In the first four installments of this series (1st Thing You Should Know About Buying Foreclosures, 2nd Thing You Should Know About Buying Foreclosures, 3rd Thing You Should Know About Buying Foreclosures, 4th Thing You Should Know About Buying Foreclosures), I wrote about defining Terminology, Pricing, Multiple Offers and Response Times as they relate to “Things You Should Know About Buying a Foreclosure.” Here’s the 5th post of the series:
NOTE: This does not mean the buyer is not entitled to perform a professional home inspection, termite inspection, and any other inspection(s) desired (at the buyer’s expense), but AS-IS means if any repairs are called out or identified by inspector(s), the bank/seller reserves the right to refuse to perform them. So the term Caveat Emptor (Buyer Beware) comes to mind. The best advice is for the buyer and the buyer’s agent to do a thorough physical/sight inspection of the property BEFORE submitting an offer on a Foreclosure, and then follow through with a thorough professional home inspection AFTER securing an accepted contract.
An experienced, knowledgeable, professional Buyer’s Agent can be invaluable during this process/phase, so please be aware, be wise and be careful.
In the first three installments of this series (1st Thing You Should Know About Buying Foreclosures, 2nd Thing You Should Know About Buying Foreclosures, 3rd Thing You Should Know About Buying Foreclosures), I wrote about defining Terminology, Pricing and Multiple Offers as they relate to “Things You Should Know About Buying a Foreclosure.” Here’s the fourth post of the series:
The standard Arizona Association of REALTORS Resale Purchase Contract contains a section in which the Buyer’s Agent can specify a finite expiration date and time, but there’s nothing in the contract that requires the bank/seller to respond to the offer. I normally recommend setting the offer expiration at least 2-3 business days beyond the offer submission date. Protection is thus afforded the buyer so that the offer will not be ‘good’ indefinitely, but it still allows the bank/seller a respectable period of time during which they can respond before the offer technically expires. When in doubt, consult with your Buyer’s Agent about potential response times and expiration dates.
In the first two installments of this series (1st Thing You Should Know About Buying Foreclosures, 2nd Thing You Should Know About Buying Foreclosures), I wrote about defining Terminology and Pricing as they relate to “Things You Should Know About Buying a Foreclosure.” Here’s the third post of the series:
If your Buyers’ Agent has run the current comps, and you’re confident that the property is priced well and will most likely attract multiple offers, then you might want to seriously consider submitting your Highest and Best offer – upfront. Every buyer wants the lowest and best deal possible, but all factors and circumstances of each individual property must be taken into account. If the property appears to be priced above current comps, then you can adjust your offer strategy accordingly. Just remember that if multiple offers are submitted on the property, your chances of securing a successful contract are drastically diminished if you don’t submit a very competitive offer.
In the first installment of this series (1st Thing You Should Know About Buying Foreclosures), I wrote about defining Terminology as it relates to “Things You Should Know About Buying a Foreclosure.” Here’s the second post in the series:
NOTE: I still occasionally run across a home buyer who says something like this to me, “I’ve never paid sticker price for a car, and I’ll be damned if I’ll pay sticker price for a house.” My response is simple – buying a house is not the same as buying a car. Automobile dealers put a ‘sticker’ retail price on a product and at the same time know that a substantial portion of consumers will attempt to negotiate a lower price. The biggest difference between pricing cars and pricing houses is that there are no two homes that are exactly the same. Hence, each residential property is priced on its own merits. So when a buyer looks at a house, and tries to assess its relative value in the current market, the asking (‘sticker’) price is irrelevant. What matters is what I said before –> what have other, similar properties actually Sold for in recent times? Be wise in your home shopping, and be sure to ask your Buyer’s Agent to run the recent ‘comps’ on any property that you’re seriously considering.
In the coming days, I’ll be writing a series about Foreclosures that will ultimately be condensed into one blog post called “Things You Should Know About Buying a Foreclosure.” Here’s the first in the series:
A Foreclosure might be owned by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Chase, Desert Schools Credit Union or any of thousands of smaller banks, credit unions or loan servicing companies, and any reference to a bank, lender or asset manager is referring to one of the foregoing entities.
Just be aware that the foreclosure process has been completed on Foreclosures, and that the ‘bank’ is now the legal owner of record, which also means the ‘bank’ is in fact the seller of the property.
NOTE: Any time you see the following terms, be aware and informed that they are NOT the same as Foreclosures: pre-foreclosure, short sale, probate/estate sale, relo/corporate approval required, court approval required, regular sale or traditional listing. If you have any doubt about the type or category of property that any listing includes, be sure to double-check with the real estate professional (Buyer’s Agent) that’s assisting and representing you.
Although this video was first released about 2 years ago, it is actually still applicable in today’s 2011 real estate market in the greater Phoenix area. The choice is whether to cry or laugh, and at this moment, in this room, I choose to laugh. Enjoy!