Several newspapers thought that a decline in May foreclosures from April's record high was good news, but a decline off a record is not necessarily healthy. Here's an article from the WSJ that I thought was a little more appropriate.
Here's a bleak milestone: there's been more the 1 million foreclosures filed in the U.S. so far this year, according to a count by the Center for Responsible Lending.
Not all of those foreclosures will result in evictions, but the statistic offers a sobering illustration of the magnitude of the problems that still face the housing market.
Some worry that the sheer volume of foreclosures could swamp the government's efforts to help underwater borrowers refinance and to modify loans of distressed homeowners. Three weeks ago, Treasury department officials estimated that more than 55,000 homeowners had been helped so far by the Obama administration's loan modification plans, including some 15,000 borrowers who were in trial modifications with Chase Home Mortgage, and 3,000 who were in a trial with Wells Fargo.
The CRL, a nonprofit research and lobbying group that favors aggressive policies to help troubled homeowners, estimates that there are 6,500 new foreclosures filed every day. The center estimates that there will be 2.4 million foreclosure starts in 2009, based off of figures from the Mortgage Bankers Association that are adjusted to reflect the entire mortgage market.
The CRL supports the Obama administration's efforts to set standards for banks to modify loans, where the government will match in part the costs to the servicer to lower mortgage payments to 31% of a borrower's income. The CRL warns that "loan modifications are not likely to succeed with superficial fixes that fail to lower a homeowner's monthly payment."
With an estimated 2.4 million foreclosure starting this year and a paltry 55,000 loan mods, the REO business should continue to grow in all areas including Prescott, Prescott Valley, Chino Valley, and Dewey-Humboldt.
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