Are bank properties worth the risk?

By
Real Estate Broker/Owner with Ad Maker Tool & Real Estate Auction Systems

A couple of weeks ago, while teaching a real estate online auction class in Mankato, MN, I met a successful auctioneer from Chicago who has been in the business for over 20 years.  He does FDIC auctions of personal property as well as real estate auctions.

He shared a story with me about his first opportunity to auction a group of 100 bank owned homes in the Chicago area.  The bank would not give him a penny for marketing/advertising and ALL of the properties would be sold with reserves.

He knew the auction would require at least $100,000 in marketing to make it successful and after giving it some thought he took the chance.  He put his own $100,000 up for the marketing and prayed that the bank would have reasonable reserves and the properties would sell.  Fortunately, it was very successful and he made over $600,000 on the deal (not a bad return on his investment).

The same bank offered him more properties to auction, but this time in Detroit.  Unfortunately, this time he learned a hard lesson by losing money (essentially paying to auction those properties).  Detroit is a much different market than Chicago and a lot tougher.

I was surprised to find out that the banks are unwilling to pay any marketing money, but I can also understand why.  It was very interesting for me to think about this opportunity and wonder if I would put up that kind of money if given the same chance.  The bank has zero risk and the auctioneer has it all.

One of the big things you are advised in auction school is to not pay for the marketing out of your pocket.

What do you think, would you do it?

Want to learn more about running your own real estate auctions online?  Join our next webinar

Comments (3)

Jack Snyder
Loan Officer in Orange County for FlexPoint Mortgage - San Clemente, CA
Loan Officer, San Clemente, Orange County, CA.

Hello Tom,

That's a tough question. It takes money to make money but this demonstrates the rick/reward quotent concomitant in every investment scenario.

(That's the second time I had the opportunity to use that word, I learned it here on an AR Blog featured today.)


I guess it would all be in the approach you take with your seed money. How much do you risk and what kind of success ratio are you aiming at. In your example above the seed money was equal to 20% of the total net return. With that you could fail one out of three times and still make a good return so you would be shooting for a 66% success rate.

Is that close?

Mar 08, 2012 03:51 AM
Chris Lewis
Gracious Living Realty - Front Royal, VA
I want to SELL your home, not LIST it!

As long as the venture pays off over time, losing money on or two events should not be a big worry.  Of course, it would be nice to have the money-makers upfront, not the losers!

Mar 08, 2012 04:28 AM
Tom Wood
Ad Maker Tool & Real Estate Auction Systems - Ballwin, MO

Jack - Yes I think that's a great way to look at it.  Thanks for the input.

Mar 08, 2012 04:36 AM

What's the reason you're reporting this blog entry?

Are you sure you want to report this blog entry as spam?