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Why would a lender bid over their judgment amount?

I was interested in bidding on a house in FL. Wells Fargo was owed $133k. They bid $250k. The house is maybe worth $300k. Why would they do this? In the tampa bay area of florida there are high forclosure rates but im wondering if they are trying to not allow values to fall. I would have won at 180k had they not bid.

Posted 6 hours ago
  
  
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Hi Dennis

First of all, forget the idea that banks bid high to stop prices from falling. Neither Wells Fargo nor the entire financial system has the firepower to keep the whole real estate market propped up. And even if they did, there’s no logic in paying more than necessary just to “protect values.” Business is simple: buy low.

With how stressed the Florida market is right now, what I’m seeing from lenders is actually the opposite. Many are bidding below their own final judgment because they want to avoid taking more REO inventory that loses value every day they hold it.

So when a bank comes in way over the judgment amount, like Wells Fargo jumping from 133k to 250k, it usually means something specific is going on behind the scenes, not a strategy to keep prices high.

If you want, share the county and case number. I can take a look and see what might be happening in this particular file.

Posted one hour ago
Edited one hour ago
  
  
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6 hours ago
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