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Patrick H. Crowe
Guest
I need help with understanding this. As most of us know there are many car washes "under water". In point of fact quite a few, at least here in the midwest, are abandoned, vandalized, eyesores. So I've been trying to buy one, maybe more.
Here's what I've found, to my amazement. Now as vain as this will sound to my few critics I have some fair and reasonable idea of what washes are worth since I wrote the Car Wash Appraisal Handbook, which has, more or less been unquestioned.
The washes I've looked at are abandoned, vandalized, closed down over a year, froze up and the lenders have them priced way, way beyond, many times beyond what they could possibly be worth. Why?
Here's what I'm told. NPR did a piece about this. If the report I was given was correct and if I understood it, the banks are better off with the bankrupt washes on their books claiming they are worth much more than they are than they would be to sell them at fair market value. Why?
Here's where I'm confused but apparently if a bank claims a wash is worth 190K when it's worth less than 25% of that amount, they can keep it on the books, somehow, at 190K level. If they actually sold it for 40K they would have serious actual losses to deal with so at least for the time being, they price it way beyond what it could possibly be worth because that's less indicative of their gross incompetence than the sale would be. HUH?
Could this be?
Patrick H. Crowe
Here's what I've found, to my amazement. Now as vain as this will sound to my few critics I have some fair and reasonable idea of what washes are worth since I wrote the Car Wash Appraisal Handbook, which has, more or less been unquestioned.
The washes I've looked at are abandoned, vandalized, closed down over a year, froze up and the lenders have them priced way, way beyond, many times beyond what they could possibly be worth. Why?
Here's what I'm told. NPR did a piece about this. If the report I was given was correct and if I understood it, the banks are better off with the bankrupt washes on their books claiming they are worth much more than they are than they would be to sell them at fair market value. Why?
Here's where I'm confused but apparently if a bank claims a wash is worth 190K when it's worth less than 25% of that amount, they can keep it on the books, somehow, at 190K level. If they actually sold it for 40K they would have serious actual losses to deal with so at least for the time being, they price it way beyond what it could possibly be worth because that's less indicative of their gross incompetence than the sale would be. HUH?
Could this be?
Patrick H. Crowe