garden state apartments logo
Member Login
Username:
BBB accredited business.
Password:
Secure Login:
Register | Forgot Password
 
Welcome to Garden State Apartments
 
Find NJ Rentals
 
List Your Rentals
 
Get $100 Now
 
Find Resources
 
Find Investments
 
spacer images spacer images
 Renters:
About NJ
Homebuyers
Jersey Shore
NJ Affordable
Moving Center
Renter’s Guide
Senior Housing
Short-Term
Student Housing
Tenant Resources
 MODIFY SEARCH:
  Search Results
  View My Favorites
  My Search Lists
  Save This Search  
City
Zip
Rent
Min $
Max $
Bedrooms

 Listers:
Articles
Calendar
Landlord Center
Message Boards
News & Info
 General:
About GSA
Contact Us
Industry Resources
Online Store
Press Room

 
Foreclosures in New Jersey - Information & Resources
Provided by GardenStateApartments.comNJ Foreclosures

Foreclosure Resource  

Foreclosure.com- Find Foreclosures!! Save & Profit! New Jersey Foreclosures (free 7-day access for GSA Members)

NJ Foreclosures Recommended Reads

From the Newswire:

New Jersey- Bargain-hunting bloggers are calling it the perfect storm: the combination of rising interest rates, variable-rate mortgages and a soft housing market is resulting in a wave of new jersey foreclosures that could turn tidal. Banks started foreclosing on 173,579 homes in the first quarter of 2006, about 5 percent more than in the same quarter last year, reports the Mortgage Bankers Association of America. Delinquencies—which foreshadow foreclosures—were up 7 percent, with 1.6 million loans showing past due.

A guide: Foreclosure starts when homeowners are at least 90 days behind on mortgage payments and receive a notice that they are in default. That's called pre-foreclosure. Every state has its own procedure for what follows, but eventually, if the bills aren't paid, the house is foreclosed and auctioned off by the county sheriff. At least half these auctions draw no bidders, and the home ends up sold to the bank holding the mortgage, for the loan balance. In most cases, the bank then puts the house on the market, with the aim of unloading it quickly. Those bank-listed houses are called Real Estate Owned or REO properties. Buyers can get in at any of the three stages.  

A bad bid? The riskiest time is at that auction. Buyers must be prepared to pay cash the same day for homes they can't see or inspect. The safest (and least profitable) is to buy REO property from a bank. The best scenario is to step in before the bank does and work out a win-win deal with the defaulting homeowner. But you'll need to put in the legwork. Anyone can find lists of properties in default in the public records at their county offices, but there is an easier way. A slew of Web sites amass that data and then sell it, typically for about $40 a month. The federal government lists foreclosures from its housing programs free of charge at homesales.gov.

Let's make a deal. Defaulting homeowners who go all the way through foreclosure will lose their house and their credit rating, and could end up with nothing, but many people wait too long to take alternative action. By the time their foreclosure approaches, they can't make repairs, hire a real-estate agent and wait for the highest offer. That's why private offers work. Some bankers will even cut the amount due on the loan to make a sale happen, so would-be buyers should negotiate with the homeowner and mortgage holder. Research the house, and offer an amount that will allow the seller to walk away with a paid-off mortgage, some cash and his dignity. "Tell them to call the Center for Foreclosure Prevention [run by the nonprofit Neighborworks, nw.org], and to run your offer by a lawyer," says Realtytrac's Rick Sharga. "Differentiate yourself from scam artists."Patience is a virtue. It typically takes seven months to buy a house, so don't rush the process. By then, the full foreclosure flood may have materialized, and you might find an even better bargain.

Thanks to MSNBC Aug. 14, 2006

 

Foreclosures

  Find Foreclosures


GSA Local & National Foreclosure Resources:

> American Foreclosures

American Foreclosures - Information from Local Sources

spacer images
BBB accredited business.  © 2005 Garden State Apartments. All Rights Reserved.