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Foreclosure Filing Rate Climbed to a Record High

May 18th, 2009 stoneequitygroup No comments

Foreclosures are hitting record highs according to recent industry report submitted by RealtyTrac. As per RealtyTrac, an online firm specialized in foreclosure properties, states that foreclosure filings which includes auction sale notices, home-loan default notices and bank repossessions, were reported a record high in April, 2009. The study shows that one in every 374 U.S.

households received a foreclosure filing in April which is in fact the maximum monthly foreclosure rate ever posted since RealtyTrac began issuing its report in January 2005.

Some states have witnessed a steep record high in foreclosure activity in comparison to last year. Nevada continues to post the nation’s highest foreclosure activity rate. In April, one in every 68 housing units in the Nevada state received a foreclosure filing, which is actually five times more than the national average. Total foreclosure activity in Nevada was up 111% from April 2008. In addition to this, Florida is a second state that has shown second highest rise in foreclosure activity among the other states in April. Total foreclosure filing in Florida was up 75% from April 2008. With rise of 42% from April 2008, California posted the nation’s third highest foreclosure activity rate.

The continuous slow down in jobs market and price depreciation had a significant effect on foreclosure levels. New housing affordability has turn out to be the prime concern and as a result deeply discounted foreclosure market holds for more than half of home sales activity. In fact in coming few months, RealtyTrac even estimates the foreclosure filing will further continue to increase till the world’s largest economy struggles to overcome from its second year of recession.

Housing market in US will continue to fall and experts even expect the peak of foreclosure activity now. Though the house market is down and price will continue to decrease, but if you are looking to buy any of the foreclosure property, you must take several factors in consideration like the quality and amenities of the neighborhood and much more.

For more information on foreclosure or any guidance in foreclosure investment, contact Stone Equity Group (stoneeg.com). The group specializes in assisting busy professionals build profitable real estate portfolios in changing markets. Over the years, it has built relationships with banks and large lending institutions to help liquidate non-performing assets.

Foreclosures Swarm Las Vegas

March 16th, 2009 Administrator No comments

I knew Las Vegas would get hit hard by foreclosures when my friend bought a condo there for $300k a couple years ago. With nothing but open desert for miles around there’s no way that a 2BR condo could be worth 300,000 crispies!

I don’t call this market downsizing, I call it “right-sizing”. Vegas cannot grow into perpetuity, like anything else there is a ceiling. As sad as it is, sooner or later many in construction and the businesses its’ support industries will have to find the next boomtown. In their wake will be many, many foreclosed homes that whose prices will have to come back down to earth.

Vegas was, and will probably remain to be the playground for those in the Southern California area as well as an international gambling destination. I believe, like the mountain communities surrounding Los Angeles and San Diego, many of the homes in Las Vegas will soon be vacation properties.

You might be able to buy a vacation house there for the cost of a rough weekend pretty soon!

SEG Advisors.Tv big hit for real estate investors

December 26th, 2008 Administrator No comments

When SEG was started it had a mission of erasing retirement poverty through real estate investing. SEG has released SEG Advisors.Tv to further its vision which offers investors free access to real estate investment videos from leading advisors. Videos are being added constantly and cover Tax Strategy, Real Estate Investing, Asset Protection, and Asset Management. A forum is also available which covers similar topics in a live setting in the SEG community.

For more information on SEG Advisors.Tv.

Foreclosures on the second wind

December 24th, 2008 Administrator No comments

After a flurry of foreclosures over the last 18 months the fallout from toxic subprime loans has started to wain. Foreclosure investments all the rage have impacted REO portfolios held by banks to just under 900k. This fact does not note the second wave of foreclosures to hit the market between 2009 to 2011 expected to be around 4 million.

The reason for the second waive of REO and Foreclosures is the adjustable rate prime mortgages structures on 3, 5, 7 and 10 year fixed periods after which may reset into substantially larger payments based on 1 - 2 percent rate increases or balloon forcing an accelerated payment. While mortgage backed securities typically utilized a 3% default rate for valuations some lenders are finding 12% of their portfolios in some stage of delinquency or foreclosure.

The office of the Thrift Supervision and the Controller of Currency released a 3rd quarter report putting a scare into the already fragile housing market illustrating new findings. The report, which covers the third quarter of the year, was the second such indication of the effectiveness — or lack thereof — of new efforts at foreclosure mitigation. It examined the portfolios of nine national banks and five thrifts, including JPMorgan Chase (NYSE: JPM), Citigroup (NYSE: C), Bank of America (NYSE: BAC), Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC), and First Horizon (NYSE: FHN), representing more than 60% of all U.S. mortgages outstanding.

As detailed in the report, the first since the initial tabulation was put out in June, new foreclosure initiatives actually fell by 2.6% to 281,298 in the September quarter (largely due to mortgage relief programs). But a perhaps more important metric, foreclosures completed, increased by 8%, while the total number of foreclosures in process rose by 11% to 617,642.

There was also a disturbing new trend in the report released by Comptroller of the Currency John C. Dugan: More than half of the mortgages modified in the first quarter to benefit struggling borrowers had fallen back into delinquency, once again more than 30 days past due by the end of September.

Real estate investments in the foreclosure and reo space are heating up. For more information on Foreclosure investments contact Stone Equity Group

Foreclosure Workshop Saturday In Arizona

December 14th, 2008 Administrator 2 comments

Financially troubled homeowners will get an insight into the mortgage foreclosure process and advice on avoiding it at a workshop scheduled Saturday at Gilbert Civic Center.

The workshop, part of a Valley-wide effort by the Leadership Centre and the Arizona Foreclosure Prevention Task Force to stem the rising tide of foreclosures, is aimed at teaching families about crisis budgeting and strategies for keeping their homes.

Residents who live in neighborhoods plagued by foreclosed properties will also get information on how to maintain their own property values amid the blight that often comes with abandoned houses.

Several speakers are lined up for the event, including representatives from the Don’t Borrow Trouble Campaign and Arizona Saves. The goal is to help people before it’s too late, said Cheri Horbacz with the task force, which also plans a workshop Jan. 10 in Mesa.

Similar workshops elsewhere in the Valley have brought in crowds of 500 people; one in Glendale drew 1,800.

Participants will learn how to talk to their lenders about loan modifications because about half of homeowners facing foreclosures fail to talk with their lender during the process, said Patricia Garcia-Duarte, task force chairwoman.

“We want to make sure people feel comfortable. The bank is calling, but they may have an option,” Garcia-Duarte said.

Beleaguered owners will also learn how to save money, and maybe their homes, even when facing a foreclosure. A class will teach 90-day crisis budgeting, said Jennifer Quillin with Arizona Saves.

Quillin said many lenders require money up front if a loan modification is agreed on. Even if terms can’t be reached, homeowners should still trim their budgets to save money, she said.

“If they are not able to save their home, they’ll need that money to move out,” Quillin said. “It’s not a ‘no bill holiday’ when you can’t make a mortgage payment.”

Speakers will also touch on the tax ramifications of foreclosures and what to expect during legal proceedings.

Mark Lines, an attorney with Shaw and Lines, will speak on trustee sales and personal liabilities that could be retained after a foreclosure.

Organizers hope people will leave the workshop energized to survive the down market.

“They’ll walk out feeling like they are the CEO in charge of their company and no one cares more about their money than they do,” Quillin said.

Foreclosure Storm Will Hit U.S. in ‘09 Amid Job Loss (Update1)

December 12th, 2008 Administrator 3 comments

By Dan Levy

Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) — U.S. foreclosure filings climbed 28 percent in November from a year earlier and a brewing “storm” of new defaults and job losses may force 1 million homeowners from their properties next year, RealtyTrac Inc. said.

A total of 259,085 properties got a default notice, were warned of a pending auction or were foreclosed on last month, the seller of default data said in a report today. That’s the fewest since June. Filings fell 7 percent from October as state laws and lender programs designed to delay the foreclosure process allowed delinquent borrowers to stay in their homes.

“We’re going to see a pretty significant storm next year,” Rick Sharga, executive vice president of marketing for Irvine, California-based RealtyTrac, said in an interview. “There are two or three clouds that suggest a pretty heavy downpour.”

Rising unemployment, expiring foreclosure moratoriums and state efforts that “run out of steam” will push monthly filings toward the record of more than 303,000 set in August, Sharga said. The number of homes that revert to lenders, the last stage of foreclosure and known as “real estate owned” or REO properties, will increase to 1 million from as many as 880,000 this year, he said.

Job Losses

“The forces leading to foreclosure are hard to offset in most cases and impossible in many,” Robert Hall, a Stanford University professor and chairman of the National Bureau of Economic Research committee that calls the beginnings and ends of recessions, wrote in an e-mail. “Job loss is a major source of defaults at all times, and job losses are running at extreme levels now.”

Initial jobless claims increased to 573,000 in the week ended Dec. 6, the highest level since November 1982, while the number of workers staying on benefit rolls reached 4.429 million, also the most since 1982, the Labor Department said today. U.S. companies slashed payrolls by 533,000 last month, the fastest pace in 34 years, for a total of 1.9 million job cuts so far this year.

“The labor market is facing its worst crisis since 1982, and it is certainly not over yet,” said Harm Bandholz, a U.S. economist at UniCredit Markets and Investment Banking in New York.

Home prices have fallen by about a fifth from the mid-2006 peak, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller home price index.

‘Devastating Consequences’

“The decline in prices and its devastating consequences” will continue next year with no indication of when they will stabilize, Hall said. Programs that modify the terms of loans, including efforts by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, JPMorgan Chase & Co., Bank of America Corp. and Citigroup Inc. can’t help thousands of borrowers, he said.

“Something like 70 percent of subprime foreclosures are beyond the reach of modification programs because the owners are investors, because the owner is in default for the second time on the property, or because the owner has disappeared,” Hall said.

The share of mortgages delinquent by 30 days or more in the third quarter rose to a seasonally adjusted 6.99 percent while loans already in foreclosure rose to 2.97 percent, both all-time highs, the Mortgage Bankers Association said in a Dec. 5 report. The gain in delinquencies was driven by an increase in loans with payments 90 days or more overdue.

No Improvement

“Until we see a turnaround in the job situation, we’re not going to see these numbers improve,” said Jay Brinkmann, chief economist of the Washington-based bankers group.

In November, one in every 488 U.S. households received a foreclosure filing, RealtyTrac said. Nevada had the highest rate for the 23rd straight month with one in 76 households in some stage of foreclosure, more than six times the national average. Filings more than doubled from a year earlier to 13,962.

Florida had the second-highest rate, one in 173 households, and the second-most filings at 49,190, an increase of 68 percent. Arizona had the third-highest rate, one in 198 households, and ranked fifth in total filings with 13,136, up 128 percent.

California, Michigan, Georgia, Ohio, Colorado, Utah and Idaho also ranked among the top 10 highest rates, said RealtyTrac, which collects property data from more than 2,200 U.S. counties that represent more than 90 percent of the population.

California

California had the most filings with 60,491, up 51 percent from a year earlier, and a rate of one filing for every 218 households, more than twice the national average.

Michigan ranked third in filings with 14,594, up 27 percent, and had a rate of one for every 309 households, according to RealtyTrac. Nevada, Arizona, Ohio, Georgia, Illinois, Texas, and Virginia were among the top 10 states with the most filings.

New Jersey had the 15th highest rate, one in 622 households, and had 5,582 filings, up 32 percent from a year earlier. New York had the 39th highest rate, one in 3,040 households, and had 2,601 filings, a decrease of 55 percent, RealtyTrac said.

Florida had three metropolitan areas among the top 10 highest rates, including Cape Coral-Fort Myers in first place with one in 59 households in a stage of foreclosure. Fort Lauderdale was seventh at one in 117 households, and Port Lucie- Fort Pierce was eighth at one in 118 households.

Las Vegas ranked second at one in every 61 households in a stage of foreclosure.

California had six metro areas in the top 10, led by Merced in third place with a rate of one in 76 households in a stage of foreclosure. Modesto, Stockton and Riverside-San Bernardino ranked fourth through sixth, Bakersfield was ninth and Vallejo- Fairfield was 10th, according to RealtyTrac.

To contact the reporter on this story: Dan Levy in San Francisco at dlevy13@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: December 11, 2008 12:33 EST


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