Community

Email Notifications

Archives

Case-Shiller Number Show Price Declines, Obstacles Delay REO Sales

Look at Case-Shiller Numbers, by Metro Area
Wall Street Journal
January 27, 2009

The S&P/Case-Shiller home-price index, a closely watched gauge of U.S. home prices, showed accelerating price declines.


Obstacles Delay REO Sales
Inman News
January 27, 2009

This is the second installment in a two-part series that focuses on the waves of foreclosed, bank-owned properties (also known as real estate-owned properties or REOs) that will hit the for-sale market, and the plans and pitfalls for reducing this inventory. Part One ran yesterday.

Making Foreclosures More Orderly
New York Times
January 27, 2009

At the center of the financial maelstrom are millions of homes at risk of foreclosure. These homes are the assets that lie behind the toxic securities that have poisoned the balance sheets of the banking sector. What can be done about all those foreclosures?
That’s it for today.

Bankruptcy Fix Will Cut Foreclosures 20 Percent
Reuters
January 27, 2009

A plan to let bankruptcy judges erase some mortgage debt will help lower foreclosures by 20 percent and stabilize the troubled housing market, a Credit Suisse report concluded on Monday.

The Specter of Nationalization
The Economist
January 27, 2009

There are ways for governments to revitalize banks without taking them over.

Posted: Tue, January 27 2009 10:54 AM by Octavion

Comments

Shihoko said:

thats not actually true.  In most cases the banks actidte the price.  They will hire a realtor to do a BPO, and then when the realtor comes in with a realistic sales price, based not only on the 90 day comps, but also the absorption rate.  What used to happen to me everytime was the bank would tell me that they don't want to see a number higher than x, or lower than z.  Basicly they are just hiring someone to validate their number.  The auctions are fixed by the way.

# April 18, 2012 11:45 AM
Leave a Comment

(required) 

(required) 

(optional)

(required)