Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Foreclosures still going through the roof

Trustees Deeds Recorded




DataQuick has released the Foreclosure report for the second quarter of this year. As you can see the numbers are still sky high. Riverside is up 250% in Notice of Trustee sale and San Berdu is up a whopping 315% over last year.





Another Increase in California Foreclosure Activity
La Jolla, CA.--Lenders started foreclosure proceedings on a record number of California homeowners last quarter, the result of declining home values and the rampant spoilage of a batch of especially risky home loans made in late 2005 and 2006, a real estate information service reported.



Mortgage servicers recorded 121,341 "notices of default" during the April-through-June period. That was up 6.6 percent from a revised 113,809 for this year's first quarter, and up 124.9 percent from 53,943 in second-quarter 2007, according to DataQuick Information Systems. Last quarter's number of defaults was the highest in DataQuick's statistics, which go back to 1992.



"It's still very clear that most of the problems are in certain areas and in certain categories. Basically, areas that absorbed spillover activity during the end of the boom cycle in 2006 seem to be the hardest hit. Prices went too high, fueled by the availability of easy-to-get dicey home loans. An added element was speculative buying," said John Walsh, DataQuick president.



Most of the loans that went into default last quarter were originated between September 2005 and November 2006. The median age was 26 months, up from 16 months a year earlier.
On primary mortgages, California homeowners were a median five months behind on their payments when the lender filed the notice of default. The borrowers owed a median $11,583 on a median $346,400 mortgage.



Last quarter's default numbers were a record in almost all of the state's 58 counties. That included Los Angeles County, where last quarter's 21,632 residential defaults surpassed the prior record of 21,444 recorded during first-quarter 1996.



Of the homeowners in default, an estimated 22 percent emerge from the foreclosure process by bringing their payments current, refinancing, or selling the home and paying off what they owe. A year ago it was about 52 percent. The increased portion of homes lost to foreclosure reflects the slow real estate market, as well as the number of homes bought during the height of the market with multiple-loan financing, which makes 'work- outs' difficult.



Trustees Deeds recorded, or the actual loss of a home to foreclosure, totaled 63,061 during the second quarter. That's the highest since DataQuick began tracking Trustees Deeds in 1988. Last quarter's total rose 33.5 percent from 47,221 in the previous quarter, and jumped 261.0 percent from 17,458 in second quarter 2007. In the last real estate cycle, Trustees Deeds peaked at 15,418 in third-quarter 1996. The all- time low was 637 in the second quarter of 2005.






3 comments:

Unknown said...

Golfer, do you know where we can access thes REO opportunities? Redfin doesnt have very many...

golfer_X said...

Unless the broker inputs the listing as an REO they show up as regular listings. So it's just about impossible to tell an REO from a regular listing on Redfin or any of the other online services. Most of the REO's are on Redfin they just show up as regular listings though.
You can subscrible to one of the many foreclosure services like Realtytrac, ForeclosureRadar etc.

Santa Ana River Rat said...

the wealth is evaporating at rapid pace. So do you think $1200 stimulus will psych people into thinking, "Wow! Our economy is just A-Okay!" Democs are saying it's time for another stimulus package, even the repug Bush is saying he'll sign the rescue plan(who is he rescuing? Now my grandkids will have to pay for this mess) We have a generation of people who are way too familiar with mommy and daddy bailing them out, and now look for the government to bail them out. Frankly the current wave of foreclosures should continue and people need to learn the hard lesson on living within means. let the natural selection begin!