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Posts Tagged ‘Foreclosures in Kingman’

The 6 Phases of a Foreclosure

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

If you or someone you know is facing possible foreclosure, you should know what to expect.

By Jean Folger of Investopedia

The 6 phases of a foreclosure (© Justin Sullivan/Getty images))

Many people have either gone through foreclosure, a process that allows a lender to recover the amount owed on a defaulted loan by selling or taking ownership of the property, or know someone who has.

RealtyTrac released its U.S. Foreclosure Market Report on April 15 for the first quarter of 2010. The report calculates foreclosure filings, including default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions, and showed that 932,234 properties were involved in the first quarter. That was a 7% increase from the last quarter of 2009 and a 16% increase from the first quarter of 2009. An astonishing one in every 138 U.S. housing units received a foreclosure filing during the quarter. If you or a loved one are facing foreclosure, make sure you understand the process. While it varies from state to state, there are normally six phases of a foreclosure.

Phase 1: Payment default
A payment default occurs when a borrower has missed at least one mortgage payment. The lender will send a missed-payment notice indicating that it has not yet received that month’s payment. Typically, mortgage payments are due on the first day of each month, and many lenders offer a grace period until the 15th. After that, the lender may charge a late-payment fee and send the missed payment notice.

After two payments are missed, the lender may send a “demand letter.” This is more serious than a missed-payment notice; however, at this point the lender is probably still willing to work with the borrower to make arrangements for catching up on payments. The borrower would normally have to remit the late payments within 30 days of receiving the letter.

Phase 2: Notice of default (NOD)
A notice of default is sent after 90 days of missed payments. In some states, the notice is placed prominently on the home. At this point, the loan will be handed over to the lender’s foreclosure department in the same county where the property is located. The borrower is informed that the notice will be recorded. The lender will typically give the borrower another 90 days to settle the payments and reinstate the loan. This is referred to as the reinstatement period.

Phase 3: Notice of trustee’s sale
If the loan has not been brought up-to-date within the 90 days after the notice of default, a notice of trustee’s sale will be recorded in the county where the property is located. The lender must also publish a notice in the local newspaper for three weeks indicating that the property will be available at public auction. All owners’ names will be printed in the notice and in the newspaper, along with a legal description of the property, the property address and when and where the sale will take place.

Phase 4: Trustee’s sale
The property is placed for public auction and will be awarded to the highest bidder who meets all of the necessary requirements. The lender, or firm representing the lender, will calculate an opening bid based on the value of the outstanding loan, any liens and unpaid taxes, and any costs associated with the sale. Once the highest bidder has been confirmed and the trustee’s sale is completed, a “trustee’s deed upon sale” will be provided to the winning bidder. The property is then owned by the purchaser, who is entitled to immediate possession.

Phase 5: Real-estate owned (REO)

If the property is not sold during the public auction, the lender will become the owner and will attempt to sell the property on its own, through a broker or with the assistance of an REO asset manager. These properties are often referred to as “bank-owned.” The lender may remove some of the liens and other expenses in an attempt to make the property more attractive.

Phase 6: Eviction
The borrower can often stay in the home until it has been sold either through a public auction or later as an REO property. At this point, an eviction notice is sent demanding that any people vacate the premises immediately. Several days may be provided to allow the occupants sufficient time to remove any personal belongings, and then typically the local sheriff will visit the property and remove the people and any remaining belongings. Belongings may be placed in storage and retrieved later for a fee.

The Bottom Line
Throughout the foreclosure process, many lenders will attempt to make arrangements for the borrower to get caught up on the loan and avoid a foreclosure. The obvious problem is that when a borrower cannot meet one payment, it becomes increasingly difficult to catch up on multiple payments. If there is a chance that you can catch up on payments — for instance, you just started a new job after a period of unemployment — it is worth speaking with your lender. If a foreclosure is unavoidable, knowing what to expect throughout the process can help prepare you.

Foreclosures Increase

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

Despite efforts by the Obama administration to stanch nationwide housing woes, banks took back a quarter-million homes in the first quarter of 2010. But banks are keeping most of these properties off the market in an effort to improve home prices.

The foreclosure crisis hit a new peak in the first quarter, as banks took back the largest number of properties to date.

The number of homes entering REO status (short for “real estate owned” by a bank) climbed 35% to 257,944 — the highest quarterly total ever — from 190,543 in the first quarter of last year and 9% from the previous quarter, according to real-estate data firm RealtyTrac. The increase comes as lenders seized more property that couldn’t qualify under the Obama administration’s Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP).

“There have been delays throughout the system, and it has taken longer for properties to go from delinquency to default,” says Rick Sharga, senior vice president at RealtyTrac. Once rejected for HAMP, however, these properties are now moving to foreclosure at an accelerated pace, Sharga says.

More properties moving through pipeline
Foreclosure filings — from notices of default to bank repossessions — were reported on 932,234 homes in the first quarter of this year, a 16% increase from the same period last year and a 7% jump from the previous quarter, according to RealtyTrac.

And the pace accelerated near the end of the quarter, with foreclosure filings reported on 367,056 properties in March, an increase of 19% from the previous month and the highest monthly total since RealtyTrac began issuing its report in January 2005.

Foreclosure auctions were scheduled on 369,491 properties during the quarter, the highest quarterly total since RealtyTrac began compiling its report.

Obama’s Foreclosure Prevention Program

Friday, March 12th, 2010

WASHINGTON – Hundreds of thousands of homeowners are in limbo waiting to find out if they will be accepted for the Obama administration’s foreclosure prevention program.

Nearly 1.1 million borrowers have enrolled in the program since it started a year ago, but so far only about 170,000 have completed the application process, the government said Friday.

To receive a permanent loan modification, homeowners need to make three payments and provide proof of their income, plus a letter documenting their financial hardship. To date, about 90,000 borrowers have dropped out.

The program is designed to lower borrowers’ monthly payments by reducing mortgage rates to as low as 2 percent for five years and extending loan terms to as long as 40 years.

To entice mortgage companies to participate, the government has set aside $75 billion in subsidies, though less than 1 percent has been spent.

Economy Expands… Foreclosures Rise?

Friday, February 12th, 2010

About 1 in every 7 home loans was either past due or in foreclosure at the end of the third quarter. Here’s what you need to know about the continuing mortgage crisis.

Moving Upstream: The MBA report provides an inside look into the evolution of the foreclosure crisis. Initial problems in the mortgage market were largely rooted in subprime loans and other exotic products. But with the national unemployment rate hitting 10.2 percent in October, the eroding labor market has emerged as the most fundamental factor behind the mortgage crisis. A job loss, after all, can prevent even borrowers with sound credit histories from paying the mortgage.

Regional concentrations: Regional concentrations of problem loans are striking. Nevada, Florida, Arizona and California — four states at the center of the housing boom and bust — accounted for 43 percent of all third-quarter foreclosure starts.

Shadow inventory: The figures are a discouraging development for a housing market that has demonstrated recent, if tentative, signs of stability. While the National Association of Realtors’ existing home sales report shows that the backlog of unsold properties has decreased in recent months, future foreclosure sales will ensure that a steady supply of discounted homes hits the market in coming years. “We continue to believe that nearly 6 (million) foreclosed homes will enter the market over the next three years, which will keep inventory of existing homes elevated,” Michelle Meyer, an economist at Barclays Capital, said in a report. “Foreclosures remain the biggest hurdle to the housing recovery.”

Hole in the rescue: It’s important to note that mortgage delinquencies continue breaking records in the face of Uncle Sam’s sweeping effort to keep struggling borrowers in their homes. Although the initiative has put more than 650,000 borrowers into trial loan modifications, there is growing concern that the Obama administration’s initiative isn’t well-suited for today’s housing crisis. For example, although unemployment is the key force behind current delinquencies, borrowers who can’t make mortgage payments because of a job loss can’t participate in the program. Observers in growing numbers have called this a key shortcoming of the Obama administration’s housing rescue. “It increasingly appears that (Uncle Sam’s housing rescue) is targeted at the housing crisis as it existed six months ago, rather than as it exists right now,” a congressional oversight panel said in a report released Oct. 9. In addition, the effort does not sufficiently address the issue of borrowers who are significantly underwater, meaning they owe more on their mortgage than their home is worth, Zandi says.

Modifying modifications: Because of these issues, “it is important for policymakers to consider how to modify the modification program so that it can work better,” Zandi says. One possibility could be through programs that allow struggling borrowers to relinquish ownership of their property but remain there as renters. Similar efforts have been launched at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Reversing the trend: Mortgage delinquency rates aren’t expected to stabilize until the labor market does. Newport expects the unemployment rate to peak in the first quarter of 2010 at roughly 10.5 percent. But even after the unemployment rate peaks, don’t expect delinquency rates to shoot back to earth immediately. “The (delinquency) rate is going to stay up there for quite awhile because the job market is going to be really weak for a while,” Newport says.

~Original post by Luke Mullins of U.S. News & World Report

Foreclosure Trends Cont.

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

In recent weeks we’ve seen reports suggesting that real estate prices have begun to stabilize. Declines in many communities have now slowed or stopped. Indeed, home prices are actually rising in some local markets.

“The decline in the national median price has moderated recently, and a shrinking supply of unsold inventory suggests we are getting closer to price stabilization in many areas,” says Lawrence Yun, chief economist with the National Association of Realtors . NAR reports that “during the third quarter, 123 out of 153 metropolitan statistical areas reported lower median existing single-family home prices in comparison with the third quarter of 2008, while  30 areas had price gains.”

“Broadly speaking, the rate of annual decline in home price values continues to improve,” says David M. Blitzer with Standard  & Poor’s. The latest S&P/Case-Shiller report    for August shows that 17 of 20 major metro areas saw rising home values when compared with July.

Foreclosure Trends

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

There’s little doubt that 2009 was a brutal year for many in real estate while  for others it was a buying opportunity. Foreclosure filings reported by RealtyTrac topped  300,000 per month for much of the year while the National  Association of Realtors says that a typical existing home sold for $173,100  in October, down 7.1 percent from a year earlier.

There’s also been good news. Interest rates fell below 5 percent and NAR reports  that home prices actually rose in 30 metro areas during the third quarter.  Home prices also fell in 123 areas, but a recovery has to start somewhere.

Foreclosures  & Modifications
Since it first began tracking foreclosure activity, RealtyTrac says  no month was worse than July 2009 when foreclosure filings topped 360,000.  Happily, the monthly numbers then retreated for the rest of the year.

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