
MIAMI (AP) -- 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.
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