank or lender.

REOs are properties that the lender has failed to sell at auction. At this point, since the home has gone back to the lender, the mortgage no longer exists.

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