While it's a good idea in the "city", it rarely works in the suburbs. One reason that comes to mind is coding. Most people, once aware that their neighbor next door has a rental, will complain to the city. All kinds of violations often pop up with these arrangements.
If the property is not built from the ground up to be a multiple tenant property, you could be looking at a LOT of potential headaches with renting it out. Insurance, for example might not be available. Lawsuits, considering the US is heaven for lawyers, etc.
But, the OP is right in wondering why people are letting their property be foreclosed.
The main reason is they were all greedy & OVERPAID like hell to the point where most houses made little economic sense as investments. It was really all speculation. As a result, many of these houses being foreclosed, if rented out bring in enough to pay only 30-40% of the original sales price.
If the property is not built from the ground up to be a multiple tenant property, you could be looking at a LOT of potential headaches with renting it out. Insurance, for example might not be available. Lawsuits, considering the US is heaven for lawyers, etc.
But, the OP is right in wondering why people are letting their property be foreclosed.
The main reason is they were all greedy & OVERPAID like hell to the point where most houses made little economic sense as investments. It was really all speculation. As a result, many of these houses being foreclosed, if rented out bring in enough to pay only 30-40% of the original sales price.