|
but I've actually been renting a while waiting for this post-boom period and the opportunities it would provide. I saw the boom coming years ago, and since I was planning on moving from this town back then I chose not to buy to avoid being upside down. Now I'm married and my wife and I have decided this is where we want to stay and where she has started her practice.
Comps in this neighborhood are going for $100/sq ft and above (several less than a mile away, and in the last few months). Best school districts in the county K-12, lowest crime, nice size lots (this one is an acre).
Title insurance shouldn't be too hard. This house was originally purchased by the current owners in 1985 (built in 1983). It would have been practically paid off by now, but in 2005 they took out a $214K mortgage and $53K HELOC on the property.
They put it on the market in 2009 asking $295K (~$98/sq ft). Re-listed it last March as a short sale @$195K.
The owner has divorced his wife, and this is one of their joint assets. He still owes the bank (BoA) ~$243K. I've looked through the public records (county clerk's office) and he was a major 'wheeler dealer' in properties during the boom, leveraging this house for money to make those deals. He was caught standing while the music stopped, but I don't have too much sympathy. Him and his new girlfriend have a $600K+ mortgage on his new primary residence (FL protects your primary residence from bankruptcy proceedings). The house I'm interested in is a 'strategic default'. Lis Penden was filed in June.
We'll see how inspections go, but in several trips to the property (including with my brother, a former glazier and current property manager who has also done plenty of renovations) and haven't seen any problems except that it needs a roof (original except what is over the addition).
Kitchen was remodeled, HVAC upgraded and replaced in Dec. 2008. Bathrooms need a remodel, and I think one of the reasons it hasn't sold with the comps in the neighborhood is that an addition to the master bedroom/bathroom is unfinished. The owner basically saw the market wasn't coming back soon enough to make finishing those things a worthwhile risk, so he has walked.
I know if this one doesn't work out, there will be more opportunities. 12 month supply in my city, and 60% of contracts in the last 12 months have failed to close.
|