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Bank Foreclosure Process Article
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Bank Foreclosure Home: Making Your Move
from:A bank foreclosure home is one that is being sold by a bank because the previous owner of the home has failed to make payments on that home's mortgage. The foreclosure process will take between four and six months during which the borrower will have several opportunities to make payments on the home in an effort to get the home out of foreclosure. When this does not happen, the foreclosure proceeds and the result is that the home's owner will be made to leave the home so that it can be sold. At that point, when all the smoke clears and the lender has full legal right to the home, they will list it for sale. A bank foreclosure home is an opportunity for investment.
With a bank foreclosure home, you have to evaluate the value of the home before purchasing it. To do that, you need to carefully consider the value based on the selling price of the homes surrounding the home as well as the current housing market in general. In many areas, house prices are falling which could cause the house's value to be less than what it is selling at. These are homes to stay away from. In order for you to know the actual value of the home, your real estate agent can run some "comps" on the home, which are numbers showing the bank foreclosure home and its value compared to properties recently sold in the area.
In addition, there are other ways to get a bank foreclosure home value determined. You can do this by using online software tools to help you calculate it. The process is often free and provides you with a good idea of what the real value of the home is so you know whether you want to invest in it. Ultimately, you have to determine the amount of work that needs to go into the home, taxes and closing costs, too, to determine if the value of the home is worthwhile to buy.
Then, you need to know when to buy the home. A well-priced bank foreclosure home will sell faster than those that are not priced right, so it is often important to have all your financials in place before you start looking for a bank foreclosure home to buy.
Finding the right bank foreclosure home is important as not all properties that are sold this way are going to be profitable investments. Many people find profitable options available to them, though when they do their research thoroughly to determine the real value of the property.
Bank Foreclosure Process Specific links
Bank Foreclosure Process News
Fewer U.S. homes foreclosed on in April
LOS ANGELES -- National foreclosure trends took a positive turn in April, as the number of homes seized by banks declined and fewer properties entered into the foreclosure process.
Read more...US foreclosure trends improved April, but state-level data point to more repossessions ahead
National foreclosure trends took a positive turn in April, as the number of homes seized by banks declined and fewer properties entered into the foreclosure process.
Read more...Foreclosure activity sinks to a five-year low
Foreclosure activity in the U.S. fell last month to its lowest level since the start of the credit crisis in 2007, driven largely by drops in states such as California, where the process occurs outside of the courtroom.
Read more...Bank Regulator Halts Work of Foreclosure-Review Consultant
A U.S. banking regulator on Friday halted the work of a consulting firm hired to review foreclosure documents as part of a comprehensive review of bank foreclosure practices. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency said Allonhill LLC had done outside work that wasn’t consistent with independence requirements for consultants working for banks in [...]
Read more...Report: Fewer US homes foreclosed upon in April
National foreclosure trends took a positive turn in April, as the number of homes seized by banks declined and fewer properties entered into the foreclosure process.
Read more...


