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Foreclosure Rate: Americans On Pace For 1 MILLION Foreclosures In 2010

ALEX VEIGA   07/15/10 05:07 PM ET   AP

Foreclosure Rate
Demonstrators gather outside of the Bank of America Tower to protest against the banks foreclosure policies Thursday, June 17, 2010, in New York. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)

LOS ANGELES — Rosalyn Dalebout rents out space in her home to three tenants, has cut off her phone service and canceled her earthquake and life insurance – all to pay her mortgage every month.

So far, she's one of the lucky ones.

More than 1 million American households are likely to lose their homes to foreclosure this year, as lenders work their way through a huge backlog of borrowers who have fallen behind on their loans.

Nearly 528,000 homes were taken over by lenders in the first six months of the year. If foreclosures continue at that rate, the yearly number would eclipse the more than 900,000 homes repossessed in 2009, RealtyTrac Inc., a foreclosure listing service, said Thursday.

"That would be unprecedented," said Rick Sharga, a senior vice president at RealtyTrac.

Lenders have historically taken over about 100,000 homes a year, he said.

The surge in foreclosures reflects a crisis that has shown signs of leveling off in recent months but remains a crippling drag on the housing market and the economy.

Many homeowners struggling to make their monthly payments have had little success in negotiating more deals.

Dalebout, a manager of a recreation center who lives in the Salt Lake City suburb of Holladay, said her lender has refused to refinance her loan with lower rates and payments.

The monthly payments on her $240,000 mortgage take more than half her salary.

"I'm just running into a lot of brick walls," Dalebout, 58 said.

Banks seem to be creating two classes of troubled homeowners. Those who are falling behind in their payments are being allowed to stay in their homes longer because lenders are reluctant to add to the glut of foreclosed homes on the market. At the same time, lenders are stepping up repossessions to clear out the backlog of bad loans.

"The banks are really sort of controlling or managing the dial on how fast these things get processed so they can ultimately manage the inventory of distressed assets on the market," Sharga said.

On average, it takes about 15 months for a home loan to go from being 30 days late to the property being foreclosed and sold, according to Lender Processing Services Inc., which tracks mortgages.

The number of homeowners that received a legal warnings that they could lose their homes in the first half of the year climbed 8 percent from the same period last year. But the rate dropped 5 percent from the last six months of 2009, according to RealtyTrac, which tracks notices for defaults, scheduled home auctions and home repossessions.

About 1.7 million homeowners received a foreclosure-related warning, one of several steps in the foreclosure process, between January and June. That translates to one in 78 U.S. homes.

Nevada posted the highest foreclosure rate in the first half of the year. Arizona, Florida, California and Utah were among the other foreclosure hotbeds. But the problem stretches to all parts of the country.

Sherri Leu of Lino Lakes, a suburb of Minneapolis, is unemployed and stopped receiving unemployment benefits earlier this year.

"I burned up my savings," she said. "The best thing that's going to help me is a job."

The software engineer has been living on what's left of a $120,000 home equity line of credit she took out shortly after she bought her house in 2006.

Leu estimates she's got enough money for another five or six mortgage payments.

"I might try to put it up for sale," Leu said. "The other option is to let the bank have it, but then I'll end up walking away losing money I put down on the house."

Assuming the economy doesn't worsen, RealtyTrac's Sharga projects lenders won't work through the backlog of distressed properties until the end of 2013. More than 7.3 million home loans are in some stage of delinquency, according to Lender Processing Services. The fastest-growing group of foreclosures is coming from people who took out conventional fixed-rate loans.

The prospect of lenders taking over more than a million homes this year is likely to push housing values down, experts say. Foreclosed homes are typically sold at steep discounts, lowering the value of surrounding properties.

"The downward pressure from foreclosures will persist and prices will be very weak well into 2012," said Celia Chen, senior director of Moody's Economy.com.

___

Associated Press writers Alan Zibel in Washington, Paul Foy in Salt Lake City and Jeff Karoub in Detroit contributed to this report.

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LOS ANGELES — Rosalyn Dalebout rents out space in her home to three tenants, has cut off her phone service and canceled her earthquake and life insurance – all to pay her mortgage every mo...
LOS ANGELES — Rosalyn Dalebout rents out space in her home to three tenants, has cut off her phone service and canceled her earthquake and life insurance – all to pay her mortgage every mo...
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08:36 PM on 07/19/2010
Bankruptcy Lawyer we live in a capitalist society, the government can do but so much. Ive seen cases where banks waited nearly a year before instituting foreclosure. The current foreclosure crisis is a result greed on the part of the banks and lack of realism from the debtors who took on debt they could not manage.
demsrsilly
Proud supporter of workplace freedom.
08:13 AM on 07/19/2010
wow, I think what is needed is a huge ineffective government program to help out. Oh wait, barry already did a few of those. Never mind.
10:02 PM on 07/18/2010
Check out these people, www.beforeclosed.com. This adds a whole new meaning to airing your dirty laundry in public. They're documenting their foreclosure in real time on that site lol. Pure trash...
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mrcontinental
Expat Extraordinaire.
05:19 AM on 07/18/2010
Rain on the scarecrow, blood on the plow;
This land fed a nation, this land made me proud;
And, son, I'm just sorry they're just memories for you now . . .
Rain on the scarecrow, blood on the plow;
Rain on the scarecrow, blood on the plow.

From: "Rain on the Scarecrow"
by John Cougar Mellencamp
11:44 PM on 07/17/2010
Obama's economy continues to deliver tremendous suffering and disappointment to everyone. Yet, the best Obama has is to blame Bush. It is time for obama to grow up and man up. I don't think he can do it because he is more of a cry baby.
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ryker88
Only the pure in heart can make a good soup.
03:59 PM on 07/17/2010
My heartfelt sympathy to those who have lost or are losing their homes because they've lost their jobs. I have a friend going through that right now. Her house is very modest. But I know someone else in his middle 60s who with a small amount of cash he bought four condos in Fl, minimum down, at the height of the bubble, believing he would turn them over quickly and make a bundle. Risky and stupid for someone so close to retirement. Three have already foreclosed and the last one will foreclose in a few weeks. He was nothing but a gambler and lost big time. He never put money away though he could well have afforded to stack away some cash. Instead took he expensive trips, bought expensive cars, lived the 'good' life. He has only SS and it will be a sad life for him in the future.
10:05 AM on 07/17/2010
Owning a home...It's just the "American Dream" no big deal really right! Wall Street and the Banks seem to have made out quite well with the "bail outs" so well in fact that they're expanding their portfolio's to include Investment Firms. Yes ..these firms go out and purchase homes that are being foreclosed on! The Circle Is Complete! 1 percent success rate for home loan modifications....folks we are getting screwed! Just like the oil leak day 88...Washington is just letting things happen as they may....
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catbite
10:11 PM on 07/15/2010
If congress doesn't act and get unemployment benefits reinstated, I'm next on the list to lose my home. I bought a small, very affordable home with a large downpayment 15 years ago, but no job means no money. And no one is hiring.
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02:12 PM on 07/16/2010
the double dip is going to be triggered by bank failure from the explosion in foreclosures. I feel for you and I don't expect any help in the next 2 years.
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ResearchtheFacts
Alert, awake & paying attention to the details.
05:27 PM on 07/16/2010
Sorry to hear of your struggle. They are creating another subset of problems by not reinstating unemployment benefits. People have to eat. In my area robberies are up.

Not your normal garden variety. You have people up in age robbing Rite-Aid and banks. I guess they are easier than 7eleven. It's sad because you have a lot of home invasions and car jacking too. And, because property taxes can not be paid people can't register their cars, so they are stealing license plates too.
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tucsoncindy
dyslexia bob
09:28 PM on 07/15/2010
Detroit has to be one of the hardest Cities hit with mass foreclosures
and unemployment. I watched a story several months ago on how
the current Mayor had come up with a plan to bring the inner
city back to life..by creating farmland...here is the web page I found
on this idea: www.hantzfarmsdetroit.com/
Anyone in Detroit have news on this project ?
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07:57 PM on 07/18/2010
Living in a suburb of Detroit. I can tell you that the intentions of Dave Bing (Mayor) is to rid the city of vacant housing. These are homes that have set idle for years or have recently been lost to foreclosures. These areas are filled with crime, drugs and homeless that use these buildings for illegal activity.
Clearing these properties will give the city a chance to clean itself up. Realizing that any rebuilding efforts are pointless at these times due to the current economy. They would lease the land to people for the means to grow crops.
These people would enter a lease for an "X' amount of time agreed with the city.
Hense, the city is still creating a revenue and those people leasing would have an income.

I am still a bit curious as to how the success of this will play out, but from the standpoint of what they're dealing with now, it couldn't make it any worse.
08:10 PM on 07/15/2010
I thought the American dream was about freedom, adventure, creativity, more freedom, more adventure, more creativity. And more thinking people. Free thinking people.

America was the experiment of the Europeans who were running away from huge governments and churches.

The Banks and the government don't like that. They want "passive" people. So they renamed it as follows: "the American dream is buying a home with a loan, and then sitting on a couch wathing TV... and your only means of protest is angry emails and nasty postings in blogs".

And so it happened.
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guveqzero
Inventor and Innovator
06:03 PM on 07/15/2010
For every banker bonus, ten homes are lost. Our leaders are allowing a systematic demantling of the American dream.
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02:25 PM on 07/15/2010
Is there any argument that this is deflationary?
No wonder the big banks are not lending.
Even though they have not had to "mark to market" or forced to take a hit for depreciating assets (cuz they wont unload them) they are hoarding their cash.

Deflation will rule until the private sector finishes de-leveraging and unfortunately that's only barely started.
It has been the individual homeowner who has done most of the de-leveraging so far.
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TheCrimeDog
02:11 PM on 07/15/2010
Mr or Mrs HP Moderator ... please stop shielding Obama.

What is wrong with telling your readers about the Bankruptcy Cramdown Bill ?
02:22 PM on 07/15/2010
I am not familiar with the Bankruptcy Cramdown Bill, what is is.... Make up a word to signify the President----like leader, to TheCrimeDog. Then you can tell us what the bill does or does not do.
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karen1p
03:47 PM on 07/15/2010
The cram down was voted down. It would have allowed bankruptcy judges to essentially "cram down" a new mortgage rate and principal balance to the banks. Senate voted it down.
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Rover
A+
02:23 PM on 07/15/2010
You mean the cramdown bill that was defeated and Obama although campaigning heavily on it did what he seems to do best and give lukewarm or no support to unless it is pro corporatist?
02:33 PM on 07/15/2010
Was that the bill passed by the House, rejected by the Senate. President Bush said he would veto the bill....then the Senate would need 67 votes. The vote to hear the bill was 48-46 no 60 votes. How does our present President fit in, when he was not even the President?
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TheCrimeDog
02:52 PM on 07/15/2010
Yes Rover ... that's "exactly" what I'm talking about.

Obama refuses to get behind the Bill ... refuses to support his home State Senator's Bill.

Bank profits up ... foreclosures raging.

President Barack Obama.
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Kevin Atlanta
Active Citizen 54
02:08 PM on 07/15/2010
The reality is that because of the structured intended collapse of AIG and Geithner's give away "at par" that these Toxic Assets have been paid for once, then paid for again with the Fannie & Freddie bail out and now the Banksters fraud is demanding the asset to sell again. How many times do these thieves expect payment from Main Street?
By rolling Fannie & Freddie into the American Home Mortgage Bank with direct lending to American Citizens for primary home ownership; short selling the foreclosures with the Banksters swallowing the inflated price loss to current market value the market may be saved and corrected at the same time.
This would effectively take this weapon of mass destruction used by Goldman Sachs and the back room gambling parlors out of the hands of the Banksters leaving only second homes and commercial properties for them to play games with.
The FED created this crisis and paid out handsomely to the Wall Street Fraud and Banksters thievery.
End the FED.
08:08 PM on 07/15/2010
You are right.
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11:44 AM on 07/18/2010
have you read Web of Debt, or gotten the dvd at secretofoz.com?
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Kevin Atlanta
Active Citizen 54
11:58 AM on 07/18/2010
No, I haven't read the Web of Debt yet but I'm familiar with their "Best Bank" idea and the example of North Dakota.
The entire reason I keep posting this Fannie & Freddie rolled into a Citizens National Bank is that we have to take the financial control of our futures back from the banking cartel of the FED and the European Central Banking systems. Jefferson understood this and so did Kennedy. When Kennedy signed the executive order to end the FED he ended up dead and LBJ never acted on the order.
Ending the FED is the only way for America to restore prosperity and to recapture our government from the legitimized bribery and corruption that exists today with purchased politicians pandering to their Corporate Fascist Masters.
02:05 PM on 07/15/2010
Commented Jul 15, 2010 at 13:49:00 in Business
“This is not suprising. From the beginning there was only one result. Every time a "new" program was announced by the Feds, it was the magic word -" asked"the banks to cooperate. Please the promises of we will adjust mortgages was a joke, except for the people that had hope that this time we would be helped. The banks had to be forced in 1932 and 1933-they were not going to do it by themselves. Same thing today--the forclosures will not not stop. What happened for the 40 year mortgage or the refinacing---forget about it, live with relatives or a tent...gee. Partly the result of few regulations.”
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