![]() "Delinquency itself has become a much clearer predictor of foreclosure," said Sharga. ![]() But the proportion of those loans that went into foreclosure was much lower, he added - about 10%. "The number of mortgages 30 days past due are still below what they were during the 2001 recession," said Brinkman. ![]() That's a much, higher percentage than in the past. In California and Florida 80% of the homeowners who miss a payment end up in foreclosure, according to the MBA. They've fallen more than 40% in Phoenix and nearly that much in Las Vegas.ĭeclining prices put many homeowners "underwater" on their mortgages, owing more than their homes are worth, which makes them more likely to default.Īnd adding a flood of bank-owned homes to already slow markets further outstrips demand and dampens prices, creating a spiral of lower prices and higher foreclosures.Īs a result, more homeowners who fall behind on their mortgage payments end up losing their homes, according to Jay Brinkman, the chief economist for the Mortgage Bankers Association In Los Angeles, San Francisco and Miami prices are down 30% or more. In many areas, the decline has been much worse. And nationally, home prices have fallen more than 21% from their peak, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price index. "The recent California law, much like its predecessors in Massachusetts and Maryland, appears to have done little more than delay the inevitable foreclosure proceedings for thousands of homeowners," said Saccacio.įoreclosures are closely tied to home prices - they tend to rise as prices fall. But they jumped back to more than 44,000 again in December, probably because banks caught up on many of the postponed notices. This creates a delay between the time that borrowers first miss payments and when they go into foreclosure.Īfter one such rule took effect in California this past summer, notices of default fell by half, to 21,665 from 44,278. Banks simply lack the manpower to track down so many delinquent homeowners with the required notifications. Part of that is because some new state regulations require banks to notify delinquent borrowers of their intent to file notices of default, and to offer help to borrowers who want to get their finances back on track. They are not sending out foreclosure filings as quickly when homeowners fall behind on payments. Either way, it has the effect of underestimating the foreclosure inventory problem.īanks also seem to be slowing the foreclosure process, according to Sharga. "Either banks are overwhelmed and can't get the houses on the MLS quickly, or they're deliberately slowing down so they don't have to take markdowns to actual home values on their books," Sharga said. Those homes are less likely to be sold because most real estate agents won't know they're available. His company now has nearly a million sales listings for bank-owned homes.Īnd what's worse, Sharga thinks that as many as 70% of the bank-owned homes listed on RealtyTrac's site have not yet been posted on multiple listings services (MLS), the industry databases of homes for sale. ![]() "I don't see how we can avoid three million foreclosures again in 2009," said Rick Sharga, a RealtyTrac spokesman. The devastating numbers are unlikely to improve soon. "The big jump in December foreclosure activity was somewhat surprising given the moratoria enacted by both Freddie Mac ( FRE, Fortune 500) and Fannie Mae ( FNM, Fortune 500), along with programs from some of the major lenders and loan servicers aimed at delaying foreclosure actions against distressed homeowners," said Saccacio.īoth of the government-sponsored mortgage giants suspended foreclosures starting Novemthrough January 31, 2009. ![]() Foreclosure filings were up 17% in December over November, and rose 41% compared with December of 2007. "Clearly the foreclosure prevention programs implemented to date have not had any real success in slowing down this foreclosure tsunami," said James Saccacio, CEO of RealtyTrac in a statement.Īnd despite those efforts on the part of both the government and the banking industry to quell the housing crisis, defaults continued to climb as 2008 came to an end. There were more than 3.1 million foreclosure filings issued during 2008, which means that one of every 54 households received a notice last year. foreclosure filings spiked by more than 81% in 2008, a record, according to a report released Thursday, and they're up 225% compared with 2006.Ī total of 861,664 families lost their homes to foreclosure last year, according to RealtyTrac, which released its year-end report Thursday. ![]()
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