4 Years of Shadow Inventory; Where Are the REO's?; Going Direct to the Listing Agent

May 27, 2010 by Andy Kaufman · View Comments 

/via Housing Wire: Shadow Inventory Could Take Four Years to Clear: Morgan Stanley

The shadow inventory of homes with delinquent mortgages yet to move through the foreclosure process would take 47 months to clear at the current sales rate in the market, according to a newly-published housing finance report from Morgan Stanley


/via Allan Glass: May California Foreclosure Report – Where are the REO’s

In his stat filled post that’s defintiely worth checking out, Glass concludes that,

If you’re an investor and haven’t educated yourself on buying at trustee sales or are waiting for the REO’s to fall into you lap, you’ll likely keep waiting. If you’re a Realtor® still trying to figure out how to become an REO broker, you’re missing the boat.

/via bubbleinfo.com: More on RE Revolution

There’s some great info in this post from Jim Klinge, AKA JimtheRealtor(<-I highly recommended his YouTube channel), where he takes on a tough topic and shares his 'Thoughts About Going Direct to the Listing Agent‘ & nails it IMO.

CNBC Sheds Some Light on the 'Shadow Inventory'

August 31, 2009 by Andy Kaufman · View Comments 

I just came across a post from CNBC’s Diana Olick that sheds some light on whether banks are holding onto an inventory of homes that they’ve already foreclosed on instead of putting them on the market.

Here’s what Bank of America told her:

  • Foreclosure sales have been abnormally low since we learned of the pending implementation of the administration’s Making Home Affordable program. From that point, we delayed the initiation of foreclosure proceedings and sales for customers that may eligible for a loan modification under MHA. As a result of this policy, our foreclosure sales in recent months have been as little as half the normal pace we experienced before.
  • Until a foreclosure is completed, Bank of America continues to exhaust every possible option to qualify customers for modification or other solutions.
  • Now that Making Home Affordable programs are operational, we do project an increase in foreclosures as we exhaust every available option to qualify customers for modifications and other solutions.
  • While we have very strong loan modification programs now available, unfortunately, these foreclosure projections reflect the increasing number of customers who will not qualify for loan modification because they have suffered major life events servicers can’t solve…primarily unemployment and underemployment.
  • We do not hold foreclosed properties off the market. The vast majority of mortgages serviced by Bank of America are owned by third-party investors. We have an obligation to them to prepare foreclosed properties for market and sell them as efficiently as possible.