Number
Of Homes At Risk Of Foreclosure Rose In May, Weighing On Property Values
AP | By ALEX
VEIGA Posted: 06/14/2012 12:09
am Updated: 06/14/2012 12:56 pm
LOS
ANGELES (AP) — Lenders initiated foreclosure proceedings against more U.S.
homeowners in May, setting the stage for increases in home repossessions and
short sales — scenarios that could further weigh down home values in coming
months.
Default
or scheduled-home-auction notices were filed for the first time against 109,051
homes last month. That's an increase of 12 percent from April and up 16 percent
versus May last year, foreclosure listing firm RealtyTrac Inc. said Thursday.
The
firm monitors documents filed on properties with mortgages that have gone
unpaid. Once that process begins, homes can end up foreclosed-upon, sold at
auction or via a short sale. A short sale is when the bank agrees to accept
less than what the borrower owes on their mortgage.
May
was the first month since January 2010 that the number of homes starting on the
foreclosure path rose on an annual basis. But the trend has been visible in the
monthly numbers, with four out of the first five months of this year recording
increases over the preceding month. The data reflects how banks and mortgage
servicers have been stepping up efforts this year to address unpaid mortgages.
Foreclosure
activity, as measured by the number of homes receiving foreclosure-related
notices, slowed sharply last year as banks grappled with allegations that they
had been processing foreclosures without verifying documents. A $25 billion
settlement reached in February between the nation's biggest mortgage lenders
and state officials has since cleared the way for banks to move against
homeowners who have fallen behind on their mortgage payments. "Lenders are
starting to catch up with the delayed foreclosures of the past year and a
half," said Daren Blomquist, a vice president at RealtyTrac. Some 33
states saw annual increases in homes entering the foreclosure process last
month, with New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Florida posting the biggest gains.
Many
of the homes now entering the foreclosure process could end up repossessed by
banks. Going by the last five years, it could be as many as half. Some 8.7
million U.S. homes entered the foreclosure process between January 2007 and
last month, RealtyTrac said. Out of those, 4.3 million properties ended up
foreclosed-upon.
Still,
the pace of home repossessions has been easing overall of late, with May being
an exception.
Banks
took back 54,844 properties last month, up 7 percent from April, the firm said.
That represents the first monthly increase after three consecutive monthly
declines. Repossessions were still down 18 percent from May last year, although
17 states saw increases, including North Carolina, Florida and Georgia.
Notably,
states that have been foreclosure hotbeds throughout the housing downturn —
California, Nevada and Arizona — each recorded sharp annual declines in home
repossessions last month.
One
factor: Banks are increasingly opting to resolve foreclosure cases via short
sale, rather than completing the foreclosure process by taking back properties.
In
the first three months of the year, short sales grew 25 percent from a year
earlier, hitting a three-year high. In contrast, sales of bank-owned properties
declined 15 percent versus the first quarter of last year, according to
RealtyTrac. "The trend we're seeing is actually short sales are becoming
the preferred method for many lenders, rather than bank repossession,"
Blomquist said.
Foreclosure
sales can spell trouble for nearby homeowners, who could see the value of their
homes erode further as neighboring foreclosures sell. But short sales typically
sell at a smaller discount than bank-owned homes, so they have less of a
negative impact on home prices.
All
told, foreclosure-related notices were reported on 205,990 U.S. properties last
month, an increase of 9 percent from April and down 4 percent versus May last
year, RealtyTrac said. On a state level, foreclosure activity in Georgia jumped
33 percent between April and May, and vaulted 30 percent from May last year.
That translates to one in every 300 households receiving a foreclosure-related
warning, the nation's highest foreclosure rate last month.
Rounding
out the top 10 states with the highest foreclosure rate in May are Arizona,
Nevada, California, Illinois, Florida, Ohio, Michigan, South Carolina and Utah.
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