Home foreclosures soar in US

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May 13, 2002
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www.socialistworld.net
#1
Very informitive article...

Home foreclosures soar in US
By Naomi Spencer
9 October 2006



The social impact of the bursting of the US housing market is already being registered in a sharp increase in home foreclosures. In August, the foreclosure rate rose a staggering 53 percent over the same period a year ago. In Michigan, Ohio, and other states hard hit by mass layoffs in manufacturing, the impact has been particularly severe.

In August, 115,292 new properties were listed on the database of online foreclosure tracker RealtyTrac, a 24 percent increase over the level in July. More significantly, RealtyTrac currently lists 650,000 properties nationwide in foreclosure or pre-foreclosure, up from 75,600 just one year earlier, when the Gulf Coast was devastated by Hurricane Katrina.

The volume of bank seizures is immense. Foreclosure.com, another online tracker of distressed properties, currently lists more than 1.27 million properties in some stage of foreclosure, bankruptcy, or bank auction. Approximately 5,000 properties are added to the listings each day.

Currently, Foreclosure.com has nearly 11,000 foreclosures and 28,500 bankruptcies listed for Ohio; Michigan has 11,000 properties listed as foreclosures and 19,500 involved in bankruptcy proceedings; Indiana has 5,500 foreclosure listings and 12,000 bankruptcies; Illinois has 12,900 foreclosures, 30,000 pre-foreclosed properties, 27,400 bankruptcies, and 9,600 properties with tax liens on them.

In cities built on manufacturing, such as Detroit and Cleveland, foreclosures and bankruptcies are highly concentrated. Cleveland and surrounding Cuyahoga County account for 5,900 of the distressed properties in Ohio.

Wayne County, which includes Detroit, has more than 16,400 distressed property listings on Foreclosure.com, up by 5,000 in less than a week. Most are bank owned and auctioned foreclosed properties. Chicago’s Cook County has an alarming 46,000 distressed properties listed, 21,000 of them in pre-foreclosure for payment delinquencies.

In addition to the massive number of foreclosures in the Midwest, government figures show that house depreciation has been the worst in cities in Michigan, Indiana and throughout the so-called rust belt, where home values did not appreciate previously as they did throughout much of the US.

Florida, California, and Nevada, all states which saw the most activity in home sales and had among the highest home prices over the last few years, saw the largest numbers of foreclosures last month, with foreclosures up by 62 percent to 255 percent from a year ago.

The decline in the housing market carries dire social implications for tens of millions of working class families which have barely managed to get by over the past few years. As the cost of living rose, real wages stagnated or declined, and the national economy generated relatively few decent-paying jobs. Together with huge increases in health care and energy expenses, housing costs have impelled Americans to take on massive debt.

Debt burden is ballooning in the US. Statistics from the Bureau of Economic Analysis show that the personal savings rate has been running in the red for 16 months. Additionally, the Federal Reserve recently found that consumer debt has outpaced, by 18.7 percent, the amount of income left after the payment of bills each month, meaning that for millions of families the cost of living is substantially higher than their monthly incomes can accommodate.

An enormous portion of the total personal debt is mortgage debt. Since 2000, mortgage debt in America has doubled, approaching $9 trillion.

This year, $400 billion of this debt is coming due in the form of mortgage readjustments. Research firm LoanPerformance projects another $1 trillion in mortgage debt will come due next year as the rates on millions more loans reset, sending individual monthly mortgage payments hundreds of dollars higher.

The increase in foreclosures is driven in large part by rising monthly mortgage payments on “exotic” loans. In the late 1990s, the Federal Reserve Board relaxed lending standards for banks and commercial brokers, allowing sub-prime and outright predatory forms of loans to proliferate.

After interest rates were slashed to stimulate the economy, banks were able to hook millions of Americans with low incomes or poor credit histories into loans on homes they could not otherwise afford. At the same time, the Bush administration aggressively promoted an “ownership society,” capitalizing on the desire of working people to achieve the “American dream.”

The option adjustable rate mortgage (ARM) was one of the most popular forms of home loans at the height of the housing boom in 2004 and 2005, bringing millions of new borrowers into the market with its option to make only the minimum payment each month.

A decade ago, sub-prime loans made up less than 5 percent of new mortgages. But in 2004 and 2005 the proportion doubled, and according to the National Association of Mortgage Brokers, the activity of banks and other brokers dealing in exotic loans such as option ARMs now accounts for 80 percent of all mortgage originations.

Many option ARMs allow homebuyers to pay only the interest each month for an introductory period, with the rest of the payment added to the principal of the mortgage, resulting in a process called negative amortization. In negative amortization, minimum payments actually increase the total cost of a home.

Depending on the type of option ARM, after either the end of the introductory period or after the mortgage balance exceeds a set amount, the ARM automatically resets at a substantially higher rate. Fitch Ratings, a banking industry tracker, estimates that four out of five option ARM mortgage holders make only the minimum payments.

When the option ARMs reset, borrowers face either monthly payments that are as much as 25 percent higher, or thousands of dollars in penalties and fees for refinancing their mortgages.

At the same time, housing prices are dropping, and many ARM borrowers are locked into mortgages that cost more than the house will be worth upon resale, with little or no equity built up as a financial cushion. This position all but guarantees ruin for mortgagees at the slightest economic shudder.

Census Bureau data released October 3 indicates that from 2000 through the housing peak in 2005, home costs rose faster than home values. The report indicated that millions of renters and homebuyers spend excessively high proportions of their incomes on housing. In some cities within regions that experienced the most home value inflation, such as in California, Colorado, and Texas, the majority of mortgage holders were spending a third or more of their monthly incomes on housing.

Residents in cities with depressed markets took on some of the largest housing burdens, paying more as wages declined. According to the Census report, the highest increases in real median monthly mortgage costs were found in Detroit (24.1 percent) and Chicago (21.7 percent). Detroit’s median rental cost increases were second highest in the nation, behind San Diego and ahead of Los Angeles, where the housing market grew the most.

A report from the private research firm Moody’s Economy.com, also released October 3, projected sharp home value declines in the immediate future. Nationally, the median sale price is forecast to drop by 3.6 percent in the coming year, according to the report, “Housing at the Tipping Point.” This would be the first year-over-year decline since the Great Depression. In some areas, home values could drop nearly 20 percent, including in the Midwest.

Moody’s projects that the largest decline will hit Danville, Illinois, a former auto production hub for General Motors. Danville has already seen an 18.7 percent drop in home prices in the last year due to more auto industry layoffs.

It is clear that job cuts, energy-driven inflation—and the higher interest rates imposed by the Federal Reserve to keep inflation in check—are compounding the pressure felt by working Americans. Yet the painful consequences of this reality find no meaningful reflection in media coverage, the political campaigns of major party candidates, or federal policy. On the contrary, the decline in the housing market has been characterized as a temporary “price correction.” This euphemism is in part calculated to contain panic and prevent a mass sell-off before housing values decline further.

Regardless of the media spin, the combination of ARM loan resets, general inflation, and housing devaluation contains the potential for a spiral of bankruptcies and foreclosures that could lead to a sharp decline in consumer spending and another economic recession, which would in turn have a significant negative impact on global markets.

The entire situation expresses the highly unstable state of the US economy and the insecure economic position of tens of millions of American families, a significant number of which are already only one or two paychecks away from a downward spiral into homelessness and destitution.
 
May 15, 2002
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#3
foreclosures have been at an all time low. Any increase would make the stats "soar." The mortgage market is rather fucked up right now, you think this is soaring now, wait till next year.

Some of you are killing me talking bad about ARM loans when you don't know what the hell you're talking about. ARMs are the best loans. The main problem are stupid borrowers who doesn't pay attention to their loan or know how it works or whats going on that get fucked by it and get foreclosed on.
 

phil

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Apr 25, 2002
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i bought my house 3 years ago and a BIG selling point was that we should buy quick as interest rates couldnt get any lower and would be GUARANTEED TO RISE in the future. i got a fixed rate 30 year mortgage at 5.5%.

the day before that it was only 5% and not locking it in that day cost us an extra 40 bucks a month for the life of the loan. for half a percent.
 

EDJ

Sicc OG
May 3, 2002
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#12
FOR THOSE gETTIN' HARRASSED THRU THE PHONE, JUST SWITCH TO VONAgE(IF YOU HAVE A BROADBAND CONNECTION) AND NEVA gIVE YOUR PHONE OUT TO THE CLERK AT THE CHEK OUT COUNTER(USE YOUR OLD PHONE NUMBER) WHEN YOU gO TO N-E CHAIN STORE OR N-E DEALERSHIP. THEY WILL USE IT FOR MARKETIN' PURPOSES. THAT WAY YOU JUST gET A BUNCH OF JUNK MAIL(BOTH REAL MAIL AND E-MAIL).
 
Jul 10, 2002
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#14
For those getting harassed register here....

https://www.donotcall.gov/default.aspx

Now, this should cease all unathorized solicitations, you may even be able to sue and the solicitors can be fined up to $10,000 or something like that.

Purchasing foreclosed properties is not a simple thing that just anyone can do. If the property is actually on the auction block, the only way to buy them is straight CASH. Financing is not an option (unless you can get a hold of the owner and work out some pre-forclosure deal). This is not as easy at it seems either, after all it is public record of who is actually being foreclosed upon and believe me there are plenty of sharks in the water who are spend every waking minute doing researching.

Even if you do have the cash what's to gaurantee that the current owner/resident isn't going to be vindictive as hell and trash the place. Think about it, how would you react if you had some hard times, fell behind on some bills and some investor is about to take your shit. Yeah it may be your fault for what ever reason, that doesn't mean you're still gonna be happy about it. I know, if I ever got to that point, I would straight fuck the shit outta that place... what's it matter, credits already fucked for the next 2 years anyway...

Sometimes an ARM makes sense, sometime a fixed rate makes sense, it varies from person to person depending on their own personal objectives. Ideally a diligent loan officer (such as myself) will explain the available options, add personal insight, but ultimately let the buyer choose for themselves...

However, there are also more scum bag lenders then not, who are in the business to capitalize in the short run, don't give a f' about their clients interests, or simply have nothing but predatory intentions. These people care nothing about fiduciary duties, rather are on the hunt to bop YOU! Now these people are definately partially responsible for people getting into shitty loans that they have no business in in the first place...

Then there are also your irresponsible buyers who overextend them selves by taking advantage of loan programs which qualify them for much more than they can realistically aford.
example,someone who makes 2 grand a month, says he makes 6k/month in order to be approved for a 400,000k loan with a 3g/month payment. They do this because their girlfriend and homeboy are gonna move in and help with the mortgage, well guess what, homeboy ends up fuckin' doods girl, they fall in love and move out to live together somewhere else (gotta add a little drama), anyway, now dood is fucked cant get a roomate, and starts fallin' behind on his payment, eventually leading to foreclosure.

People also loose jobs, get into accidents, have personal crisis, severe illness, ect ect ect... It is only logical to expect foreclosures to increase as the purchase markets reaches all time high's as well.

Then of course there are properties that are in markets that shifted from a boom to a bust, or oversaturation/overbuilt market in a very short period of time (as with most of country) as mentioned in the article. Also, them option ARM's with negative amoritzation or 'deferred interest' for those who like euphemism's are terrible loans for any novice inexpirienced potential buyer...

there's lots more, maybe later...
 
Jun 19, 2004
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#16
Pure Life said:
listen to this man..he is right..

ARM loans are the best...i offer them all the time..

We got one right now, my girl and I were 21 at the time ok credit, and we had alot of debt but have payed it down quite a bit. So our credit scores and income have risen. We have 6 months before we refinance for a 30 year fixed, hopefully rates drop a lil more or at least stay steady till then,..... we took a gamble hopefully its worth it.................
 
May 9, 2002
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#17
HERESY said:
Everyday I get 2 to 3 calls from people asking us to refinance. The shits so over the top now I'm damn near gonna start reporting companies for harassment.
My boy does that for a living...he hates cold calling people...and his last "mortgage" job was big pyramid scheme...but he didnt realize it til he had been there for over 2 years....
 
Feb 8, 2006
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#18
Jesse fuckin' Rice said:
My boy does that for a living...he hates cold calling people...and his last "mortgage" job was big pyramid scheme...but he didnt realize it til he had been there for over 2 years....
ANYONE jumping in the mortgage business right now should reconsider.