Foreclosures Rose 53% in June, Bank Seizures Tripled (Update3)
By Dan Levy
July 10 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. foreclosure filings increased 53
percent in June from a year earlier and bank seizures rose the
most on record as deteriorating property values and higher rates
on adjustable mortgages forced more people to give up their homes.
More than 252,000 properties, or one in 501 U.S. households,
entered a stage of the foreclosure process, RealtyTrac Inc., a
seller of default data, said today in a statement. Bank seizures
rose 171 percent, the most since the Irvine, California-based
company began tracking statistics on default notices, warnings of
a scheduled auction and repossessions in January 2005.
``The foreclosure problem is getting worse and will stay with
us well into the next decade,'' Mark Zandi, chief economist for
Moody's Economy.com in West Chester, Pennsylvania, said in an
interview. ``The job market is eroding and homeowners have less
equity. Lenders are much less willing to work with you if you've
got negative equity, and you're more likely to give up your house
if you're deeply underwater.''
Foreclosure activity is the highest since the Great
Depression of the 1930s, said Rick Sharga, RealtyTrac's vice
president of marketing. Home prices, which fell the most on record
in April, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller index of 20 U.S.
metropolitan areas, have created a cycle where shrinking equity
drives homeowners into foreclosure, which in turn further pushes
down home prices, Sharga said.
1 Million Homes
``We'll have 1 million bank-owned properties by the end of
the year,'' Sharga said in an interview. ``That will represent
between one-fourth and one-third of all home sales.''
About 53 percent of borrowers with subprime loans, those with
poor or incomplete credit histories, will have negative equity in
their homes at the end of the year, and the number will rise to 63
percent in 2009, New York-based analysts at Credit Suisse led by
Rod Dubitsky said in an April 23 report.
Tighter underwriting standards mean borrowers whose
adjustable-rate mortgages reset to higher payments can't refinance
their loans, Credit Suisse said. About 2.7 million subprime
borrowers will enter the foreclosure process by the end of 2012,
with a peak of new foreclosures in the third quarter this year,
the analysts said.
About $3.5 trillion in homeowner equity has been wiped out
since the spring of 2006, when housing prices were at their peak,
Zandi said.
Glut
Rising mortgage defaults and auctions of foreclosed
properties are adding to a glut of unsold homes and prolonging the
housing slump. Efforts by the U.S. Congress to insure as much as
$300 billion in refinanced mortgages and save up to 2 million
borrowers from foreclosure can work only by ``slowing down or
reversing home price declines and equity deterioration,'' Credit
Suisse said.
Home prices will ``absolutely'' decline another 5 to 10
percent and could fall further if the slowing U.S. economy enters
a deep recession, Susan Wachter, a professor of real estate
finance at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School, said
today on Bloomberg Radio.
While foreclosure rates are worst in parts of California,
Nevada and Florida, where lax lending standards put subprime
borrowers at risk of defaulting, and Ohio and Michigan in the U.S.
Midwest, where the auto industry cut jobs, other parts of the
country remain stable, Wachter said.
``We are in a serious regional recession, but there are many
markets where housing prices are not falling,'' she said.
Nationwide, Filings fell 3 percent from May.
``May was the highest month we've ever recorded, so a little
bit of a drop off was inevitable,'' Sharga said.
Nevada, California
Nevada had the highest foreclosure rate for the 18th
consecutive month. One in every 122 households was in some stage
of foreclosure, more than four times the national average, and
3,133 properties in the state were seized by lenders, said
RealtyTrac. The company has a database of more than 1.5 million
properties and monitors foreclosure filings including default
notices, auction notices and bank seizures.
California ranked second, with one filing for every 192
households, 2.6 times the national average, and had 20,624
properties seized by banks. Arizona ranked third at one in 201
households, almost 2.5 times the national average, and had 4,297
bank seizures.
Florida, Michigan, Ohio, Colorado, Georgia, Indiana and Utah
also ranked among the 10 states with the highest foreclosure
rates.
`Beyond the Sprawl'
California had seven of the 10 U.S. metro areas with the
highest rates, including the top three. Stockton, in the state's
central valley, was first with one in every 72 households in a
stage of foreclosure, followed by Merced, about 110 miles east of
San Francisco, with one in 77 households, and Modesto, near the
Sierra Nevada mountains, with one in 86 households. Riverside-San
Bernardino ranked fifth, Vallejo-Fairfield was seventh,
Bakersfield was eighth and Salinas-Monterey was tenth.
``The housing beyond the sprawl is going to suffer another
serious leg down because of high oil prices,'' Peter Navarro,
professor of economics and public policy at the University of
California at Irvine, said in an interview. ``A lot of people went
out there to get cheaper homes, but this is going to take a big
bite out of their mortgage.''
Cape Coral-Fort Myers and Fort Lauderdale, Florida, ranked
fourth and ninth, respectively, and Las Vegas was sixth among
metro areas with the 10 highest foreclosure rates.
California had the most total filings for the 18th
consecutive month, increasing 77 percent in June from a year
earlier to 68,666. Florida was second at 40,351 filings, an
increase of 92 percent, and Ohio was third at 13,194, an increase
of 11 percent.
New York filings increased 22 percent from a year earlier to
5,367, with one in every 1,473 households in a stage of
foreclosure, the 32nd highest rate.
New Jersey filings rose 5 percent. The state had one in every
695 households in a stage of foreclosure, the 14th highest rate.
To contact the reporter on this story:
Dan Levy in San Francisco at
dlevy13@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: July 10, 2008 15:47 EDT