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Current Market Conditions
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If you bought a foreclosed property....
RealtyTrac reports that 3Q foreclosure filings are up 4% from last
quarter but down 1% from 3Q 2009. That translates into 1 of every 139
homes received a foreclosure filing this quarter. Foreclosure sales
continue to dominate supply with REO and pre foreclosure sales totaling
31%
of all home sales.
And the banks are screwed too. For the first time bank repossessions topped 100,000 in a single month up 7% over
quarter.
Title insurance protects you if someone comes back even years later and
claims that they actually hold title to the property you bought in
foreclosure.
What if someone who lost his home in
foreclosure wins it back because of sloppy paperwork? You might not get to keep the foreclosure purchase. There might not be
any monetary loss because thats why title insurance exists, but you can
see how the uncertainty can kill the market.
Sales of pre foreclosure and
foreclosed properties, 31% of all sales, can dry up and distressed
property inventory just grows.
The Optimists
Real-estate procedure requires the physical transfer of paperwork whenever
mortgages trade hands. Some are questioning whether banks have lost or never had physical possession of the mortgage. If so, banks will have track
down refile paperwork. If this is the full extent of the problem then it will slow the process and inventory will build, but ultimately little damage will be done.This, of course, is what the banks are claiming is the extent of it.
The Pessimists
What if, instead of being lost and then found and properly refiled, mortgage documents were never properly
transferred during each step of the process, then the
whole system freezes. The law suits that cascade down on the heads of
industry would claim that the banks never technically and actually owned
the mortgages and cannot foreclose. That they foreclosure with
defective documents and the whole things illegal.
If you bought a foreclosure home, your title and ownership of the
property could be clouded now, title may be in question. If you’re
looking to buy a foreclosed home, the purchasing process may be delayed.
And you may have difficulty getting title insurance.
REsourced
from
www.yourpropertypath.com
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