1945 Washington Street
Purchased for $610,000 in 2004, the two-bedroom Pacific Heights condo #409 at 1945 Washington Street was refinanced in 2007 with a first mortgage for $615,000.
Having fallen $13,274 behind on payments, seven months ago a notice of default was issued for the aforementioned first. And last month, the 924 square foot property was taken back by the bank with no bidders at $615,000 in cash on the courthouse steps.
The property is now listed on the MLS and asking $739,900 versus the $644,138 owed to Wells Fargo at the time of foreclosure, including penalties and principal.
∙ Listing: 1945 Washington #409 (2/2) 924 sqft – $739,900 [Redfin]
A Foreclosed Upon Noe Home Sells For Over…What Wells Was Owed [SocketSite]

16 thoughts on “Will Wells Profit On This Condo’s Foreclosure?”
  1. Is it accurate to suggest Wells will profit from this?
    What about:
    1. Internal management costs
    2. Legal costs
    3. Unknown final sale price
    4. Does Wells pay transfer tax?
    5. Most importantly, this is only one property in their entire portfolio, so even if they “make” money here, how much does it offset their other losses?

  2. One of these days Wells Fargo will get popped for “creative” accounting.
    You heard it here first!

  3. Pretty much every bank could be popped for such, and much worse, but the gov has decided it doesn’t care if the banks cheat us.

  4. So what if Wells Fargo profits from this? There is absolutely NOTHING wrong with that. The bank isn’t cheating anyone. The bank gave a loan to someone who didn’t meet obligations per the terms of the loan, and foreclosed as a result. Case closed. Nothing more to be said.

  5. remember:
    “SF Audit Finds Irregularities in 99 Percent of Foreclosures”
    and
    “In 85 percent of the loans, homes were lost to people or corporations who lacked the authority to foreclose on properties”
    And 82 percent of the loans contained “suspicious activity,” including “fabricating documents” and “backdating of documents,” according to the study.
    Source: The Bay Citizen (http://s.tt/15Iez)
    Why it’s wrong is that the foreclosure was likely illegally performed.

  6. ^OK. I guess banks should just stop foreclosing on properties when owners stop making payments on their loans. Silly me, what was I thinking.

  7. Doesn anyone know if it is possble to buy a forclosed property with an 80/20 30 year fixed mortgage or is all cash required?

  8. @apropos
    How about enforcing the law both ways? I got no problem with foreclosures as long as they are done legally. Wwhat the banks have done (systematic fraud) is much worse than failing to pay ones mortgage, why should they got off without punishment?

  9. They are taking huge losses in FL, AZ and NV. If they do make a profit on this sale, it would barely cover the loss on a single property in Las Vegas.

  10. @ lyqwyd:
    you are good at playing the victim card. i’m sure you’ve been doing it your whole life. fact is, when one signs a loan document, they sign a promissory note, which means “i promise to pay”. Don’t point fingers at the bank, look in the mirror instead and ask who the promise-breaker is…
    Oscar

  11. @lalalalaa – I believe you need all cash if you are buying on the courthouse steps. But once a bank has completed the foreclosure and listed the property for sale you can purchase it just like any other property, so you can get a standard loan, assuming you qualify and the property is habitable.

  12. @oa
    Did you miss the part where I said “I got no problem with foreclosures as long as they are done legally”
    I guess you think forging loan documents is perfectly acceptable process in foreclosing on somebody.
    If somebody has been foreclosed on, how does that make it unacceptable for them to point out systemic criminal fraud enacted by banks?
    FYI: I’ve never been foreclosed on, nor am I at risk of being foreclosed on.
    So how exactly am I a victim, or playing one?

  13. @anon
    Like I’ve said repeatedly, I don’t have any problem with legal foreclosures. I didn’t read anything in that link saying fabricating documents and forgeries were OK.
    “… 82 percent of the loans contained “suspicious activity,” including “fabricating documents” and “backdating of documents,” according to the study.”
    If you or I did that type of stuff we’d be sent to jail, why do you think it’s OK for banks to commit criminal acts?

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