Re: Info on Auctions… - Posted by Richard Ragon
Posted by Richard Ragon on July 06, 2006 at 17:40:27:
>>>You may have done a tremendous amount of homework, but the questions you asked demonstrate that you still don’t know nearly enough to head out to the trustee’s sale intending to spend real money.
I form my questions in a way that I believe is going to bring in the most responses… I also ask some questions that I know the answer too, or at least know enough about already, just to have a way too judge if someone is jerking my chain. What you mistake as not knowing or appear not to know, might be just a question that designed for me too look for a specific answer from someone. Sorry, if Im not forthright, to be honest this is somewhat of a protection mode, as playing dumb has it’s advantages sometimes. 
>>>Some of those “big boys” aren’t the most ethical people in the neighborhood. They may stage conversations that you think you’re not meant to overhear to encourage you to bid on one property, or discourage you from bidding on another. They may overpay on property after property, just because their pockets are deeper than yours, and they don’t like competition.
I’m aware of these tactics… To tell you the truth, I don’t care what they do, I’ll have a prop picked out and a price already picked. If I win, kewl… if not… so what… some guy overpaid. If they start overpaying each time I show up, the joke is on them and eventually they’ll wise up to me I’m hear to stay. Buying at the sale is the only way that I can ever buy… you guys going knocking on the doors are nuts… 
>>>>You were asking about senior liens and junior liens. I’ve heard of newbies in California thinking they were getting a bargain at a trustee’s sale when they bought a house worth $350K for $270K, only to discover that there was a senior lien they’d overlooked (or worse, didn’t know enough to look for) for $300K. Some of those “big boys” who know better than to bid on that particular junior will line up to qualify right behind you when they see that YOU don’t know better, just to lull you into a false sense of security.
Hey… I’m not randomly going to auctions to just pick out houses. When I show up, I have a property in mind, I’ve pulled the title from 3 sources, I’ve walked over to the county recorders office and looked it up myself (been looking at titles for 10 years now), I’ve pulled comps for the area including the taxes, a top map of the blocks, and have on occasionally even gone by the house and taken a photo while looking at the owner, just too see if he’s still there…
>>>>Look up the guys I mentioned, and attend a few auctions just to watch the process before you go intending to bid. When you think you know enough about the process, then you need to do your homework on the specific house you intend to bid on. Good luck, and go slow.
I’ve been actually attending these auctions (as a lookie loo) myself on and off since 1995. I’ve been tracing the properties from the legals pre and post, and even watching where the houses go, who they sell too, how much they sell for, and I have even figured out what kind of profits these cartel guys are doing by following up on them.
I’ve been sitting down on the side line watching for so long that I even know several of the cartels names, and I know what cars they drive, and have even spotted them on the road driving some times. I even know what the Trustee drives too.
… its time to make a move.