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1.7 Million Homes Were On The Verge Of Foreclosure This Fall

ALAN ZIBEL   12/17/09 04:45 PM ET   AP

Foreclosure Letup

WASHINGTON — About 1.7 million homeowners were on the verge of foreclosure in the fall, a looming "shadow inventory" of homes that will be put up for sale in the coming years and weigh down prices, a report said Thursday.

The number, up from 1.1 million a year earlier, is likely to keep rising through the middle of next year or later, said Mark Fleming, chief economist of First American CoreLogic, the real estate research firm that released the study.

Already, the foreclosure backlog is equal to nearly half the 3.8 million unsold new and existing homes currently on the market, First American said.

"We're going to be dealing with high levels of distressed (sales) in the marketplace for at least a couple of years," Fleming said. "It's not just all going to disappear."

Other reports have come up with larger estimates. But FirstAmerican assumes that fewer delinquent borrowers – only about one-third – will wind up losing their homes. It also estimates that nearly 30 percent of bank-owned properties have already been listed for sale.

In many markets around the country, the number of new foreclosures has dropped in recent months as homeowners are reviewed for loan modification programs. But real estate agents, who have seen this as an encouraging sign, still fear that an onslaught is coming.

"We've been in recovery mode for most of the year. How many foreclosures do they have to dump on the market to affect that? I don't know," Deborah Farmer, owner of StarLight Realty in Tampa, Fla. "Any house priced under $225,000 will be affected by a large increase in foreclosures in this market."

__

AP Real Estate Writer J.W. Elphinstone contributed to this report.

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WASHINGTON — About 1.7 million homeowners were on the verge of foreclosure in the fall, a looming "shadow inventory" of homes that will be put up for sale in the coming years and weigh down pric...
WASHINGTON — About 1.7 million homeowners were on the verge of foreclosure in the fall, a looming "shadow inventory" of homes that will be put up for sale in the coming years and weigh down pric...
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09:28 AM on 12/21/2009
Larry summers is one of the worst people of the year
http://financeopinionss.blogspot.com/
10:40 AM on 12/19/2009
Wait you aint seen nothing yet bucky !!
02:32 PM on 12/18/2009
Like I said in another post. Sounds like the rumblings of a homeowner revolt. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GLnbx8qB4SU
11:03 AM on 12/18/2009
And I saved that message on my answering machine for a long time, cause no, I didn't think anyone would believe it.
But then I accidently deleted it.
And that flicker don't bother me.
time to make a boobie joke.
10:39 AM on 12/18/2009
Heh MicroSoft:
Wanna give me back my iolo System Mechanic Pro Installation disk back?
I told ya, I can't afford to buy it again!
And I gotts pretty good locks on the back door,
so did you come through the front door?
Gee, the least ya coulda done while you were in here was tidy up my house for me!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gayandmarried
08:31 AM on 12/18/2009
people, DONT think of this mess as a bad thing,, think of it as a business would,,

a BUYING OPPORTUNITY,,

if everyone , and I mean EVERYONE who was underwater walked away from their houses, they could rebuy the same house, or something similar for 90%,,

I just did that in south florida,, as i just bought a house for 65K that was foreclosed on for 450K,, so now i own the house mortgage free!!!
dont be the last one to figure this out,, lets start a national revolution!~ and THAT will be change we can believe in!!
07:02 AM on 12/18/2009
We are in for 10 years of economic structural chain. Baby boomers who voted supply side Reagan and deregulation Clinton into office will suffer horribly.

Generation X & Y better wake up before the Wall Street - Washington Axis of Greed does the same to their generation.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jack Webb
Just the facts, ma'am'
04:52 PM on 01/05/2010
Trust me, if the majority of baby boomers get taken down things will get real, real ugly.

We're talking AIG executive types lined up in front of hastily dug mass graves ugly.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PhilipTaylor
Legalized Bribery is an Oxymoron - must END
05:11 AM on 12/18/2009
Dear Mr. President,

It is the SAME STORY EVERYDAY: R1P-0FF OF AMERICANS TO PAY $30 MILLION -$400 MILLION TO EXECUTIVES per Year!

LOSERS: AMERICAN PEOPLE - LOSING HOME or MONEY or LIFE
WINNERS: SELF-PROCLAIMED "EL1T1ST" FINANCE PEOPLE MAKING MASSIVE INCOMES
MECHANISM: WASHINGTON POLITICIANS - CONGRESS AND PRESIDENT

no change. none.
09:48 PM on 12/17/2009
And the Senate thinks these people are going to nicely "take it" when told they have to spend thousands of dollars buying medical insurance from private companies whose officers belong to the same country club as the bankers who've taken their homes?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lozange
Aiming around wondrously
09:45 PM on 12/17/2009
All those millions to bankers who stashed them for themselves when you could have given these people a reprieve. Bankers in the US should burn.
09:25 PM on 12/17/2009
Just another lie told to you buy the man.

Even as we wade through the wreckage of the housing collapse, Americans remain a staunchly house-proud people. And our government is apparently determined to encourage us: This month, President Obama signed into law an extension and expansion of the popular homebuyer tax credit, which had been scheduled to expire at the end of November. But before you rush out to claim your extra cash, take a moment to make sure you're not in the housing market for the wrong reasons. We've found that several of our most cherished beliefs about the value of a home don't hold true:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/13/AR2009111302214.html
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
doneflyin
my micro-bio isn't
08:59 PM on 12/17/2009
The Goldman Sachs folks are taking their bonuses in stock which they can't sell for 5 years.
That makes me think they must believe it will be that long before we are safely out of the woods.
Just my opinion of course, but to me that makes sense.
There won't be much improvement in the job market next year and without that this home mortgage mess has more down side. I know so many people who have lost good jobs with no hope of replacing them, those who are working more but paid less, or working part time. I know that those at the top of the food chain have no idea what it is like down here.
Talked to a banker a couple of months ago who works for a small, exclusive private bank here. He said his clients don't even know there is a recession. Nice work that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hysterian68
bureaucrat/historian/ranter
09:54 PM on 12/17/2009
private bank clients never know there is a recession. they are as clueless as they are corrupt to the core.
08:52 PM on 12/17/2009
You'll be happy to know job help is on the way via the newly passed $150 billion job recover bill. Of course 50% of it is ear marked for wall street bailouts, but I'm sure trickle up socialism is going to make private businesses start to hire again.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
doneflyin
my micro-bio isn't
09:03 PM on 12/17/2009
Yes and they are getting ready to pass a so called health care bill that will bail out the insurance industry.
The Lieberman/Nelson Health Insurers Protection Act.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
MoreDimensions
09:37 PM on 12/17/2009
The jobs bill would use $75 billion in money earmarked for the Wall Street bailout and redirect it to infrastructure investment and aid to states per last nights headline.

So, just the opposite of what you say.
09:42 PM on 12/17/2009
That's the other half... funding states doesn't create jobs. Funding wall street doesn't create jobs either.
08:30 PM on 12/17/2009
I know we have Fannie and Freddie but what we could use is an effective agency to regulate mortgages and provide basic housing for all Americans-we have the funds if we didn't allow corporate America to raid and rob it......
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stargazer13
To Love One Is To Love All
08:35 PM on 12/17/2009
they don,t care about us as a people 10 million slave ,s 290 million more to pick up the slack !!
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stargazer13
To Love One Is To Love All
09:10 PM on 12/17/2009
I know how dare them !! regarding taxes used against us !!
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stargazer13
To Love One Is To Love All
08:21 PM on 12/17/2009
I am are part of these numbers !! it make,s me sad !! after 11 months of no job and no unemployment benefits thankfully approved this last month but to little and to late to save my home !!

I have tried to tell my self my happiness is not connected to this house !! I still have air I am OK !!

but still my eyes water !! because I feel I have failed !!

and when I think of the million upon millions of people just like me feeling just like me

My eyes water that much more !!!
08:45 PM on 12/17/2009
Me too. I went into forclosure last month. Lost a job but didnt get unemployment because I quit the job, although I was forced out. Spent my savings, then my retirement money. Refinanced twice trying to save it but now I'm out of money and cant pay anymore.
I dont like the house and wont miss it. I bought it as a fixer-upper and wasnt able to make many improvements so it's not a nice home. But still, I put years of my life and a ton of money into it and now I'll be starting over again at 39 yrs old. And I'm not looking forward to living in an apartment building again.
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stargazer13
To Love One Is To Love All
08:54 PM on 12/17/2009
I wish I was 39 s*ck ,s to be us right now that,s for sure !!

good luck !! and may you never have to live in an apt lololololo
10:02 PM on 12/17/2009
I was forced out of my job, too, and didn't get unemployment. And, like you, spent my savings and cashed in retirement. I don't think that the public in general understands that in this dog-eat-dog economy sometimes companies or governmental employers don't want to go thru the hassle of firing you and/or paying unemployment insurance so they make your life so miserable that you eventually break. I know I broke. At age 61.

One thing I did after I lost most everything was to move to a small southern town where the quality of life is really good and rents are cheap. I rent a very nice house and feel free at last. Don't be afraid of a drastic change.
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booki
09:07 PM on 12/17/2009
please don't cry.. you have not failed. sometimes things happen in our lives. who knew?
be happy that ur healthy.
i cannot imagine all the feelings
u are a strong woman..you gaze at the stars.
living in an apartment is not so bad.
you have not failed.......you were a victim of this economic mess.
take care of yourself......please don't cry
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stargazer13
To Love One Is To Love All
09:12 PM on 12/17/2009
I have come to the realization that I won,t be the part of society that get,s to live in one house for 25 or 30 years

I have now become a migrant worker traveling looking for work !!