Homes can become bank-owned properties if the homeowner defaults on their mortgage and the bank forecloses. Bank-owned properties may also be referred to as real estate owned, or REO for short.
Foreclosure can be a long process. It starts when a homeowner defaults on a mortgage and a bank or financial institution repossesses the home. And it ends when the bank sells the property to recoup ...
Today’s real estate market can be challenging for homebuyers. A sustained rise in prices has made the market increasingly expensive, and competition for properties can be intense. Bank-owned ...
Headlines scream almost daily about soaring foreclosures, that more than 1 million homes were lost to foreclosure in 2008 and the number is expected to top 1.2 million this year. The good news in Las ...
Home prices are still rising — they’re currently averaging just below all-time highs set in 2006, according to the Case-Shiller Home Price Indices. Combine that with slim housing inventory in many ...
One good thing that came out of the housing recession is today’s opportunity for consumers to more easily purchase bank-owned homes or real estate owned (REO) properties. However, many traditionally ...
When a lender cannot sell a default property in a short sale or at a foreclosure auction, it becomes Real Estate Owned (REO). REO refers to a home or other property now owned by a lender— that could ...
According to RealtyTrac's new U.S. Foreclosure Sales Report for the second quarter of 2011, sales of homes that were in some stage of foreclosure or bank owned accounted for 31 percent of all U.S.
In January 2012, Carrington Holding Co. was so bullish on buying and renting out foreclosed single-family homes that it obtained $450 million in financing to fund a buying spree of vacant real-estate ...
Bank-owned properties can offer quite the deal. In most cases, these are homes that were passed up during a foreclosure auction, and now, the bank is on its last line of defense. They need to sell the ...