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US Foreclosures Up 24 Percent In 1st Quarter

ALAN ZIBEL   04/16/09 07:20 AM ET   AP

Foreclosure

WASHINGTON — The number of American households threatened with losing their homes grew 24 percent in the first three months of this year and is poised to rise further as major lenders restart foreclosures after a temporary break, according to data released Thursday.

The big unknown for the coming months, however, is President Barack Obama's plan to help up to 9 million borrowers avoid foreclosure through refinanced mortgages or modified loans. The Obama administration expects its plans to make a big dent in the foreclosure crisis. But it remains to be seen whether the lending industry will fully embrace it, despite $75 billion in incentive payments.

The faltering economy is causing the housing crisis to spread. Nationwide, nearly 804,000 homes received at least one foreclosure-related notice from January through March, up from about 650,000 in the same time period a year earlier, according to RealtyTrac Inc., a foreclosure listing firm. During the quarter, Ohio was the state with the seventh highest number of homes seeing foreclosure activity with about 31,600 receiving at least one filing, up 1 percent from a year earlier.

In March, more than 340,000 properties were affected nationwide, up 17 percent from February and 46 percent from a year earlier. Ohio had 12,600 homes receiving foreclosure notices during the month, 12 percent more than during March 2008.

Foreclosures "came back with a vengeance" last month and are likely to keep rising, said Rick Sharga, RealtyTrac's senior vice president for marketing.

Nearly 191,000 properties completed the foreclosure process and were repossessed by banks in the quarter. While the number was down 13 percent from the fourth quarter of last year, it is expected to rise through the summer and then possibly taper off.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the big mortgage finance companies, together with many banks had temporarily halted foreclosures in advance of Obama's plan. Now armed with the details about which borrowers can qualify, the mortgage industry has begun foreclosing on ineligible borrowers.

The Treasury Department has signed contracts with six big loan servicing companies _ including Citgroup, Wells Fargo and JPMorgan Chase. Many have already started processing loans as part of the government's "Making Home Affordable" plan.

"We need to get the long-term solutions for these folks," Shaun Donovan, Obama's housing secretary, said in an interview.

In the coming months, Donovan said, there are still likely to be increased foreclosures, especially from vacant houses, second homes and those owned by speculators. None of those properties will qualify for a loan modification. However, he remained optimistic that overall foreclosures could start to decrease this summer.

But even industry executives who emphatically support the plan emphasize that it's success isn't guaranteed.

"The effectiveness of the plan overall obviously is going to depend on the level of industry participation," said Paul Koches, general counsel of Ocwen Financial, which collects loan payments on subprime loans.

Many borrowers and consumer groups claim the modifications offered by the lending industry don't do enough to help cash-strapped homeowners, despite more than a year of public prodding from regulators. Fewer than half of loan modifications made at the end of last year actually reduced borrowers' payments by more than 10 percent, data released last month show.

Plus, the lending industry has been swamped by the unprecedented wave of calls from distressed borrowers. "You can't wave a magic wand and make the loans suddenly modified," Sharga said. "They're all individual transactions."

In RealtyTrac's report, Nevada, Arizona, California and Florida had the nation's top foreclosure rates. In Nevada, one in every 27 homes received a foreclosure filing, while the number was one in every 54 in Arizona. Rounding out the top 10 were Illinois, Michigan, Georgia, Idaho, Utah and Oregon.

___

On the Net:

RealtyTrac Inc.: http://www.realtytrac.com

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WASHINGTON — The number of American households threatened with losing their homes grew 24 percent in the first three months of this year and is poised to rise further as major lenders restart fo...
WASHINGTON — The number of American households threatened with losing their homes grew 24 percent in the first three months of this year and is poised to rise further as major lenders restart fo...
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William1950
everything I say could be wrong
09:48 PM on 04/16/2009
with no jobs people have a hard time paying mortages, this is somehow a surprise? some of us are finally getting it, NAFTA lost the manufacturing industry, and apparently a few others too... ever needed to dial a help line from say Dell? - the people on the line can barely speak english.. I've asked them where they live, most are in india .. our jobs are gone, the income for the remaining jobs is being driven down, and open war har been declared on unions. and we are kept distracted with phoney issues like the "tea partys" or "gay marriage" or "gun control" or "abortion" or "gas prices" ... anything to keep us fighting ourselves while we continue to be used and plundered.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bcasey11
go veg
07:31 PM on 04/16/2009
wait... the bailouts were a bad idea?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PhilipTaylor
Legalized Bribery is an Oxymoron - must END
07:08 PM on 04/16/2009
*************** IT IS TIME FOR BYPASS SURGERY - AROUND WALL STREET **********************

Wall Street is cutting CREDIT LINES and raising RATES/FEES on Main Street in Middle of this CRISIS!

OBAMA: FUND Direct Government Loans to MAIN STREET at current Low Rates and FEES!

99% of People live on Main Street and should

TRANSFER their Accounts from WS Banks to Local Community Banks & Credit Unions to gain Attention for

"HOW IMPORTANT MAIN STREET IS to WALL STREET."


*************** IT IS TIME FOR BYPASS SURGERY - AROUND WALL STREET **********************
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PhilipTaylor
Legalized Bribery is an Oxymoron - must END
07:11 PM on 04/16/2009
***************** TRICKLE DOWN BAILOUTS ONLY HELPS WALL STREET***********

Direct infusion for Main Street is a MUST! Help the VICTIMS!


********************* TRICKLE DOWN BAILOUTS HURT MAIN STREET****************
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10:52 PM on 04/16/2009
I love your plan! Direct loans to main street at a low rate, use local community banks and credit unions. Make the big banks obsolete dinosaurs. It's perfect!
03:53 PM on 04/16/2009
Obama said in January, he was going to help homeowners fight foreclosure. I suspect he might not have been sincere. The evidence appears to favor the school of thought that the banks want to take control of millions more foreclosure properties, and then continue the raping and pillaging of Americans, once they see the end of bailout billions coming their way. What a shame for Main Street, eh? I mean, all it would take is a brief declaration of moratorium on future foreclosures until bailout is complete. Banks could focus on jobs and businesses, which is all they need to do to play their part. Once everyone is back working, the housing issue could be revisited.
Viper
Former repub, still repenting
05:05 PM on 04/16/2009
The ones that dont qualify for help are ones that nothing can be reasonably done to save the house,,, The mortgage even with aggressive cutting, is still too high of a percentage of the persons income, for the person to afford the house they bought..(read.. you cant afford it then or now)..

Obama when he announced the plan said it would not save everyone, it was designed to save those that could be saved where the borrower's income was not way out of line with what he bought.

Also note that 40% of the homes in the U.S. are second vaaction homes and investment rental homes.. which the plan does not help...

Thus many foreclosures are not on primary residences.


Regards..
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sueinmn
03:18 PM on 04/16/2009
Heres more food for thought! Will this coss more job loss as it catches on??

NAFTA eh? Turns out that America's trade policy with its southern neighbor didn't quite work out as planned. ""The pressure has not been to raise the Mexican wages up, it's been to push the U.S. wages down," Ben Davis, the director of the AFL-CIO Solidarity office in Mexico City tells The Detroit News. True dat. "Mexican auto unions are taking a cue from U.S. labor leaders by offering two-tier hiring systems and salary cuts that bring already low wages down to near-Chinese levels." Taking a cue? Or, dare I say it, taking pay-offs? "Wage concessions were apparently key to convincing Ford Motor Co. to direct many of the 4,500 new jobs involved in building Fiestas to the Ford plant in Cuautitlan. Union leaders at the plant told the Associated Press they had agreed to cut wages for new hires to about half of the current wage of $4.50 per hour." $2.25 an hour? Yes. Under NAFTA, Mexico is only obliged to pay workers the national minimum wage: $5 a day. ""We need to be more competitive," said Ford union leader Juan Jose Sosa Arreola. "That's the truth. That's a reality." Once again, the truth hurts. Oh, and five Ford execs banked $60m last year. And Bill Ford's deferred millions await the fruit of Mexican labor.
03:22 PM on 04/16/2009
Ugh. Hate to say it but Ross Perot was right.
04:30 PM on 04/16/2009
Yep. What we are now hearing is that "big sucking sound" he rightly prophesized while so many ridiculed him.
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ibsteve2u
Someone who cares - to his unending regret
07:00 PM on 04/16/2009
Its funny.

If a foreign government bombed America and the resulting damage forced hundreds of thousands to millions of Americans out of their homes, we'd go to war with the fury we had on December 8th, 1941.

But because our fellow Americans - technically, at least - are the ones who are doing it to us, we are just supposed to take it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sueinmn
03:03 PM on 04/16/2009
Actually we can tie Bush to much of the homeownership that should not have been made to begin with. He cut section 8 housing after Katrina and pushed for lower income ownership. CNN had the story and others carried it. It was his way of getting many off the roles of Government cost. He laxed lending and this I believe was the creation of "creative lending"!

http://archives.cnn.com/2002/ALLPOLITICS/06/17/bush.minority.homes/index.html
Bush aims to boost minority home ownership

THIS IS A MUST SEE!

You Tube video also!
http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2008/10/president-bush-and-home-ownership/
Why The Mortgage Crisis Happened

He talked the talk in favor BUT he was getting many off the government roles is all!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TJCole
01:26 PM on 04/16/2009
The people don't count, only the banksters, they are the new Lords, the new American Royalty....we get next to nothing unless the corrupt banksters see fit to give it, at usurious predatory rates of course...
01:31 PM on 04/16/2009
Somebody needs a hug. Sorry... I am fresh out.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dadw5boys
Disabled Vietnam Vet
12:35 PM on 04/16/2009
Downloand the " PRODUCE THE NOTE " legal form if your faced with Foreclosure !!!!!!!!

Some SubPrime Lender never filed the paper work and you may have a FREE HOUSE and don't even know it !!!!!!!!

.
12:21 PM on 04/16/2009
I find this a sad LOL,when their still calling it a recession ,when it's in reality a economic depression!
12:16 PM on 04/16/2009
Down to 600,000 jobs lost? Wow... that's just... ahh... great.
Call me when job losses are down around 200,000 per week.
Note too that those claiming jobless benefits for more than a week increased to 6 million, the highest on records dating to 1967.

Folks, the second wave of foreclosures are upon us. They will surely crush the banks balance sheets between now and Christmas, and results will once again disappoint. The consumer is completely out of financing options, as credit cards and equity lines are pulled and jobs continue to be lost. More jobs lost will lead to more foreclosures and less consumer spending. It is a vicious, positive feedback loop.

Get your money out of the stock market now.
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12:14 PM on 04/16/2009
It's a melt down
12:56 PM on 04/16/2009
I take mine with cheddar, please.

:-)
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
yweston
Wild Wild "Proud to Be a Progressive" West
12:07 PM on 04/16/2009
As I recall the mortgage modification program was only for people who could afford their homes. If you couldn't prove you can pay then your home would be foreclosed on.
My girlfriend received a mortgage modification with no problem. Her mortgage went from 10% to 5 1/4%.
The 24% receiving foreclosure notices can't afford to stay in their homes. I have compassion for them, however, when mortgage help was first announced "people" complained they didn't want to pay for other peoples mortgages. The Government said at that time. People who could not afford to stay in their homes would not get help. So, I guess this is the result!
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vippy
Carpe Diem!
01:31 PM on 04/16/2009
No one can afford a home when you lose your job. So why this nonsense? If you only get an
unemployment check for 6 months or so, what will happen after it runs out. I want to say we are not getting out of this mess for at least the next two years. It is time to cut congress and senate.
Who needs 2 senators per state anyway in these dire times. Let them feel the mess they created as well. And don't lie to us about the less than 10% unemployment figures.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sueinmn
02:41 PM on 04/16/2009
Don't know her circumstances but they refused to help me. WE can afford our home for 10 yrs now. I work construction so Im off for who knows how long. My hubby works in nuclear power so hes hopefully safe. Our mortgage is already less than the required 31% to qualify so they refused to help us. When mu UI runs out, we will no doubt be hurting and risk giving something up. Weve been saving for 2 yrs seeing troubled times ahead. Because jobs are going south, many good homeowners are losing and will continue too. Your girlfriends gets laid off, then what? She'll be in the same boat as many. We're not asking for handouts, just time to remain as we did not cause this crisis yet we all stand to lose from it. A 2 yr mortgage moratorium would help!
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DnDCfromChi-town
07:01 PM on 04/16/2009
I'm sorry to hear about your situation. I pray it works out for you and your family..
12:00 PM on 04/16/2009
Not too good. But then... this is what happens when almost everyone believes that the "market always goes up" and the market says "No, I don't."

:-)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sposton
right to tell what they don't want to hear
11:46 AM on 04/16/2009
If we look at a graph of economic activity during Great Depression we can see upward and downward movements throughout the 1930's. I think we are are experiencing something essentially similar and probably have a long way to go before we turn the corner. And when we finally do we will have found ourselves considerably poorer. I think most Americans still think we are just going back where we were before this started. I think this is likely to be very wrong. Our politicians are just plain lying to us and are unwilling to start doing what is necessary for our future. There will come a time when you will hear all kinds of stories how we can no longer afford our social programs like social security and such. Do not fall for such talk - first see if there are any cutbacks in our obscene military expenditures. The oligarchic interests just see a way to kill or raid anything dating back to the FDR's New Deal era.
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11:38 AM on 04/16/2009
So I get a phone call from Countrywide yesterday. The guy on the phone proceeds to tell me that he has good news and bad news for me. The good news is, because we meet the financial requirements, we qualify for refinancing under the Home Affordable Modification Program as passed by the Democrats and signed by Obama as part of the stimulus package. The bad news is that since the program will only finance 105% of your CURRENT home value then I would have to write the government a check for $100,000 in order to refinance. So much for Hope and Change.
12:04 PM on 04/16/2009
So why did you buy that home way above its real value, again? Maybe you were hoping to make a little real estate profit? Well, here is a bit of advice for you: every profit comes at a risk. If you aren't willing to take the downside, don't go for the potential upside. And if you do and lose, don't complain. We are kind of fed up hearing all the whining.
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12:36 PM on 04/16/2009
Nope. Not looking for a profit. Just looking to own my first home. I waited and waited for prices to come down and they kept going up. So I bought before the prices got to where I couldn't afford. Did I take a risk? Of course. I'm not complaining about losing. My complaint is that my tax dollars are being used to help others while I am not entitled to get that same help for which I am paying. If you call that whining then too bad. No one forced you to listen.
12:26 PM on 04/16/2009
calirighty, previously, when I critisized right wing policy that got this country in this mess(and Clinton is to blame too) you jumped all over me stating that our problems are due to children born out of wedlock, illegals, liberal policy, ect ect. Sounds to me like you're in deep sh*t. You made some really stupid financial mistakes and now you are going to pay for it. Don't look to Washington for help, it is't coming and it wouldn't have come from McCain either. I'm a fiscally conservative liberal, bought my house for cash, I'm out of work for the first time in 26 years, but I'm coasting. No panic. Sounds to me like you need to go and buy a big tent.
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12:32 PM on 04/16/2009
Um. Nope. I'm paying my mortgage just fine, thank you very much. Haven't missed a single payment in over 3 years of owning the home. But why should I continue to keep paying 7% interest on my loan when my taxes are going to help those who WERE irresponsible to get 4% interest rates. I don't need a bail out. I just thought I could get my money's worth out of the system. Big mistake. Sounds to me you need to learn a little more about people before making stupid assumptions.