Foreclosure Freeze “Icing” Loudoun Real Estate Market

November 14, 2008 by Danilo Bogdanovic  
Filed under Foreclosure/REO properties

Foreclosure 90 day freeze

President-Elect Obama said he wants to put a 90-day moratorium on foreclosures once he takes office, but Countrywide/BoA, Chase and Citi aren't waiting until January 20 to start "freezing" foreclosures. The effect of this is already being felt in Loudoun County as less new foreclosure/bank-owned properties are coming on the market.

For example…I just did a search for active bank-owned and short-sale town home listings in Ashburn Village and found that over 90 percent of them were short-sales. The ratio has recently been about 60/40 (foreclosures to short-sales)

One effect of this is that buyers will be further frustrated with the purchase of a home. Short-sales take 3, 4 sometimes 6 months for a response and only about 20 percent get approved so they work for only a select few buyers that have that kind of flexibility and patience. With the rising number of short-sales and diminishing number of foreclosure listings and traditional resales on the market, buyers are left with less "real" inventory to choose from than they have in years.

(Short-sales are not "real" listings in my book because the seller doesn't even know if the short-sale will be approved by the bank while listing the property)

What will happen when the "freeze" ends? We'll see more foreclosure properties hitting the market once again. As much as this may sound like a bad thing, it's actually a good thing. We have to get through the bank-owned property inventory one way or another before we can see the market rebound. Plus, it will give buyers more "real" inventory to choose from.

 

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Comments

3 Responses to “Foreclosure Freeze “Icing” Loudoun Real Estate Market”
  1. I think the rising number of short-sales and diminishing number of foreclosure listings and traditional resales on the market

  2. I’ve definitely seen a steadily rising number of short-sales over the last few quarters.
    Short-sales just make the market even more of a mess because not many agents, brokers or sellers/borrowers know how to handle/negotiate them nor all that’s involved. And not all buyers realize how messy they can be if the listing agent, broker of seller/borrowers isn’t experienced with them.
    If you’re involved in a short-sale that goes smoothly, consider yourself lucky (and go buy a lotto ticket while you’re at it).

  3. cheap checks says:

    I agree with your idea but, there are different school of thoughts producing different ideas that has to brought into consideration.

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