Special offer

Chicago Second in Foreclosure Notices and Repossessions 10-28-10

By
Managing Real Estate Broker with HomeSmart Connect 471007886

Where is this leading?

 

Foreclosure filings increased from last year in 133 of 206 metropolitan statistical areas tracked in the third quarter, or 65%, according to RealtyTrac. The Seattle area had the highest increase. There, foreclosure filings, which include notices of default, pending cases, notices of foreclosure sale and repossessions, increased 71% from the third quarter of 2009. Chicago was second with a 35% increase followed by Houston,  Texas number at 26%. California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona accounted for 19 of the top-20 foreclosure rates in the country. The only exception was Boise City, Idaho, which was 14th. Las Vegas posted the highest rate in the third quarter, where one in every 25 housing units received a filing, more than five times the national average. The 32,288 filings is down 20% from last year. 

Cape Coral-Fort Meyers, Fla. was second with a one in 35 foreclosure rate. Filings there reached 10,352, down 22%. One in 36 houses in Modesto, Calif. received a filing in the third quarter for the third highest rate, but it was an 18% drop from a year ago. Miami, Fla. posted the highest total number of foreclosures in the third quarter, at more than 58,600 filings. It's an increase of 9% from last year and up 25% from the previous quarter. “The underlying problems that are causing homeowners to miss their mortgage payments — high unemployment, underemployment, toxic loans and negative equity — are continuing to plague most local housing markets,” said James Saccacio, CEO of RealtyTrac. “And these historically high foreclosure rates will continue until those problems are resolved.”


According to CNBC reporting today, one out of 139 housing units received a foreclosure notice in the third quarter reporting.


Without job growth, the housing market will not and cannot improve. GDP growth of 3% is necessary to turn this around. The Fed is attempting to inflate the problem away, but it hasn't worked. My question is; what happens when you keep force feeding the economy and nothing happens? I think most folkes are fearful of the result. And that is why few want to commit themselves in times of great uncertainty. Let's face it, we're in uncharted waters... October 28,2010

 

 

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 

Posted by