전미 부동산 소식

전미 부동산 뉴스 통계 은행 이자 몰게지 주거용 상업용 부동산 정보

Six months, 343,000 lost homes

김세규
Author
admin
Date
2008-07-11 01:26
Views
1282



Six months, 343,000 lost homes

Through the first half of 2008, the foreclosure rate shows little sign of letting up.


NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The number of Americans losing their homes to foreclosure continued to soar in June, according to a report released Thursday.

RealtyTrac, an online marketer of foreclosed properties, reported that lenders repossessed 71,563 homes in June. A year ago, just 26,369 homes were taken back.

During the first six months of 2008, 343,159 Americans lost their homes, up 136% from 145,696 recorded during the same period in 2007.

The report revealed that foreclosure filings of all types, including notices of default, notices of auction sales and bank repossessions, rose 53% from June 2007, to 252,363. For the first six months, total filings rose 56% to 1.4 million.

"June was the second straight month with more than a quarter-million properties nationwide receiving foreclosure filings," said James Saccacio, chief executive officer of RealtyTrac.

There was a shred of good news: When compared with May, filings declined 3%.

Part of that decline may be traced to the actions of states, including Maryland and Massachusetts, that have put moratoriums on foreclosures, according to Rick Sharga, a spokesman for RealtyTrac.

"Massachusetts put a 90-day hold on new foreclosures," he said, "and filings dropped 3% there over last year."

But big increases were more common. In 13 states, filings more than doubled from a year earlier, including in Arizona, Nebraska and Oregon.

"The year-over-year increase of more than 50% indicates we have not yet reached the top of this foreclosure cycle," said Saccacio.

Adding to foreclosure woes is that home prices have been falling all year, down more than 14% in the first quarter, according to the latest figures from the S&P Case-Shiller Home Price Index.

Price declines strip homeowners of equity, making many mortgage borrowers owe more than their homes are worth. When they're underwater, they can't borrow against home equity to help out during a rough financial stretch.

Underwater properties are hard to sell because any deal would be for a sum below the mortgage balance - the bank would have to agree to take a loss. Many of these "short sales" get turned down and wind up as bank-owned properties.

"The real explosion has been in bank repossessions," said Sharga. "There's really no place else for these places to go except back to the lenders when they're underwater."

Two things work against short sales, according to Duane LeGate, president of HouseBuyerNetwork.com, a short-sale specialist. One is there is often a question of who has authority over the loan. Mortgage servicers are loath to make decisions that will result in losses of mortgage principal of loans in investor pools, even if it means smaller losses than foreclosures produce.

The second is manpower. Servicers simply don't have the personnel to handle the volume of short-sale and other loss-mitigation requests they've been receiving. Delays in processing short sales can mean approvals come too late.

"We hear about all these streamlined mortgage lending programs," said LeGate. "Where are the streamlined processes to undo the mortgages they originated?"

Sun Belt still hard hit

Nevada led all states in the rate of foreclosure activity for the 17th consecutive month, with one filing for every 122 households, a total of 8,713. California had the most filings with 68,666, one for every 192 households.

Other states with very high foreclosure rates included Arizona, one for every 201 households, Florida (one for every 211), Michigan (one in 375) and Ohio (one in 382).

California had seven of the 10 metropolitan areas worst hit by foreclosure. Stockton had one for every 72 households - more than six times the national average of one for every 501 households. Merced, was second with one for every 77 households, and Modesto - one in 86 - was third.

Cape Coral-Fort Myers, Fla., where one in every 91 households received a foreclosure filing, had the fourth highest rate. In Las Vegas, the only city outside of California and Florida with a foreclosure rate ranking among the top 10, one in 99 households received a foreclosure filing in June. To top of page



Total 4
Number Thumbnail Title Author Date Votes Views
334
6월 해외부동산 취득 '반토막', 미국 서브프라임 모기지 부실 영향
admin | 2008.07.23 | Votes 0 | Views 1296
admin 2008.07.23 0 1296
333
뉴욕타임스, "美 집값 10~15% 추가하락"
admin | 2008.07.21 | Votes 0 | Views 1311
admin 2008.07.21 0 1311
332
미국서 집사기 어려워진다 (모기지 보험사, 보험계약 규정 강화)
admin | 2008.07.21 | Votes 0 | Views 1379
admin 2008.07.21 0 1379
331
앤디 시에가 본 세계 부동산시장…"대폭락 가능성"
admin | 2008.07.21 | Votes 0 | Views 1393
admin 2008.07.21 0 1393
330
미국인은 왜 집 옮길까···평균 5~7년에 한번 이사
admin | 2008.07.16 | Votes 0 | Views 1626
admin 2008.07.16 0 1626
329
되살아난 서브프라임 유령… 다음 희생자는 누구?
admin | 2008.07.16 | Votes 0 | Views 1291
admin 2008.07.16 0 1291
328
`구제금융설마저..` 패니매·프레디맥, 날개없는 추락
admin | 2008.07.12 | Votes 0 | Views 1786
admin 2008.07.12 0 1786
327
미 대형 모기지업체 인디맥 파산
admin | 2008.07.12 | Votes 0 | Views 1270
admin 2008.07.12 0 1270
326
Six months, 343,000 lost homes
admin | 2008.07.11 | Votes 0 | Views 1282
admin 2008.07.11 0 1282
325
'주택·금융 혼란 내년까지 간다' 버냉키 FRB 의장 발표
admin | 2008.07.10 | Votes 0 | Views 1268
admin 2008.07.10 0 1268
324
`반짝 반등` 美 잠정주택판매 재하락
admin | 2008.07.08 | Votes 0 | Views 1270
admin 2008.07.08 0 1270
323
뉴스위크, 美주택시장 바닥 아직 멀었다.
admin | 2008.07.06 | Votes 0 | Views 1256
admin 2008.07.06 0 1256
322
"서브프라임 사태 불 껐지만, 미국 경기 침체는 불 보듯"
admin | 2008.06.28 | Votes 0 | Views 2133
admin 2008.06.28 0 2133
321
집값 '4년전 수준'…4월 낙폭 사상 최대, 대도시가 더 떨어져
admin | 2008.06.25 | Votes 0 | Views 1409
admin 2008.06.25 0 1409
320
단 500달러로 주택장만이 가능한 이유
admin | 2008.06.25 | Votes 0 | Views 1620
admin 2008.06.25 0 1620