Single- Family Homes/ Market Map/ Sales Volume 2011 vs. 2010
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
CA foreclosure activity
As both jobs and home sales remained scarce, 34% of all California home resale activity in the fourth quarter of 2011 was attributed to real estate owned (REO) inventory — approximately the same as in the prior quarter and down from an even higher 38% one year earlier.
The above chart tracks the number of California residential properties resold quarterly by lenders who acquire ownership by foreclosure. These properties are also commonly called “Real Estate Owned” properties (REOs).
61,517 notices of default (NODs) were recorded in California in the fourth quarter of 2011, down from 69,799 one year earlier. The largest numerical drops in NODs issued took place in the counties of Riverside (-871), San Bernardino (-917), Los Angeles (-1,833) and Alameda (-543).
These charts track the number of Notices of Default (NODs) and trustee’s deeds (TDs) recorded quarterly in California from 1994 to the present, along with the estimated percentage of NODs that have actually gone to foreclosure quarterly over the last four years.
Recording an NOD is the lender’s first step in the foreclosure process; the recorded trustee’s deed is the final step, at which point the property is placed in the Multiple Listing Service (MLS) as a real estate owned property (REO). The entire process takes place over a period of approximately four to five months, although this time period has recently been extended by government interference at both state and federal levels. As a consequence of this interference (designed to postpone NOD recordings and reduce trustee’s sales and evictions) we will not know the full impact of recent NODs on the total percentage of NODs which go to a trustee’s sale (and thus become REOs) until 2013.
Trustee’s sales took 31,260 homes in the fourth quarter of 2011. This is down 20% from 38,895 in the third quarter, and 12% lower than the 35,431 home foreclosure sales one year earlier. The drop is a positive sign for stabilizing the real estate market, although the still-high level of NODs suggests that many more foreclosures are still to come, and will continue for several years.
Low-tier neighborhoods continue to see the highest concentration of both NODs and foreclosure sales, with fourth quarter foreclosures of six homes for every 1,000 in ZIP codes with prices lower than $200,000. In ZIP codes with prices above $800,000, only 0.7 NODs were recorded per 1,000 homes, evidence of significant inequality in debt and employment between income tiers.
It now takes an average of ten months following the recording of the NOD to complete a trustee’s foreclosure sale in California. One year earlier, foreclosure proceedings averaged nine months in duration. The extended processing time is seen as a product of lender backlogs, the pursuit of loan modifications and shortsale approvals to circumvent foreclosure, as reported by Dataquick.
An estimated 30% of homes sold at trustee’s sales were bought by individuals other than the lender or government groups — up from 22% last year. This third-party high-bidder situation indicates speculators remain optimistic about future resale pricing.
Two quarters do not a trend make. The fourth quarter of 2011 marked a second three-month drop in foreclosures, but it is still much too early to determine whether these declines will be enough to put a stop to the bumpy plateau California has experienced since 2008 in this jobless Lesser Depression. The still-high number of NODs is evidence of more foreclosures to come (about 60% will go to trustee’s sale), as lenders make good on their promise earlier this year to increase foreclosure efficiency and clear out some of the massive backlog of serious delinquencies.
Foreclosures are sure to continue at or near their current high rate, since home prices will not rise significantly for several years and a large percentage of the 2,500,000 negative equity homeowners in California, both with and without jobs, will eventually become frustrated and default. Negative equity properties are damaging to society and must be promptly cleared out by lenders or owners in order to put an end to the drag they create for the economy— a process not likely to be concluded until roughly 2015-2016. In the meantime, lenders will work through the obscure shadow inventory of mortgaged homes backlogged as delinquent and in need of foreclosure.
To get the California economy recovering and restore strength and stability to the real estate market, it is imperative lenders quickly clear out the delinquencies on their books, either by repairing those defective loans with cramdowns for employed owners or, more brutally, by foreclosing.
“California foreclosure activity drops,” from Dataquick
The above chart tracks the number of California residential properties resold quarterly by lenders who acquire ownership by foreclosure. These properties are also commonly called “Real Estate Owned” properties (REOs).
61,517 notices of default (NODs) were recorded in California in the fourth quarter of 2011, down from 69,799 one year earlier. The largest numerical drops in NODs issued took place in the counties of Riverside (-871), San Bernardino (-917), Los Angeles (-1,833) and Alameda (-543).
These charts track the number of Notices of Default (NODs) and trustee’s deeds (TDs) recorded quarterly in California from 1994 to the present, along with the estimated percentage of NODs that have actually gone to foreclosure quarterly over the last four years.
Recording an NOD is the lender’s first step in the foreclosure process; the recorded trustee’s deed is the final step, at which point the property is placed in the Multiple Listing Service (MLS) as a real estate owned property (REO). The entire process takes place over a period of approximately four to five months, although this time period has recently been extended by government interference at both state and federal levels. As a consequence of this interference (designed to postpone NOD recordings and reduce trustee’s sales and evictions) we will not know the full impact of recent NODs on the total percentage of NODs which go to a trustee’s sale (and thus become REOs) until 2013.
Trustee’s sales took 31,260 homes in the fourth quarter of 2011. This is down 20% from 38,895 in the third quarter, and 12% lower than the 35,431 home foreclosure sales one year earlier. The drop is a positive sign for stabilizing the real estate market, although the still-high level of NODs suggests that many more foreclosures are still to come, and will continue for several years.
Low-tier neighborhoods continue to see the highest concentration of both NODs and foreclosure sales, with fourth quarter foreclosures of six homes for every 1,000 in ZIP codes with prices lower than $200,000. In ZIP codes with prices above $800,000, only 0.7 NODs were recorded per 1,000 homes, evidence of significant inequality in debt and employment between income tiers.
It now takes an average of ten months following the recording of the NOD to complete a trustee’s foreclosure sale in California. One year earlier, foreclosure proceedings averaged nine months in duration. The extended processing time is seen as a product of lender backlogs, the pursuit of loan modifications and shortsale approvals to circumvent foreclosure, as reported by Dataquick.
An estimated 30% of homes sold at trustee’s sales were bought by individuals other than the lender or government groups — up from 22% last year. This third-party high-bidder situation indicates speculators remain optimistic about future resale pricing.
Two quarters do not a trend make. The fourth quarter of 2011 marked a second three-month drop in foreclosures, but it is still much too early to determine whether these declines will be enough to put a stop to the bumpy plateau California has experienced since 2008 in this jobless Lesser Depression. The still-high number of NODs is evidence of more foreclosures to come (about 60% will go to trustee’s sale), as lenders make good on their promise earlier this year to increase foreclosure efficiency and clear out some of the massive backlog of serious delinquencies.
Foreclosures are sure to continue at or near their current high rate, since home prices will not rise significantly for several years and a large percentage of the 2,500,000 negative equity homeowners in California, both with and without jobs, will eventually become frustrated and default. Negative equity properties are damaging to society and must be promptly cleared out by lenders or owners in order to put an end to the drag they create for the economy— a process not likely to be concluded until roughly 2015-2016. In the meantime, lenders will work through the obscure shadow inventory of mortgaged homes backlogged as delinquent and in need of foreclosure.
To get the California economy recovering and restore strength and stability to the real estate market, it is imperative lenders quickly clear out the delinquencies on their books, either by repairing those defective loans with cramdowns for employed owners or, more brutally, by foreclosing.
“California foreclosure activity drops,” from Dataquick
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