LOS ANGELES (AP) — The evolution of the U.S. foreclosure crisis is increasingly diverging along state lines.
On a national level, fewer homes were placed on the foreclosure track last month than in August last year, when they hit a 17-year high, foreclosure listing firm RealtyTrac Inc. said Thursday.
At the same time, so-called foreclosure starts increased almost exclusively in states like Florida and New York, where the courts must sign off on foreclosures, the firm said.
Conversely, in many so-called non-judicial states, like California and Arizona, the number of foreclosure starts declined versus August last year.
The pace of homes entering the foreclosure process is expected to decline gradually, barring another severe economic shock that sends the slowly rebounding housing market into a tailspin, experts say. But that decline is likely to continue playing out unevenly, in part because of the differing approaches to handling foreclosures from state to state.
In addition, some states have passed laws that effectively slow down the process, creating a backlog of foreclosure cases that will take longer to wade through.
Foreclosure activity has been declining in most non-judicial foreclosure states because they didn't build a huge backlog of pending cases during an industrywide slowdown in foreclosures last year. The slowdown stemmed from widespread claims that lenders had been processing foreclosures without verifying documents.
The slower process in states where courts play a role in foreclosures contributed to a logjam of pending foreclosure cases that now has lenders playing catch-up.
All told, 99,405 homes entered the foreclosure process in August, up 1 percent from July, but down 13 percent from August last year, RealtyTrac said.
The latest figure shows a marked slowdown in foreclosure starts since they peaked in April 2009 at about 203,000. But they're still well above the 34,000 recorded in May 2005, before the housing bubble burst.
Foreclosure starts posted annual increases in 18 states — mostly in those where courts are involved in foreclosure cases. One of the exceptions was Washington state, a non-judicial state where foreclosure starts more than doubled.
Lenders there were catching up with foreclosures cases that had been delayed by a state law that took effect July last year and allowed borrowers facing foreclosure to request mediation, said Daren Blomquist, a vice president at RealtyTrac.
"This trend in state legislation intervening in the foreclosure process in some of the non-judicial states, particularly over the past six months to a year, is actually going to prolong the time it takes to fully clear this backlog of foreclosure properties," he said.
Meanwhile, the number of completed foreclosures nationwide declined last month to 52,380. That's down 2 percent from July and down 19 percent from August last year, the firm said.
Home repossessions have been down on an annual basis the past 22 months. But they increased last month in 35 states, including Nevada, where they jumped 76 percent, and Oregon, where they climbed 57 percent.
Between January and August, banks completed foreclosures on 452,016 homes. At that pace, the nation is on track to end the year with 678,000 completed foreclosures, down from 800,000 last year, Blomquist said.
There are as many as 1.5 million homes already repossessed by banks or in some stage of the foreclosure process.
At the state level, Illinois had the highest foreclosure rate in the nation last month, a rate of one in every 298 households in some stage of foreclosure. Both foreclosure starts and completed foreclosures rose in Illinois last month.
Florida, California, Arizona and Nevada rounded out the top five states with the highest foreclosure rates in August.
by Alex Veiga Associate Press Sep 13, 2012
Foreclosure starts fell on annual basis in August - Yahoo! Finance
Monday, September 17, 2012
Real Estate News
Reuters: Business News
National Commercial Real Estate News From CoStar Group
Latest stock market news from Wall Street - CNNMoney.com
Archive
-
▼
2012
(392)
-
▼
September
(91)
- Last days of the Borgata
- LifeLock reveals finances pre-IPO
- Home prices rose in July in 20 major US cities
- Radar Logic: Home Prices Hit Peak in July, Distres...
- 34,000 in Ariz. get mortgage aid
- Phoenix-based Vestar buys Calif. retail center for...
- Phoenix-area rental homes a red-hot commodity
- Home-related sales through the roof
- New US home sales edged down 0.3% in August
- Attorney General sets 3-year foreclosure plan for ...
- Top 10 things to know about Social Security
- Understanding Social Security benefits
- Maricopa County homeowners likely to see property-...
- Reagor: Building of homes slows a bit
- At 40, McCormick Ranch still desirable place to live
- Fountain Hills mulls giving new life to avenue
- Peoria entertainment/hotel plan closer to reality
- Residential lot coverage debated in Arcadia
- Arizonans may not feel closure of local banks
- Proposed Scottsdale condo plan gains height, density
- Luxury retirement facility's sales rise
- Audit: Maricopa County housing-agency woes continue
- Foreclosure starts fell on annual basis in August ...
- Housing prices up in most NE Valley communities
- Housing key part of SkySong's 'secret sauce'
- Valley in top 10 in US for foreign investors
- New tax on home sales is overblown rumor
- Home construction on uptick in Scottsdale
- Building set for approval - USATODAY.com
- Furnishings firm takes over ex-nightclub site
- The market: Views from the trenches
- City closer to Waterfront apartment-plan OK
- Scottsdale council approves permits for downtown b...
- Metro Phoenix a seller's (and landlord's) market
- Scottsdale home prices up 9.26 percent over a year...
- Valley bankruptcies keep plummeting
- IRS pays Swiss ex-banker, whistleblower $104 milli...
- Baby Boomers have many options for retirement plan...
- Proposed condo plan gains height, density
- Cottonwoods considers adding assisted living
- Scottsdale council approves contentious Echo at Wi...
- Phoenix-area home-price dip called a 'natural reac...
- City Planning Commission draws criticism
- US Home Prices Rise in July by Most in 6 Years - D...
- 2 large Phoenix warehouses being built
- City expands affordable housing - USATODAY.com
- Entertainment hub progresses - USATODAY.com
- City hopes Chandler site will be revitalized - USA...
- PV commission member resigns over resort redevelop...
- Top 5 lenders: $500M spent in Ariz. - USATODAY.com
- 6,900 Scottsdale apartments in pipeline
- Home prices notch first 12-month gain since 2010 -...
- Advice for Arizonans on brink of foreclosure
- New-home sales rise to match 2-year high - CBS News
- Beach-club complex votes on permits, licenses are ...
- US home sales rose 2.3 percent, sign of recovery
- Toll Brothers Posts Strong Growth - WSJ.com
- A challenge to finish preserve - USATODAY.com
- Valley agent did well by focusing on SHORT SALES -...
- New Mountain Shadows resort plan consolidates buil...
- ARMLS buys researcher
- Mesa senior-living complex will be based on Tempe ...
- Home prices up in 5 areas - USATODAY.com
- Newest numbers don't cast 'shadow'
- Run-up in home prices slows - USATODAY.com
- Fannie Mae posts $2.2B net gain for Q2 - Yahoo! Fi...
- Land purchase for theater expected to finalized soon
- ASU's SkySong will add residential space
- Reagor: New-home market projections promising
- 6 Phoenix-area apartment communities sold
- Fannie and Freddie principal cuts barred - USATODA...
- Phoenix expedites building process
- Plan for luxury homes at resort stirs controversy
- Mystery bidder gets 275 homes - USATODAY.com
- Meritage earnings rise - USATODAY.com
- Mesa minister gets maximum sentence in fraud
- Split up banks, says builder of Citigroup - USATOD...
- New home sales fall to 5-month low in June – USATO...
- GOP rips Geithner about LIBOR - USATODAY.com
- Historic homes at risk after they're foreclosed
- 100 more lots sold in project - USATODAY.com
- 4333 Building plan still viable, extension sought
- Census estimates: Phoenix remains sixth-largest ci...
- SIGNS OF HEALTH - USATODAY.com
- Subdivision is proposed - USATODAY.com
- Reagor: Home-listing group game for some fun
- After 6 years, Scottsdale is settling state-land case
- Foreclosure Crisis Hits Older Americans Hard - US ...
- Government program to help avoid foreclosure
- Property-tax bills may rise in Paradise Valley sch...
- Construction, housing sectors face challenges
-
▼
September
(91)