Archive for the ‘Atlanta Foreclosures’ Category

Bank of America Halts Foreclosure Sales during Investigation of Its Practices

Tuesday, December 28th, 2010

This article from RISMedia provides information on the recent foreclosure halt from Bank of America.  Contact us to learn the details of trends in your local area. 

RISMEDIA, December 28, 2010—(MCT)—A Bank of America freeze on foreclosure sales spread Friday to the Inland Empire in California after the biggest bank in the U.S. announced it was broadening an investigation into its foreclosure practices to all 50 states.  The halt, which took effect yesterday, adds to growing concerns that lenders have been repossessing homes without following proper protocol.  Housing analysts said the moratorium could prolong a housing recovery in the Inland Empire, dragging out the foreclosure process for many homeowners and muffling buyers interested in purchasing distressed properties.  “(A halt on foreclosure sales) would have a chilling effect I think on the market, especially if other lenders follow suit in California because foreclosure sales make up a significant portion of all sales occurring in the state,” said Daren Blomquist, spokesman for foreclosure tracking firm RealtyTrac.

The Inland Empire has one of the highest foreclosure rates in the nation, with one foreclosure for every 113 homes.  In the Riverside-San Bernardino metropolitan area, about 30 percent of home sales are of bank-owned homes, or REOs, according to RealtyTrac’s most recent numbers. Statewide, foreclosed properties make up 25 percent of sales. 

A week ago, Bank of America announced a stop to foreclosures in the 23 states that require court approval in the process. Ally Financial and JPMorgan Chase have gone ahead with similar plans. California does not require a court order for foreclosure. 
But Friday’s moratorium represents the first move by a bank to halt foreclosures in all states to review foreclosure documents. Bank of America’s decision comes after widespread calls from consumer advocacy groups and public officials for a nationwide moratorium on foreclosures.  Assemblywoman Wilmer Amina Carter, D-Rialto, said Friday that she supported the bank’s moratorium.

“This will give us an opportunity to work out a plan so people can be helped and the banks can become stable enough to help the community thrive by providing resources for people to become homeowners again,” Carter said.  While the action does not stop the foreclosure process on delinquent borrowers, it prevents a foreclosed home from going to sale. Bank of America expects the moratorium to last “a few more weeks” while it assesses foreclosure documents, said Rick Simon, a Bank of America spokesman, in an e-mail. Simon said, so far, the assessment shows the bank’s foreclosure decisions were correct.

“Based on our review thus far, we are confident that the basic facts about debt and delinquency represented in past foreclosures are accurate,” Simon said.  Real estate experts said homeowners on the verge of foreclosure sales would temporarily be saved from eviction. But the moratorium only prolongs their problems, depending on how long the action lasts.  “This is just going to lengthen the time that this problem takes to correct itself,” said Tim Adams, a Realtor broker associate in Redlands. “All we’re doing is extending the pain as far as I’m concerned.”

But sellers in the Inland Empire who have been competing with bank-owned homes in the real estate market could benefit from the halt, Adams said. Bank-owned homes, which sell at lower prices, have brought down property values for non-distressed homes in inland neighborhoods, he said. Buyers also can use the time to get themselves financially ready to buy next year, he said.

News of the moratorium brought relief to Prakash Bhakta, a Fontana resident, who said he has been fighting a foreclosure sale by Bank of America set for next month. The moratorium gives him and his family at least a temporary reprieve from the sale, he said.

He said he has known that lenders improperly foreclose on homeowners, and the moratorium only brings attention to the issue. Bhakta last year filed a lawsuit against his former bank, Wilshire Credit Corp., for fraud in the foreclosure process. The notes on his property now belong to Bank of America, he said.

“Two years I’ve been fighting the system,” Bhakta said. “Now it’s being brought to the light.”

“They’d have to go find another house,” Green said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Copyright (c) 2010, San Bernardino County Sun, Calif.
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Changing Trends for Foreclosures and Short Sales

Monday, October 26th, 2009

The trends for new “notices of foreclosure” or pre-foreclosures continue to be significant for the metro Atlanta market.  Equity Depot reports that pre-foreclosures have been in the 10,000 – 12,000 range each month for metro Atlanta since mid summer.  This is up from the 7,000 - 8,000 range last fall.  These increases are driven by unemployment, adjustable mortgages resetting to higher levels and general economic conditions.  One would expect that the inventory levels of bank-owned properties would be significantly higher… but that is not the case.  Rick Sharga, SVP Marketing at RealtyTrac, wrote a recent blog post and estimated that there are at least 450,000 to 500,000 missing REO properties or “shadow inventory” as it is now known in the industry.   So where are these missing REOs or bank-owned properties? 

Click the chart image below to view the data for the big 4 counties of metro Atlanta – Fulton, Dekalb, Cobb and Gwinnett.   Contact us if you are interested in see the data for each individual county.  This chart shows some interesting facts:

Big 4 - September 2009 

  • Pre-foreclosures are still very high (yellow bar)
  • Properties that become foreclosed or bank-owned are significantly lower (red bar)
  • Sales of bank-owned properties is higher than the rate of new properties becoming bank-owned (purple bar)
  • Market sales (resales, new homes, land) are significantly smaller than the number of pre-foreclosures (green bar)
  • The percentage of REOs or bank-owned properties compared to total sales is shrinking in recent months (green line).        

The case is clear – REO listing inventory is shrinking.  We also know this to be true from the “word on the streets” since many REO specialists do not have the listing inventory volumes they has back in the spring and early summer months.  There are two root causes for this situation.  One is that more banks are supporting and promoting short sales.  The second is that banks are simply sitting on inventory and not bringing properties to the market for sale.  Short sales make sense since it costs the bank less money to process.  But why would a bank sit on inventory and not bring to market for sale?  Some speculate that banks are holding assets to defer losses.  Others believe that banks are using these assets to negotiate with the government to establish a “toxic bank” similar to the model used for the RTC (Resolution Trust Corporation).  Only time will tell the real reasons. 

So what does this mean to sellers or buyers in metro Atlanta?

For sellers, it means that you and your agent need to carefully watch the trends for future listing inventory in your local area.  This includes notices of foreclosure or pre-foreclosures that will become short sales or bank-owned properties.  This also includes the “shadow inventory” that banks are holding.   If the banks decide to dump the inventory onto the market too fast, it will have a negative impact on market values.  Yet another category to watch includes the “sideline inventory” of sellers that are expected to come into the market if values slightly improve.  Right now our inventory levels are down 28% from last year.  Pended sales are running at about the same pace as last year.  For now, we are consuming our inventory.  If that remains the case, property values will remain stable and may even pick up slightly.  It is all about the balance for buyers and the current listing inventory.  Prudential Georgia Realty created our award-winning Advanced Property Marketing System specifically for these types of market conditions.  As the market changes, we will see the trends first and can help you optimize your value proposition to stand out from your competition.     

For buyers, there are still tremendous deals in our market.  There are fabulous resales, builder short sales, residential short sales and bank-owned properties.  Many of these are priced below their replacement costs.  It may be wise to work with a specialist who understands both the short sale and REO markets to evaluate the best opportunities.  Prudential Georgia Realty has hundreds of trained and certified specialists that can help in your local area.  These specialists have foreclosure searches powered by RealtyTrac plus our new custom Short Sale searchPGR is the only brokerage that provides these powerful tools to our agents.

If you want THE EDGE in the market, please contact your Prudential Georgia Realty agent to get started today!

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