1. California Foreclosures Decline in 2Q 2010

    1 By on July 23, 2010

    A new study from MDA DataQuick showed the number of mortgaged houses entering the foreclosure process in California in the second quarter of 2010 dropped for the fifth consecutive quarter and is now at the lowest level since the second quarter of 2007.  This is a good sign that the California real estate market, which has been battered by the recession and unemployment, is starting to show some signs of life.

    Just over 70,000 notices of default were filed in the second quarter, which is a 13.6 percent decline from the previous quarter and a whopping 43.8 percent decline from the second quarter of 2009.

    Some of the decline can be attributed to sellers dropping their prices to bring their demands more in line with the market, and some of the decline can be attributed to programs such as the Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives (HAFA) program that incentivizes lenders to allow borrowers to sell their homes in short sales rather than going into foreclosure.  22,000 foreclosures have been cancelled in California in June alone, many of these becoming short sales through HAFA.

    Foreclosures in California are most dominant in areas with lower-priced houses.  Areas with median home prices of less than $300,000 experienced foreclosures at a rate about 3.5 times higher than areas with median home prices of more than $800,000.  Foreclosure sales made up 36 percent of all resales in California last quarter, which is the third straight quarter that number declined.

    While this is good news for California’s housing market on its face, it is important to realize these numbers are still very high from historical standards, and if we see significant price declines over the next year, we could see defaults tick back up.

    Category: Mortgage Rates
  2. HAMP Modified Borrowers Have Disturbingly High Redefault Rate

    By on June 21, 2010

    “Default?  Woo hoo!  The two sweetest words in the English language”

    -Homer Simpson (on winning by default)

    According to a report from Fitch as reported on by James Hagerty of the Wall Street Journal, borrowers who modified their loans under the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) are extremely likely to redefault on their new mortgages.  It is estimated that more than 65 percent of HAMP borrowers will redefault.

    The Fitch report says that the redefault rate is likely to be high because many of the borrowers whose mortgages were modified are struggling with other sources of debt, or have experienced lost income due to job loss, as unemployment remains high.

    According to reports from the Treasury Department, 436,000 of the 1.24 million borrowers who enrolled in the program have dropped out. 340,000 borrowers have received permanent  modifications and have remained in the program.  Some fear that HAMP redefaults could kick off an additional wave of foreclosures that further hurts home prices.

    I don’t know that it should really be surprising that many people who had their mortgages modified under HAMP are having trouble keeping up with payments.  The economic recovery has begun to stall, and we have not seen any real improvement in the labor market.  Without jobs or steady income, many will have difficulty making any sort of mortgage payment, unless the payment is modified to $0.  For many borrowers, modifying the mortgage payment is akin to putting a band-aid on a gunshot wound – too little, too late.

    What do you think of HAMP?  Let us know in the comments section below.

    Category: General

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