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FRESNO -- Housing prices are so low that some investors are changing their strategies, going from "fix up and flip" to "touch up and hold."
Investors are finding that they can buy and rent the properties for less than the cost of building new.
With construction at almost a standstill, that makes existing properties more valuable.
And with values at 2002 levels, investors such as Terance Frazier are changing their game.
"I'm buying more properties and sitting on them," said Frazier, who typically buys, repairs and resells.
He has bought about 30 properties in the last two months, including apartments.
"I'm getting as many doors as I can," he said. Some he resells quickly; others he's holding onto until values rise. "I'm watching the cycles."
Frazier is one of the largest purchasers at courthouse auctions, but is finding that more people are getting into the action, searching for bargains.
The number of foreclosures sold at courthouse auctions in Fresno County in October totaled 73, up from 55 in September and sharp spike from 10 in October 2008, according to ForeclosureRadar, which tracks such activity.
In Kern County, the number climbed to 109 in October from 90 in September and 19 in October 2008.
"It is clear that sales at the courthouse steps are becoming increasingly competitive," wrote Sean O'Toole, founder of ForeclosureRadar.
The increase in activity at the courthouse steps coincides with more houses scheduled for auction -- although banks are choosing not to release all of them to the marketplace.
About 87 percent of the postponed auctions are at the request of the lender or with their agreement.
As a result, more homeowners are in "foreclosure limbo," holding out hope for a loan modification or just waiting for an eviction notice, O'Toole said.
Mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have started programs that allow borrowers facing foreclosure to rent back their homes.
Frazier often does the same thing, enabling families to stay intact and in the same neighborhoods and schools.
"No one knows if you are renting or owning -- and in the long run who really owns your house anyway," he said. "Just try paying off your house and then not paying your property taxes."
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