Last Minute Closing Delays Hit Foreclosed Home Buyers As Some Lenders Drag Their Feet When Recording Legal Title To Repossessed Collateral
- Stacee Maurer thought she'd found her perfect first home: a three-bedroom Cape Cod off High Street north of Graceland Shopping Center. On May 22, she signed a contract to pay $93,000 for the foreclosed property -- almost $30,000 less than it had sold for in 2006. Then she landed where a growing number of central Ohio homebuyers are landing: in foreclosure limbo.
- Shortly before she was scheduled to close on the home, Maurer, 24, learned the deal was delayed because the deed transferring the property to the bank hadn't been recorded. In late June, she moved into her parents' home, where she has been waiting -- and is now hoping to close today.
- Real-estate agents, title companies and others who deal with foreclosed properties say Maurer's situation is increasingly common. Eighteen months or more can pass between the time a foreclosure notice is filed and a home is resold, they say. But now, delays are occurring even after the bank repossesses the property, holding up or crushing deals that would put homes in new buyers'
hands.(1)
For more, see Growing number of buyers stuck in limbo.
(1) One local Realtor reportedly observed: "What used to take two weeks is taking 12 to 15 weeks," said Bob Pritchard, a Coldwell Banker King Thompson agent who deals in foreclosed properties in central Ohio. "We have been getting extensions on the close-by dates left and right," he said. "You get buyers who are financing and get a rate locked in, they can't close for 30 days and then it may be at a higher rate. It's costing the buyers more to buy the property, and some are just walking away."
<< Home