Investors on the prowl amid U.S. foreclosure frenzy
Orlando has always been known for its theme parks but some tourists are now heading to the Sunshine State for a different type of excitement.
For only $45, bargain hunters can sign up for the Foreclosure Bus Tour and spend six hours looking at homes with a real estate agent.
The tours, which are also taking place in other parts of the U.S., come as more and more Americans lose their homes to foreclosure.
In February alone, 223,651 U.S. homes had foreclosure filings -- default notices, auction sale notices and bank repossessions.
The highest foreclosure rates were in Nevada, California and Florida.
"In Nevada and Florida you had a lot of speculative buying going on and a lot of overbuilding of condo units that just haven't turned out to be good investments," ...
In California and Arizona, affordability problems contributed to the high foreclosure rates.
"Prices escalated too rapidly, people overextended themselves to get into these houses. They got into them with risky financing and their loans have gone bad."
In Michigan and Ohio most notably unemployment have contributed to high foreclosure rates.
"Foreclosure properties are selling for significantly less than they did just a couple of years ago".
Ralph Roberts, author of "Foreclosure Investing For Dummies," told CTV.ca that foreclosure investing is one of the hottest segments in real estate sales in the U.S.
"Foreclosures are hitting affordable homes, foreclosures are hitting upper-end homes, foreclosures are hitting middle-America homes -- they're hitting everything."
http://news.sympatico.msn.ctv.ca/Top...sure_US_080327
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If you read the whole article, you will find at the bottom some price examples, ....still to high for me!!
I wonder how things are in Canada.
Apparently, there are more than 220 new foreclosures being registered in Calgary and Edmonton….. each and every month!
I'm not sure, if that is the normal trend.
Orlando has always been known for its theme parks but some tourists are now heading to the Sunshine State for a different type of excitement.
For only $45, bargain hunters can sign up for the Foreclosure Bus Tour and spend six hours looking at homes with a real estate agent.
The tours, which are also taking place in other parts of the U.S., come as more and more Americans lose their homes to foreclosure.
In February alone, 223,651 U.S. homes had foreclosure filings -- default notices, auction sale notices and bank repossessions.
The highest foreclosure rates were in Nevada, California and Florida.
"In Nevada and Florida you had a lot of speculative buying going on and a lot of overbuilding of condo units that just haven't turned out to be good investments," ...
In California and Arizona, affordability problems contributed to the high foreclosure rates.
"Prices escalated too rapidly, people overextended themselves to get into these houses. They got into them with risky financing and their loans have gone bad."
In Michigan and Ohio most notably unemployment have contributed to high foreclosure rates.
"Foreclosure properties are selling for significantly less than they did just a couple of years ago".
Ralph Roberts, author of "Foreclosure Investing For Dummies," told CTV.ca that foreclosure investing is one of the hottest segments in real estate sales in the U.S.
"Foreclosures are hitting affordable homes, foreclosures are hitting upper-end homes, foreclosures are hitting middle-America homes -- they're hitting everything."
http://news.sympatico.msn.ctv.ca/Top...sure_US_080327
-----------------------------------------------------------------
If you read the whole article, you will find at the bottom some price examples, ....still to high for me!!
I wonder how things are in Canada.
Apparently, there are more than 220 new foreclosures being registered in Calgary and Edmonton….. each and every month!
I'm not sure, if that is the normal trend.