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Record year for foreclosures as unemployment rises

By ADRIAN SAINZ
,
AP
posted: 27 DAYS 10 HOURS AGO
Text SizeAAA
MIAMI -A record 2.8 million households were threatened with foreclosure last year, and that number is expected to rise this year as more unemployed and cash-strapped homeowners fall behind on their mortgages.
The number of households that received a foreclosure-related notice rose 21 percent from 2008, RealtyTrac Inc. reported Thursday. One in 45 homes were sent a filing, which includes default notices, scheduled foreclosure auctions and bank repossessions.
In December, more than 349,000 households, or one in 366 homes, were hit with a foreclosure-related notice. That represents a 14 percent spike from November and a 15 percent jump from December 2008.
Banks repossessed more than 92,000 homes, up 19 percent from November. That increase was likely due to lenders working to clear their books at the end of the year, RealtyTrac said.
Stemming the tide of foreclosures is an important step for the real estate market and the economy to recover. Because foreclosures are usually sold at heavy discounts they can lower the value of surrounding properties. Cities lose property tax dollars from empty foreclosures and declining home values, straining local economies. Home prices have stabilized in some cities, but are still down 30 percent nationally from mid-2006.
The foreclosure crisis isn't letting up. Between 3 and 3.5 million homes are expected to enter some phase of foreclosure this year, said Rick Sharga, senior vice president of Irvine, Calif.-based RealtyTrac, which began tracking the data five years ago.
High foreclosures forced the federal government and several states to come up with plans to prevent or delay foreclosures to help troubled borrowers.
"It was bad, but it could have been much worse, and it probably should have been worse," Sharga said.
One plan intended to help homeowners is the Obama administration's loan modification program known as Making Home Affordable. Lenders participating in the program have offered trial loan modifications to 760,000 eligible borrowers since it was launched in March. A loan modification changes the terms of the loan, such as lowering the interest rate, to make the monthly payments more affordable.
As of November, just 31,000 of them had been made permanent. Nearly the same number had dropped out of the program or were found to be ineligible. The Treasury Department will release updated figures Friday.
Economic issues, such as unemployment or reduced income, are expected to be the main catalysts for foreclosures this year. Homeowners with good credit who took out conventional, fixed-rate loans are the fastest growing group of foreclosures.
The Mortgage Bankers Association on Wednesday recommended changes to the government's program to account for borrowers who've lost their jobs. The program, for example, should include a suspension of payments as the first step for borrowers with a temporary loss of income.
The government also should refrain from "endless incremental program changes," the trade association said.
Since April 2009, there have been nine instances where new program requirements were released, and more than 90 clarifications for new or revised forms, reporting changes and policies. The changes forced mortgage companies to implement new procedures and retrain employees, taking away time that could be spent helping borrowers.
The same three states that led the nation in foreclosure rate in December also posted the highest rates for the entire year: Nevada, Arizona and Florida. More than 10 percent of Nevada housing units received at least one foreclosure filing in 2009, with Florida and Arizona following with about 6 percent each.
The other states ranked in the top 10 for the year were California, Utah, Idaho, Georgia, Michigan, Illinois, and Colorado.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
2010-01-14 00:46:39
COMMENTS ( 46 )
Page 1 of 10 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>
liguyusa
12:33AM Dec 10 2009 
I became a statistic in this mess last April. I lost my house in Florida to foreclosure. I knew I was in trouble as far back as 2007, and I contacted the loan servicer, Citibank Mortgage. They were just the servicer, not the owner of the loan. Citi did not want to help or refinance the loan. Finally they suggested doing a short sale, and I followed all of their instructions to try and find a buyer for my home. This resulted in three contracts to purchase, which were submitted to Citi. They sat on this for three months, and when they finally did get back to my realtor, all three buyers had gone and purchased other homes. Citi then sold the servicing of my loan and hundreds of others in order to raise cash for themselves. The new servicer proceeded with the foreclosure, and the resulting sale netted the lender 30 cents on the dollar. The short sale would have netted double that. Every lender and servicer has to take drastic steps and work with their borrowers before this crisis becomes even worse. By the way, my loan was not a "sub prime" loan, I had put 25% down at closing, and when I first contacted Citi about helping me I was not behind in the payments. I walked away from the house after they dropped the ball on the short sale.
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SGentilejr
8:27AM Nov 12 2009 
Stop crying about the economy and no jobs. YOU are the economy and YOU are the problem. Yes YOU______________________________________________
YOU gave our jobs and our nation's wealth away by buying far too many Imported products. YOU cannot possibly expect there to be jobs in the USA when YOU spend all of YOUR money on buying Imported products. The only way to create jobs, I repeat the ONLY WAY to create jobs in the USA is to buy MORE American made products and less Imported products. Your choice: 1) Become a Loyal and Patriotic American and buy more Made in the USA products. or 2) Keep buying Imported products and betray your nation and help Osama bin Laden to destroy it. Remember: Osama bin Laden said "He would destroy our economy" and when you buy Imported products YOU are foolishly helping bin Laden destroy the USA economy.
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pontifffhelp
This comment has been deleted.
BeachbabynSC
9:13AM Oct 19 2009 
When is the Government going to help the UNEMPLOYED people who lost their jobs (to no fault of their own) STAY in their homes and keep the banks from forclosing on them?????????? They bail out the banks, auto, insurance industries but leave out the american people who really need a life-line in this economy. If something is not done NOW for the unemployed just wait till they see how many foreclosures will be coming!!!!!!!!!!! This is very sad and someone in Washington really needs to STAND UP and help the UNEMPLOYED from loosing their homes....
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OnTheSalt
6:24PM Oct 15 2009 
I think its a shame that people who lost their jobs are now having to deal with the possibility of loosing their homes. Why is the President not doing something about this? The Government bailed everyone out who didn't deserve to be bailed out and are now making huge profits and the tax payers will never see any of the money paid back from them!!!!

Its time the unemployed people get some help keeping their homes. They have programs out to help people with modifications and refi's but NOTHING to help the unemployed! We the unemployed did not ask to lose our jobs so give us a chance to save OUR HOMES!!!
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