delete this
Quote from kowboy:
Interesting. Thanks for the post. The above is probably a regional thing.
The national foreclosure service listing Reo properties which I subscribe to, is showing substantially more inventory coming on the market in my area of interest, Nv, Wy, Mt, and northern Az. But no great weakening of prices and not very negotiable just yet. IMO, no fire sales so far, not worthwhile as far as buying. It may be just a matter of time.
Quote from a529612:
"Real estate prices will go down 40-50 percent in bubble areas. There will be massive defaults. This time it'll be worse because we haven't had this kind of speculative buying in U.S. history," Rogers said.
http://www.reuters.com/article/news..._DOUBLEFEATURE_mortgage_troubles&pageNumber=1
Quote from ByLoSellHi:
Banks are already selling foreclosed properties on the wholesale auction market - used homes for as little as 10% of their last closing price - new homes for less than the cost of construction - to large scale vulture funds.
These vulture funds are either reselling the homes, or renting them out.
There was also a WSJ article about a guy in North Carolina who used to be a farmer, and is now buying homes, sight unseen, for - as an example that was cited in the article, $2,500 (not $25,000), when the last closing on the same house showed a closing price of $44,000. He then resells these homes to poor credit risk people at 12% interest rates, and sells the mortgage to private equity funds.
He is buying thousands of these homes a ayear, sight unseen.
Quote from kowboy:
Interesting. Thanks for the post. The above is probably a regional thing.
The national foreclosure service listing Reo properties which I subscribe to, is showing substantially more inventory coming on the market in my area of interest, Nv, Wy, Mt, and northern Az. But no great weakening of prices and not very negotiable just yet. IMO, no fire sales so far, not worthwhile as far as buying. It may be just a matter of time.
Quote from razorack:
I believe that on the face of it his bullishness about china going forward would seem to be contradicting his call about US housing and the flow on effects on the consumer and world economic growth. But when you consider that China now has an active policy in place to replace their export/investment model of growth of the past , with a more sustainable internal growth model, then you realise that China will be relatively immune to the falling demand for its products during the coming housing lead recession. Also with a lack of other targets for investment there will be global shifts back into China on a relative basis, these flows will keep their stock market bouyant, after the inevitable correction which he predicts