Seven minutes. A keyboard, a bowl of cereal and $100. That’s all a buyer needs to have a shot at a discounted condo on iBidcondo.com. On July 27th, an online auction will open for a sleek condominium in the Beat condos on the south side of Dallas, TX. A seat at the eBay-like auction room costs $100, but the last property went for $86,840. The winner probably fell out of his or her computer chair, because the Austin condo was valued at $690,000. So, who’s crazy enough to let a property go for a fraction of the valued price? Developers approached iBid founder Eugene Marchese, a developer himself until the banks cut off his funding. He put his remaining property online, charged seat fees, sold the condos at a fraction of the price and kept the seat sales. The actual money from the sale goes Dallas-based charities, which are yet to be determined. Developers hope to sell 2,800 seats per auction, but for the Austin sale, only 1,000 were sold. That said, developers still unload their property, help out a charity and pocket revenue from seat sales. Not to mention cause a lucky buyer to choke on their cereal. Write to Jon Prior.
Jon Prior was a reporter with HousingWire through late 2012.see full bio
Most Popular Articles
Latest Articles
HousingWire Mortgage Rankings have arrived, bringing data-driven benchmark to originator performance
HousingWire on Tuesday announced the launch of the HousingWire Mortgage Rankings, a new performance intelligence product designed to provide a clear, data-driven view of mortgage origination activity across the U.S. The rankings benchmark mortgage originators based on observed production, offering a standardized view of performance across geographies, loan types and channels. Historically, the mortgage industry has lacked […]
Jon Prior was a reporter with HousingWire through late 2012.see full bio