Monday, January 6, 2014

RealtyTrac: Number of Foreclosures May Increase as Housing Market Recovers

Monday, 06 Jan 2014 06:51 AM
By Michael Kling


As the housing market recovers, the number of foreclosures may increase. 





That's because lenders will speed up the foreclosure process and move homes to the auction block as home prices rise and more buyers line up for sales. 

"Lenders know there's now a much better chance they can get those properties sold,
 so they're moving to do that," Daren Blomquist at RealtyTrac, a real estate data firm, tellsCNBC.

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After the collapse of the housing market, mortgage credit was scarce, prices were
 falling, and lenders were swamped by mortgage defaults. In many instances,
foreclosure proceedings were stuck in a quagmire of legal problems, missing
 documents and unclear title chains.

Lenders often opted to let deadbeat borrowers remain in their homes rather than
 seize a home they might not be able to sell. 


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The long foreclosure timelines in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut may translate into slightly higher borrowing costs for consumers in those states.

The Federal Housing Finance Agency announced last month that, because the stress in housing markets has eased,
it was eliminating the across-the-board adverse-market fee instituted in 2008 to help cover the costs of high rates of delinquencies. The fee, applicable to all mortgages bought by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, is 25 basis points, or 0.25 percent of the mortgage loan amount.
But the agency, citing the “significantly greater costs” associated with much longer foreclosure timelines in the tristate area and in Florida, said the fee would remain in place in these four states.
The fee isn’t onerous — an added $5.95 a month, for example, on a 30-year loan of $200,000 at a rate of 4.5 percent. And it isn’t a closing cost, noted Jordan Roth, the senior branch manager of the Manhattan office of GFI Mortgage Bankers. “It is a fee that gets added into the rate or, as we like to say, baked into the rate,” he said.
Still, the singling out of states that take a long time to process foreclosures through their judicial systems does represent a shift in regulatory thinking. “It’s effectively a recognition that the cost to lend in a market that has long judicial foreclosure timelines needs to be accounted for,” said Mark Fleming, the chief economist for CoreLogic, a real estate data service. “If it takes two years to get through a foreclosure, time is money.”

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