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Foreclosures Take Twice As Long To Process Now As They Did In 2007: Study

Foreclosure

The Huffington Post   First Posted: 12/28/11 01:06 PM ET Updated: 12/28/11 01:13 PM ET

If the American housing market is ever to recover -- and provide some momentum to a broader economic turnaround -- it needs to work its way through the millions of foreclosed properties that have yet to be processed and auctioned off. But those cases are taking longer and longer to get through.

In 2007, the average foreclosure process in America, from beginning to end, took 253 days, or about eight months. Today, according to LPS Applied Analytics as reported by CNN, the average foreclosure takes 674 days. That's a year and ten months, almost triple what it was four years ago.

The foreclosure epidemic is one of the main factors inflicting damage on the housing market, which has still not made up for the losses it suffered a few years ago when the real estate bubble burst. In neighborhoods across the country, foreclosed or vacant properties are distorting their local markets, dragging down the values of the surrounding houses and wiping out vast sums in homeowner wealth.

The ubiquity of foreclosures, and their depressing effect on housing prices, has been cited as both a symptom and a cause of the country's persistent unemployment problem. Many homeowners enter default after losing their jobs -- and on the flip side, as the Wall Street Journal recently noted, plummeting home values tend to trap people where they are, making it harder for them to move to other towns where employment opportunities might be more plentiful.

The conundrum is expected to get worse in 2012. New foreclosures climbed by about 21 percent in the third quarter of 2011, with a total of almost 1.33 million foreclosures underway by the end of September. Analysts believe the volume of foreclosures will grow much greater next year as banks begin re-submitting documents that had to be discounted in the wake of the robo-signing scandal, when some of the country's biggest lenders were found to have approved reams of mortgage paperwork without reading it first.

Thanks to a government effort to screen out and correct instances of robo-signing, more than four million homeowners will eventually get the chance to submit their foreclosure cases for review -- an ambitious damage-control program that is nevertheless likely to prolong the real estate market's lifeless condition.

Experts have offered a range of predictions for when the market might touch bottom and housing prices will begin to rise again. Even the most optimistic forecasts don't see a recovery happening until late 2012 or early 2013.

Related on HuffPost:

Here are the 11 most bizarre foreclosures of 2011:
CT Family Never Missed A Payment
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Shock Baitch and his wife Lisa of Connecticut were threatened with foreclosure by Bank of America after never missing a payment. BofA mistakenly told credit agencies they were seeking a loan modification. "Now I am literally and financially paying for it," Baitch told CTWatchdog.com.
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If the American housing market is ever to recover -- and provide some momentum to a broader economic turnaround -- it needs to work its way through the millions of foreclosed properties that have yet ...
If the American housing market is ever to recover -- and provide some momentum to a broader economic turnaround -- it needs to work its way through the millions of foreclosed properties that have yet ...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Siebenstein
> there is no endless growth
02:05 AM on 11/08/2012
Third World Country America

All run by Wall Street and its Mega Corps, and no help for main street.

It's over...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Claudia L
Time is the seed of the Universe
11:05 AM on 01/11/2012
"When the market touches bottom", it will stay there.
03:24 PM on 12/30/2011
This is all assuming that foreclosing homes FASTER would help anyone outside of the corner office of the Bank.
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itruth
fideistic deist with socratic tedencies
05:57 AM on 12/30/2011
BOA was forclosing on homeowner that was current and had never been late?uhh huh yup there's your problem,promotions to incompitence.No wonder their stock is below 5.If that is their model and you own BOA,RUN.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Claudia L
Time is the seed of the Universe
11:08 AM on 01/11/2012
The Peter Principle. Yep, they've reached their ultimate level of incompetence. But with the bank owning all that real estate they get bigger bonuses.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Celebrindan
M=1∞/R=dM>1
11:55 PM on 12/29/2011
"... But those cases are taking longer and longer to get through. ..."

They will never see the end of this.

The entire system is scheduled for total failure, prior to (significantly) anywhere near the end of this morass.

They've destroyed the lives of the people they need to sell these homes to, by outsourcing their income, and the taxes they used to pay, so, who they gonna call?

This is the grave they have dug for themselves.

Get ready for the second Dark Ages, it's going to get medieval.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Claudia L
Time is the seed of the Universe
11:12 AM on 01/11/2012
I hope it takes 10 years to foreclose and the owners living in those houses save enough money over that time to buy their house back @ 1/2 the price, with cash, during auction.
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Smarty5
Buy land, they're not making it anymore.
09:42 PM on 12/29/2011
Could the robo-signing mess be responsible for this? It takes time to process them manually.
Beernuts
home of the armed, land of the scared
08:15 PM on 12/29/2011
OK...here we go again. Been about 6 months but right there at the tail end of an article that gives about 200 reasons why home prices will continue to fall forever is one of those "may be late 2012 or 2013" recovery predictions. It all began in early 2008-"turnaround will probably be (blah, blah, hiccup, blatz, tangerine)". I'm still waiting.....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wildwildwest
Hell is empty and all the Devils are here...
07:58 PM on 12/29/2011
Wow, the mortgage company f****d them over and they weren't in foreclosure? This video is so very tragic. Glad I don't live in Tennessee anymore, 5 years of Memphis was more than enough...
Nightangle
NPA - no party affiliation
02:19 PM on 12/29/2011
Back in 2006, after I paid off my student loan - $918./mo, I bid for a home in Florida - very nice 2 story stucco Florida home on a standard acre. The property was on auction. The owners owed 16 months of mortgage + taxes. But they have powerful parents/in-laws. My mortgage was $7000 more than the next bidder. I lost regardless. They got back their home under their parents house. Go figure.

I am now 29, been in my job for almost 10 years and blessed with 4 promotions over the 10years. I bought a old dilapidated stone historical house on a 5 acre of the original 25 acre estate in 2006. I financed it throught the help of the Historical Trust and the Pennsylvania Preservation of Historical Home. I renovated it which is my primary home in 2006 in Pennsylvania about 30 min from Phila - near Delaware.

That first house that I made a bid and lost was back on foreclosure list and in auction. I made another bid and got it. This time, the bank gave it to me, no question.

There are those who just unable to manage their finances, for many reasons. Perhaps renting is a better alternative.
05:45 PM on 12/29/2011
You bought a house in 2006 and you admit it publicly? lolololol
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
frank day
Obama cares about all of U.S.
07:27 PM on 12/29/2011
Sounds like you've been diligent and managed your affairs wisely.

Others would do well to follow your example.
07:48 PM on 12/29/2011
Banks warned Fannie and Freddie vigorously not to lower underwriting guidelines. They stated over and over again that this would lead to massive defaults. Both the Journal and Times carried Opeds covering this topic. The government moved forward with their policies and we were stuck with massive defaults. That is the reason you want a greedy banker making the decision. A greedy banker realized they wouldn't make any money if the borrower defaulted.
08:26 PM on 12/29/2011
You can't possibly be this in the dark. Wall Street got their bailout, and paid back the money (except for ALLY / GMAC) This $200 Billion plus goes directly to Fannie and Freddie's portfolio. A portfolio of loans to people that never should have received loans.

To bail out the banks, I had to laugh at that comment.

That is one of the problems we have in this country. It is raining outside, do you know whose fault it is?

Wall Street.........
NOSOCIALNETS
Facebook is EVIL
02:10 PM on 12/29/2011
Taking longer because they are trying to run the paperwork legal this time. Not like last time, or the time before.
12:28 PM on 12/29/2011
So this is the top talent the taxpayers are paying to get us out of this housing mess? These banks are run by highly trained and specialized people and this is a computer age?
Why would this take so long unless they are using pencil and paper?
08:04 PM on 12/29/2011
You can't just modify a loan without approval from the investor. The investors are reluctant to give approval for modifications. The foreclosure process takes so long because of dealing with government agencies, many of which are not automated. Also there are tons of regulations when going through the foreclosure process.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
oliver clothesov
would you like one lump or two?
11:41 AM on 12/29/2011
if you have the cash to buy a home right now it pretty much goes without saying- you are going to want a highly discounted bargain- ergo, short sale, distressed property or foreclosure. why would you pay top dollar for any home right now unless you are looking for a top of the line primary residence? the banks need to figure out how to free up credit just like Ben freed up credit to them for the American consumer or this cesspool market is going to be here for another 5-10 years.
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Gaaltero
Conscious Black Man
12:17 PM on 12/29/2011
Truth. I sold everything I had and did some hustling to buy my house. My credit is jacked up so it had to be cash.
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AvgJoeBlow
We are smarter than any of us.
01:52 PM on 12/29/2011
More and more people are going to do the math and decide 24 months of no mortgage payments might be the way to go. The corrupt Congress better get off the schnide and start passing legislation to screw us even harder. I'm thinking something like the Student Loan no default or bankruptcy possible should be a good enough model for them and the banks.
-AJB
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Gaaltero
Conscious Black Man
11:32 AM on 12/29/2011
What people don't know is the bottom done fell out the country and behind the scenes they are trying to the country up. I bet I know a dozen or more people in some stage of the foreclosure process, and it's not like all these people are losers. My boss is rich, makes at least $250k/year and he just stopped payinig is mortgage flat out about 4 years ago ... and still lives in the house! Says that he's half a million dollars underwater on his house and they can come get it if they can but he isn't going to give it to them. Early this year, he gave me advice and a tip on buying these houses that went through foreclosure and are just sitting there. I bought a house in burbs for $25k in a good school district so my son could go to a better school. Nawh, the bottom done fell out the country and Obama and all those cats are just trying to keep the illusion that the country is ok after Bush and his boys on WS cleaned us out.
11:04 AM on 12/29/2011
How can a bank foreclose if they do not have title to the property?

No one knows where those loans ended up.
11:23 AM on 12/29/2011
How can a defaulted borrower claim ownership if they still owe the money?

It' doesn't matter who the creditor is.
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Gaaltero
Conscious Black Man
11:49 AM on 12/29/2011
Possession is 9/10th of the law. The creditor has a lien, but if they can't show they have a valid lien with all papaerwork in order, they can't foreclose or evict. The borrower may still owe "someone" but no one can kick you out. Sounds like ownership to me.
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Gaaltero
Conscious Black Man
11:41 AM on 12/29/2011
It's all about the note. What most banks and investors hope is that you just walk away from the property. They don't have half their paperwork in order but if you never contest it the court won't bother and will just push the case along. Some of the paperwork is an outright forgery toobut if no one contest the foreclosure it just gets processed like the real thing.

Bottomline. If you're getting foreclosed on, get a lawyer and fight. I know people in foreclosure that have been in their houses for years.
05:47 PM on 12/29/2011
There is nothing to fight. You borrowed the money, you can't pay it back, you no longer own the house.

Get over it and get on with your life.
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local21
Next to go is Scott Walker in 2014
09:07 AM on 12/29/2011
The taxpayers bailed the banks out, how about the banks helping out the temporary out of work taxpayer/home owner.