Foreclosures Jump As Moratorium Ends

Author: Alex Amaro / Category: Foreclosures

Foreclosures jumped 46 percent in March compared to a year earlier and were up 17 percent compared to February with more than 340,000 properties affected nationwide, according to foreclosure marketer RealtyTrac.

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, RealtyTrac says.

Many lenders and servers had put a moratorium on foreclosures, waiting for the details of the Obama administration’s foreclosure plan. But now they are back with a vengeance. The end of the moratorium is also driving an increase in the availability of REO properties, according to RealtyTrac.

Nevada, Arizona and California had the nation’s highest foreclosure rate. Other states in the top 10 in the first quarter were Florida, Illinois, Michigan, Georgia, Idaho, Utah and Oregon.

States with the highest number of actual foreclosures, 60 percent of the total, were California, Florida, Arizona, Nevada and Illinois. Rounding out the top 10 were Michigan, Ohio, Georgia, Texas and Virginia.

One in every 159 homes nationwide was at some stage of foreclosure, according to RealtyTrac.

Source: RealtyTrac (04/09/2009)

What’s In the Foreclosure Prevention Plan

Author: Alex Amaro / Category: Foreclosures

The Obama administration yesterday released its long-awaited plan to stem foreclosures. It’s organized into three categories:

1.) Help for home owners making their payments but at risk of default and foreclosure.

Home owners with a Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac loan would be eligible to refinance as long as their mortgage doesn’t exceed 105 percent of the home’s current market value. Currently owners need to have at least 20 percent equity. Potential impact: 4-5 million households.

2.) Help for home owners already in default and in need of loan modification.

For lenders that voluntarily agree to lower a borrower’s payment so that it makes up no more than 38 percent of the borrower’s income, the government would share the cost of lowering the mortgage burden to 31 percent of income. Incentives to lenders to participate include a $1,000 payment.

Borrowers can receive up to $1,000 as an incentive to stay current on their new mortgage. Still in the works is a proposed provision that would allow bankruptcy judges to require loan modification (known as a cramdown) as part of a household’s restructuring. That provision requires legislation by Congress. Estimated potential impact: 3-4 million households.

3.) Doubled resources to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

To encourage investors to buy the secondary market companies’ mortgage-backed securities, the government explicitly backstops them to up to $400 billion, twice the current amount.

The plan does not provide help to investors or to home owners who are in trouble with a second home, nor does it apply to homeowners whose mortgage is part of a private-label mortgage security that is not backed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.

“The administration’s proposed plan, combined with provisions like the $8,000 first-time home buyer tax credit in the just-enacted American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, will help minimize foreclosures, shrink housing inventory, stabilize home values, and move the country closer to an economic recovery,” says NAR President Charles McMillan.

Source: REALTOR® Magazine Online

Foreclosures on Hold While Stimulus Crafted

Author: Alex Amaro / Category: Foreclosures


Home foreclosures are slowing as lenders wait for Congress to approve the stimulus package.

Foreclosures.com reported that foreclosures completed in January dropped 26 percent from December to 72,694, the fewest since April.

On Wednesday, the U.S. Office of Thrift Supervision told the savings and loans it regulates to suspend foreclosures on owner-occupied homes while the details of a plan to help borrowers reduce payments is worked out. The new plan is expected to hold monthly housing-related payments to 31 percent of income, as opposed to 38 percent, which was the previous standard. Workouts including lower payments will also be available to borrowers who are in danger of falling behind, but haven’t so far.

Meanwhile, Moody’s Economy.com predicts that 1.5 million homes will be lost to foreclosure in 2009, up from 1.4 million in 2008 and 750,000 in 2007.

“What the foreclosure-mitigation efforts will do is to keep the number of foreclosures from increasing substantially this year and next year,” said Celia Chen, senior director of housing economics at the firm.

Source: The Wall Street Journal, James R. Hagerty and Ruth Simon (02/12/2009)