Up And Up Goes The Foreclosure Baloon
According to reliable sources foreclosures rose by 93% from July last year to July 2007 across USA. It went up by 9% from June. In July last year the number of foreclosures had been 92,845 but this year during the same month the number read 179,599. In June the foreclosure number was 164,644. The figures have been released by one of the oldest reliable online groups, keeping track of this specific situation. The national foreclosure rate is 1:693.
Five states of California, Florida, Michigan, Ohio and Georgia bore the brunt of more than half the country’s foreclosure burden. In the middle are squeezed in Missouri (18th) and Kansas (32nd). In Missouri the ratio was 1:1,275 and in Kansas it was 1:2,782.The figures are inclusive of default, sale and bank repossession notices. Because of multiple mortgages some of the property units may have been counted more than once. But the tracking group has listed separately individual properties. During the first six months of the current year 573,397 properties showed foreclosure activity in some form or the other. It amounts to 58% rise from the first half of 2006 and 32% rise from the last six months of that year.
In July Nevada, Georgia and Michigan showed the highest numbers. California, Florida and Ohio were the states with the highest foreclosure numbers.
The sub-prime loans and ARM loans have been battering the mortgage market during the last few months. One by one delinquency is being reported and houses are being foreclosed. Falling real estate prices have added woe to misery with owners not being able to sell off units and pay off dues. Sub-prime loans had been given to those with shaky credit history. It started with interest-only repayments but when the grace period was over the cracks began to appear and widen.
But the story did not end there. From the housing credit category it infected the country’s savings and loans. Never had the situation been so bad in the past 14 years. USA Office of Thrift Supervision is nervous and edgy with $14.2 billion in repossessed assets and loans whose dues are more than 90 days old. In other words property is lying around idle with no cash flow coming in. To avoid further decline it is being advised that properties should be sold off quickly without thinking of profit and loss.
According to reliable sources foreclosures rose by 93% from July last year to July 2007 across USA. It went up by 9% from June. In July last year the number of foreclosures had been 92,845 but this year during the same month the number read 179,599. In June the foreclosure number was 164,644. The figures have been released by one of the oldest reliable online groups, keeping track of this specific situation. The national foreclosure rate is 1:693.
Five states of California, Florida, Michigan, Ohio and Georgia bore the brunt of more than half the country’s foreclosure burden. In the middle are squeezed in Missouri (18th) and Kansas (32nd). In Missouri the ratio was 1:1,275 and in Kansas it was 1:2,782.The figures are inclusive of default, sale and bank repossession notices. Because of multiple mortgages some of the property units may have been counted more than once. But the tracking group has listed separately individual properties. During the first six months of the current year 573,397 properties showed foreclosure activity in some form or the other. It amounts to 58% rise from the first half of 2006 and 32% rise from the last six months of that year.
In July Nevada, Georgia and Michigan showed the highest numbers. California, Florida and Ohio were the states with the highest foreclosure numbers.
The sub-prime loans and ARM loans have been battering the mortgage market during the last few months. One by one delinquency is being reported and houses are being foreclosed. Falling real estate prices have added woe to misery with owners not being able to sell off units and pay off dues. Sub-prime loans had been given to those with shaky credit history. It started with interest-only repayments but when the grace period was over the cracks began to appear and widen.
But the story did not end there. From the housing credit category it infected the country’s savings and loans. Never had the situation been so bad in the past 14 years. USA Office of Thrift Supervision is nervous and edgy with $14.2 billion in repossessed assets and loans whose dues are more than 90 days old. In other words property is lying around idle with no cash flow coming in. To avoid further decline it is being advised that properties should be sold off quickly without thinking of profit and loss.









