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Investor Buys County’s Entire Foreclosure Stock

A Detroit metro area county no longer has to worry about their foreclosure backlog. For about $4.7 million, Bill McMachen, an investor in Macomb County in Michigan, purchased all of the county’s 627 foreclosed properties all at once and for one price.

The county’s treasurer was offering up all of the county’s distressed homes in a foreclosure auction last week. And made one offer that McMachen found particularly attractive: One buyer could acquire all of the distressed properties at once if the purchaser agreed to pay the amount equal to all of the taxes owed on them, which was $4.72 million. McMachen was one of the only investors apparently at the auction who was ready to buy the entire bulk of the 627 homes all at once, instead of individually. 

McMachen paid an average of about $7,500 a piece for each of the homes. He says he may sell the properties in packages of 10 or so to some investors interested in individual properties. He also says he plans to donate some to charities and sell others to residents who are seeking affordable properties in moving to the suburbs. 

He estimates his purchase will eventually net him about $10 million by reselling the homes. 

Ted Wahby, the county’s treasurer, told AOL Real Estate that the sale allowed the county to sell all the foreclosures—the “good with the bad”—all at once and recoup the taxes that were still owed on the properties. 

 

 

 

 

Source: “Bill McMachen of Michigan Buys Hundreds of Foreclosed Properties, Dirt Cheap,” AOL Real Estate

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Comment by Yvonne Hartshorn on August 7, 2012 at 1:49pm

Sounds like a set up to me...they should have allowed other home seekers and perhaps even the disfranchised homeowner's families in on the deal...so sad...every one wins except the homeowners...bad precedent...real estate as we know it came to an end in the exposure of the financial crimes in 2008...

Comment by Glen Hagen on August 7, 2012 at 12:05pm

Smells like a pocket deal to me... $7,500 per home in Detroit's suberb!

Don't you think the county's treasurer should have made others aware of their intentions before allowing just 1 individual to profit?  Who knows, a bidding situation might have developed with hundreds of thousands more going to the county!   

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