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Foreclosures Down In First Half Of 2011 Due To Processing Delays

Foreclosure Processing Delays

By ALEX VEIGA   07/14/11 01:07 AM ET   AP

LOS ANGELES -- The number of homes taken back by lenders in the first half of this year fell 30 percent compared with the same 2010 period, the result of delays in foreclosure processing that threaten to stall a U.S. housing recovery.

Banks seized 421,212 homes in the first six months of the year, down from 529,633 between January and June last year, foreclosure listing firm RealtyTrac Inc. said Thursday.

The decline reflects lenders taking longer to move against homeowners who have fallen behind on their mortgage payments. The banks are working through foreclosure documentation problems that first surfaced last fall and an ensuing logjam in some state courts. Lenders also have put off on taking action against delinquent borrowers as U.S. home sales have slowed this year.

As the processing delays mount, however, so has the backlog of potential foreclosures – homes that otherwise would have been repossessed by lenders this year.

RealtyTrac estimates that 1 million foreclosure-related notices that should have been filed by banks this year will be pushed to next year. The filings include notices for defaults, scheduled home auctions and home repossessions – warnings that can lead to a home eventually being lost to foreclosure.

The delayed filings buys more time for many borrowers behind in payments to remain in their homes, perhaps giving them time to catch up or simply to stall their inevitable eviction. But it also means any eventual foreclosures will happen next year, extending the shadow of distressed properties that hovers over the market.

"The best-case scenario is we don't get back to normal levels of foreclosure activity until 2015, which means the housing market recovery gets delayed by at least a year," said Rick Sharga, a senior vice president at RealtyTrac.

And given delays in the time it's taking lenders to move a home from default to foreclosure and then sell the property, the housing turnaround could conceivably be pushed out to as late as 2016, Sharga said.

"It could be the new reality is we're going to have to accept the fact that home prices in most markets aren't going to budge much for the next several years while this overhang gradually, painfully makes its way into the market and gets purchased," he said.

In all, some 1.2 million U.S. homes received a foreclosure-related notice in the first six months of this year, RealtyTrac said.

That's down 29 percent from the same period last year and down 25 percent versus the second half of 2010.

Put another way, one in every 111 U.S. households received a foreclosure filing between January and June.

In addition to repossessing fewer homes, banks also fired off 36 percent fewer initial notices of default in the first half of this year than in the same period last year. The notices are the first step in the foreclosure process.

Foreclosure activity did pick up slightly between May and June, although lenders repossessed fewer homes than they did in June last year.

At the current pace, banks are on track to take back between 800,000 and 900,000 homes this year, down from a record of 1 million lost to foreclosures last year, Sharga said.

The firm had originally anticipated some 1.2 million homes would be repossessed by lenders this year.

Foreclosures typically sell at a discount to other types of homes, weighing down home values. As a result, housing experts say U.S. home prices are unlikely to recover until the glut of foreclosed homes on the market is cleared out.

Lenders have been careful not to unload all of their foreclosures on the market at once, and have financial incentives to continue doing so. But the prospect of more foreclosures hitting the market for years to come makes it difficult to predict when home values will stabilize. And that keeps many would-be homebuyers on the sidelines.

Between April and June, it took an average of 318 days for a home to go from the first stage of foreclosure to the point where it was sold at auction or taken back by the lender, RealtyTrac said. That's up from 298 days in the first three months of the year and up from 277 days in the second quarter of last year.

The foreclosure process took longest to play out in New York at an average of 966 days, or 2.6 years, during the second quarter. New Jersey was second-slowest at an average of 944 days, RealtyTrac said.

Homes were on a relative foreclosure fast-track in Texas, taking an average of 92 days to go through the process, the fastest turnaround time in the nation.

Despite slowdown in foreclosure activity, several states continue to have outsized foreclosure rates.

Nevada continued to lead the nation, with one in every 21 households receiving a foreclosure notice in the first half of this year.

Rounding out the top 10 states with the highest foreclosure rate in the first half of this year are Arizona, California, Utah, Georgia, Idaho, Michigan, Florida, Colorado and Illinois.

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LOS ANGELES -- The number of homes taken back by lenders in the first half of this year fell 30 percent compared with the same 2010 period, the result of delays in foreclosure processing that threaten...
LOS ANGELES -- The number of homes taken back by lenders in the first half of this year fell 30 percent compared with the same 2010 period, the result of delays in foreclosure processing that threaten...
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06:49 PM on 07/15/2011
So if it walks like a piggy, talks like a piggy, by golly it’s a PIGGY!.

WHERE IS MY LOAN MODIFICATION BANK OF DESTROYING AMERICA!.
BofA and it’s CEO Brian Moynihan reminds me of that song by John Lennon and George Harrison titled "Piggies" I invite you to listen to this song on youtube and see if it appropriately fits. .
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ovD9rTzs2q4&feature=player_embedded .
Please stand with me and Brookstone Law Firm, and send an email to Bank of Abusing America that states that we will no longer tolerate their potentially illegal, fraudulent, irregular and abusive business methods. .
So please send your email directly to Bank of America and include the following:.
1. Your name
2. Your complaint concerning your experience with Bank of America.
3. Please end your email “I support John Wright vs. BofA Lawsuit!”
4. Please send a copy of your email to piggybankblog@earthlink.net
5. Please send your email to BofA CEO Brian Moynihan:
brian.t.moynihan@bankofamerica.com.
I HAVE HAD ENOUGH AND I AM FIGHTING BACK! .
I have created piggybankblog.com for all of those who have been abused by Bank of Destroying Americas potentially irregular, fraudulent and simply abusive home loan modification process. .
Divided we might have fell America. UNITED WE MUST STAND!.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PoOJMr7OJ0s.
My name is John Wright AND I AM FIGHTING BACK!.
John Wright
piggybankblog.com
01:33 PM on 07/15/2011
What's messed up the housing recovery is that the bad mortgage lenders in cahoots with greedy big banks, related greedy types, MERS enablers, et al, made such a huge mess in the first place. Shuffling responsibility for lost notes and mortgages, trying to over flawed practices with fraudy or forged documents doesn't fix it.
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cats530
Valar morghulis
12:45 PM on 07/15/2011
"Step aside Goldman "Sh*tty Deal" Sachs and JP Morgan MBS settlements. Enter Deutsche Bank...The Deutsche complaint is filled with eye-popping allegations. Bernstein claims, for instance, that senior traders at the bank described the securities they were peddling to clients like Dexia as "cr*p," "pigs," and "generally horrible." One trader, Greg Lippman, allegedly wrote, "DOESN'T THIS DEAL BLOW" in an e-mail to a colleague about an offering Dexia sank $23 million into."

http://www.zerohedge.com/article/more-deutsche-bank-pain-dexia-files-%E2%82%AC1-billion-lawsuit-against-bank-selling-it-toxic-mortgag
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Realtors Are Liars
NAR is CORRUPT
10:30 AM on 07/15/2011
Defaults are still skyrocketing which creates an even more massive inventory of foreclosed housing.

Why buy a house today when you can buy later for 50% less?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tbryant80
I am an Independent, not a troll for partisan poli
08:44 AM on 07/15/2011
Fraud has gone from "technical issues" to "processing delays".
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Caseybug
Religion and WS are businesses without a product
02:53 AM on 07/15/2011
This is outrageous, outrageous I say. Isn't there some way we could just rubber stamp these things and circumvent due process??
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Realtors Are Liars
NAR is CORRUPT
11:28 PM on 07/14/2011
This is a mere bump in the road. There are many millions more foreclosures to execute.

Why buy a house today when you can buy later for 50% less?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tarpon22
05:08 PM on 07/14/2011
Yes it is the FRAUD clogging the system.
And Eric the WORM Holder of the Justice Department that REFUSES to Indict or Prosecute any Banks for Mourtgage and Foreclser FRAUD.
Obama supports Holder totally.

It is disgusting that the top Law Enforcement Officer that swore an Oath to uphold all Laws has refused to enforce Laws on CORRUPT Banks.

RON PAUL REVOLUTION
Ron Paul 2012
END THE FED
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Realtors Are Liars
NAR is CORRUPT
04:57 PM on 07/14/2011
The housing price decline has barely begun.

Why buy today when you can buy later for 50% less?
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cats530
Valar morghulis
04:56 PM on 07/14/2011
Here's one more reason (and its a doozie) on why not to buy a REO (besides the obvious title problems):

http://www.npr.org/2011/07/13/137629788/as-number-of-foreclosed-homes-grows-so-does-mold?source=patrick.net#recommendationCntHref
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BonnieDoon
Fool me once...
04:47 PM on 07/14/2011
It's the fraud committed by banks and mortgage industry clogging the pipeline.
04:04 PM on 07/14/2011
Try using "Universal Finance", they helped my father reduce his payments by $800 . No upfront cost, no bull.

http://universalfinance.org
03:48 PM on 07/14/2011
This is a large part of the reason housing prices haven't recovered in New York. They may have risen to near 2008 prices, but it will be a while yet until they catch up to where they ought to be, especially with this uncertainty surrounding the debt crisis. Our company, Manhattist, Inc., is encouraging clients to invest in Manhattan properties today. They only stand to gain, and what smart, up-and-coming professional wouldn't want to be sitting on a rising property value?

--Manhattist
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17ladyslippers
04:41 PM on 07/14/2011
Is free advertising allowed here?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Realtors Are Liars
NAR is CORRUPT
05:01 PM on 07/14/2011
Prices in NYC and in particular Manhattan have a long ways to fall yet. A very long way to fall.
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cats530
Valar morghulis
02:15 PM on 07/14/2011
“Banks have participated in a national epidemic of fraud that has clouded or damaged the chain of title of hundreds of thousands of American homeowners all across the country,’’ O’Brien said in one of his many press releases. “It would be a dereliction of my duties as the keeper of the records to record these documents and any other documents that contain questionable signatures.’’

http://www.boston.com/business/articles/2011/07/14/county_registrar_takes_a_stand_against_robosigners/
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stargazer13
To Love One Is To Love All
01:44 PM on 07/14/2011
sure uh huh right

because 30 + million American,s credit just took a hit because of massive job loss,s
but hey ! that has nothing to do with it !