Monday, June 25, 2012
WOW!! WHAT A DIFFERENCE A YEAR MAKES!
Don't believe it? Well, believe these 3 headlines from the last 3 weeks of the Orange County Register from April 22 through May 6 (in order of oldest to most recent): 1) FORCLOSURE SALES DOWN SHARPLY 2) IS THE FORECLOSURE CRISIS OVER? 3) HOMEBUYERS SPRINGING TO LIFE THIS SEASON. There has in fact been a huge shift in Southern California real estate in the last year. According to statistics gathered by Foreclosure Radar and other sources, California property owners are losing homes to foreclosure at half the pace of 2011. Part of the reason for the drop is that banks have finally figured out that short sales save them money. When a property short sells, it's better for everyone. The homeowner doesn't take such a big hit to his/her credit, they save a little dignity, and it will allow them to re-enter the housing market more quickly down the road. For banks, the advantage is significant; they generally don't have to rehab the property, they don't have to put utilities in their name and maintain the property while it's being held for sale and they don't have a nonperforming asset on their ledger. If you don't know what you're looking for when you study the numbers, you might miss it. The casual glance at the numbers appears drastic. The month of March saw 86,487 trustee sales scheduled. That seems like a drastic number. But 80% of them were postponed, many specifically to allow a short sale to proceed. So far this spring, Notices of Default are down 19.7%, foreclosures going back to the bank are down 62% and foreclosure sales to a third party are down 21%. So, is the foreclosure crisis over? There may be different interpretations of the data to come to that conclusion, but suffice it to say, foreclosures have definitely peaked. The final headline regarding homebuyers begs the question, who is buying all these distressed listings? The answer to that question is, well, everyone. As the number of foreclosures drop, investor purchases will rise, because the investors come to the market as close to the bottom as they can reasonably figure. The month of March, for example, Foreclosure Radar reported that 46% of all trustee sales were purchased by investors instead of them going back to the bank to become an REO. A year ago the significant number was 71%, and that was the number of homes NOT being purchased, but going back to the banks. Bank owned properties are down 20%, and only 44.7% of listed properties were distressed for March, which means over half the properties listed for sale were equity sellers.
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