But why would the bank holding the REO do that? What's in it for them? What do they care, really, about where the money came from? They want to unload a non-performing asset. It's in their interest to do so as quickly as possible.
Around here, property taxes alone on an average house can cost the bank upwards of ten thousand dollars a year. When my parents retired, the property taxes on their modest 3-bedroom house in working-class western Long Island were about $14,000 a year (which is the main reason they moved, by the way). I really don't get why a bank holding a non-performing asset that's costing them that much money would care where the money came from. They just want to unload it.
Yeah, cash is king; but the bank has already lost a bunch of it on an REO, and all those non-performing assets make the bank's shareholders jittery. The bottom line is that the bank wants to sell the house. They failed to do so by short sale, and they failed to so at foreclosure. Although banks will rarely put any money into an REO to make it more saleable, I doubt they would deliberately delay the sale just for the sake of finding a cash buyer.
So who would?
The former owner is a suspect, of course. People losing their homes have been known to do spiteful things to "get even" with their banks. But why schlep the HVAC unit up the stairs when taking a sledge hammer to the sheetrock and plumbing fixtures is so much easier and more satisfying? And if you are going to schlep it all the way up the stairs, why not sell it once you get it there? So no, I don't think the former owners are the culprits here.
So again, the question is: Who would have a vested interest in preventing the home from being sold, or at least delaying it?
My prime suspect would be the broker who did the original BPO.
Real estate brokers work on commission, and these sales typically generate less money for them because the sale prices tend to be low. They also tend to require a lot more work. So the broker's looking at more work for less money -- not something too many people look forward to.
A seller's broker in this situation might be especially reluctant to share that meager commission by splitting it with a buyer's broker. The obvious way to avoid that is to sell it himself. But "pocket listing" the property will likely get him in trouble with the bank (and possibly the law) for not putting forth his best effort to find a buyer.
But if he makes the house unsaleable (probably blaming the previous owners, vandals, or thieves, any of which would be hard to disprove because he himself did the BPO), he can wait until a suitable candidate strolls into his own office looking for a great deal. That "suitable candidate" would preferably be one with cash, but could also be someone who is using an FHA 203(K) loan (which does allow extra funds for repairs to be factored into the mortgage). In either case, the broker gets to pocket the whole commission.
Follow the money.
-Rich