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Discounted Rehabs, Fixers, and Rentals in Central Virginia

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latimeshousesforsaleBuy Richmond Virginia Foreclosures

Foreclosures in Richmond and Virginia are at an all time high.

In the Richmond market, foreclosed properties dominate the MLS and thousands of pre foreclosures in Richmond VA are in process.

To buy a Richmond Virginia foreclosure, you could spend hours scanning the MLS for REOs, spending thousands of dollars advertising for sellers in pre-foreclosure, or simply outsource it.

That is where we come in.

We find Richmond VA pre-foreclosures and people wanting to avoid foreclosure for you.

Learn of Richmond Virginia Foreclosures

Here is how you learn of Richmond VA Foreclosures

We find the property in pre-foreclosure in Richmond.

We email our wholesale buyers that we have a property in pre-foreclosure available to them.

You receive our email, open it and read about the pre-foreclosure in the Richmond area.

You call us to see the house.

You put down a non-refundable good faith deposit to secure your closing (unless I can’t deliver title).

You buy the property that is the foreclosure process in Virginia.

That is how you do it with a company like this.

Get Richmond VA Pre Foreclosures by Email

To get our emails, simply join our wholesale buyers list.  You can only get word of our deals by joining our list.

We buy and sell pre foreclosure in Richmond, Glen Allen, Louisa, Goochland, Hanover, Chesterfield, Petersburg, Colonial Heights, Chester, Hopewell, Henrico and throughout all of central Virginia.

EMILY C. DOOLEY TIMES-DISPATCH STAFF WRITER

Published: June 9, 2009

The Richmond region has lost more jobs than any other metro area in the state, an economist said yesterday.

From when employment — the number of jobs — peaked in the Richmond area in August 2007 through March 2009, the region lost 26,000 jobs. The job losses included thousands resulting from the bankruptcies of Circuit City Stores Inc., LandAmerica Financial Group Inc., and Qimonda AG.

. . . . .

Virginia also is doing better than the nation. From March 2008 to March 2009, Virginia employment fell by 2.4 percent. During that same period, employment fell by 3.5 percent nationwide, the report said.

. . . . .

Another study could bolster that belief. A June 5 study conducted by the Society for Human Resource Management said more workers are expected to find jobs in June compared with the previous six months.

The study is based on a monthly survey of human resources officials at manufacturing and service-sector companies.

via In Virginia, layoffs hit Richmond area hardest | Richmond Times-Dispatch.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Published: May 27, 2009

WASHINGTON — A real estate group says sales of previously occupied homes rose modestly from March to April as buyers swooped in to take advantage of prices that were 15.4 percent below year-ago levels.

The National Association of Realtors said today that home sales rose 2.9 percent to an annual rate of 4.68 million last month, from a downwardly revised pace of 4.55 million in March.

The results slightly beat economists’ forecasts. Sales had been expected to rise to an annual pace of 4.66 million units, according to Thomson Reuters.

The median sales price plunged to $172,000, down from $201,300 in the same month last year. That was the second-largest drop on record after January, when prices fell 17.5 percent.

via April existing home sales rise 2.9 percent | Richmond Times-Dispatch.