Quote from Visaria:
How was the local real estate in New Orleans after Katrina?
How about in many areas in Detroit atm?
don't know about New Orleans. Detroit is a very bad deal. Nobody was accountable. Good deal for smart thinkers. Bad deal for banks and homeowners.
For instance, a house listed at 269k was owned by a guy who lost his job. So he just lived there for a year or more without paying the mortgage. Finally, he got the eviction notice from the sherrif. So he is going to lose his down payment. Now the house is vacant. I saw one go from 169k to 50k. So some smart guy trying to get ahead in life actually bought it for 25k, and immediately put it up for sale at 50k. But it had a lot of structural problems. Probably about 40k to get it liveable again.
Where was the bank? They owned the house, and could have worked out a deal with the guy who got foreclosed on. Now he would still be living there, and the bank would have come out better than letting it go vacant. Now it is just a house they unloaded at 25k. It is still vacant with many problems. The guy that bought if from the bank at 25k and is trying to sell it at 50k has a chance, but not until all the structural problems are fixed. And for that he needs another 40k.
all this could have been avoided if anyone at the bank was accountable, and could work out a deal.
They claim they had a program, It was called the affordable home mortgage act, or something like that, but it didn't cover people with no income who had lost their jobs.
lose a job, lose a house, lose a neighborhood, lose a bank