Well now that Congress has the "Bail Out" finalized, it should be interesting to see just WHO and HOW they will be handling the sale of these "assets".
I have an idea - since it's OUR money we should have a say from now on. Here's MY plan
- Get RID of the asset managers and the handful of bank agents they use and spread the wealth - I would like to get Some of my money back. Why over work a few agents?
- Make these "assets" salable and put some money into them instead of taking Huge losses**. That way you'll stop running the prices into the ground and causing more foreclosures.
- Price them at Market Value instead of pennies on the dollar, unless of course you would like to see "Bail Out" round 2 from the surrounding neighbors.
- Force the banks to approve a short sale within 2 weeks on the new ones coming in the pipeline. You managed to spend $7 bill in 2 weeks - they should get us an answer in 2 weeks.
- If someone is making their payments on time cut them some slack and Work with them Quickly, so they are not forced into foreclosure - we bailed you out at least you could do is help them.
- How about we collect some of the debt back from those that foreclosed? I do not mind borrowing money to help a neighbor but darn it I expect some of it back. I pay my debts.
- Anyone that did a "buy and bail", destroyed their home or pulled money out and ran should be held responsible. Why does our society keep rewarding Bad behavior?
- Do Not let HUD handle these assets - the last thing we need is more government involvement.
What concerns me is how much they are willing to sell these "assets" for here's an example**
- 03-11-05 home sold for $785,000
- 07-12-06 mortgage $675,000 and $150,000
- 11-27-07 sold at sheriff sale for $562,500
- 06-06-08 placed on market by bank agent for $379,900
- 03-11-08 Sold for $415,000 in 5 days - that's 50% which can ruin this neighborhood
Right now in Macomb County 15% (1396) homes and condos are bank owned/foreclosed and 5.5% (489) are short sales. How many more are there around the country? How many of these are figured into the "asset" pile and how many more are going to follow?