After conducting a preliminary study on foreclosures and lis pendens in Leon County last week, we knew that something exciting was happening and it needed to be analyzed with much more scrutiny. In case you missed the blog, it was titled Tallahassee Foreclosure Report Posts Positive News and it contained evidence that the banks were both slowing down on new lis pendens filings, as well as speeding up on pushing through foreclosure sales.
For those of you new to the Tallahassee Real Estate Blog, we report both lis pendens filings (the beginning of the foreclosure process) as well as foreclosure sales, in order to see how many distressed properties actually make it to auction on the court house steps.
No Great Change In Location Of Foreclosures In Tallahassee
The first thing that I did was run two separate reports, one showing the subdivision (Neighborhood) of all lis pendens filings, and then I also did one for each zip code. I was hoping to find out if any new trend existed in where new foreclosures in Leon County were occurring, but I could find none:
Top Neighborhoods By Foreclosure Filings
Lis Pendens Filed By Zip Code
As one can see, nothing much seems to have changed in regards to the location of foreclosures in Tallahassee. But the graph is what really caught our attention, and we believe it says quite a bit about the volatility of the next 6 to 18 months in the Tallahassee housing market.
Foreclosure Sales Go Through The Roof In Tallahassee
As you can see from the real estate graph above, foreclosure sales in Tallahassee skyrocketed during the month of June, hitting nearly double the previous record high. We have been discussing the build-up of homes in the shadow inventory, of banks that were being very slow to deal with the problems of distressed assets in their pool of toxic loans, and perhaps we are finally seeing the first step in the banks move to purge these loans from their books.
If you are facing foreclosure, get good real estate advice right away. Right now, the conditions still favor the homeowner in negotiations with the lender, but as we work through the inventory of distressed properties, “normal” times will return.
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