South Florida foreclosure filings up nearly 50 percent from year ago
The number of homeowners stung by the rout in the
Nationwide, 252,363 homes received at least one foreclosure-related notice in June, up 53 percent from the same month last year, but down 3 percent from May, RealtyTrac Inc. said. One in every 501
The housing crunch has hit
In
Realestat's
Foreclosure filings increased from a year earlier in all but 11 states.
Irvine, Calif.-based RealtyTrac monitors default notices, auction sale notices and bank repossessions. More than 71,000 properties were repossessed by lenders nationwide in June, the company said.
While foreclosures continue to rise nationwide, efforts in some states to give borrowers more time before losing their homes appear to be working.
In Maryland, where a new law has increased the time to finalize a foreclosure to 150 days from just 15, foreclosure filings dropped by almost 18 percent from last year's levels. In
Still, the combination of weak housing sales, falling home values, tighter mortgage lending criteria and a slowing
Economists project 2.5 million homes nationwide will enter the foreclosure process this year, up from about 1.5 million in 2007.
Analysts say the mortgage industry's effort to assist troubled borrowers is being overwhelmed by the magnitude of the foreclosure crisis, and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said earlier this week that many foreclosures are "not preventable," citing borrowers who "took out mortgages they can't possibly afford and they will lose their homes."
Lawmakers and government officials have been struggling to come up with a response to soften the blow for the
The Bush administration announced Tuesday that it would be ready on Monday to implement an FHA expansion that lets borrowers who've fallen behind on their home payments - because of mortgage rate resets or other economic hardships - get more affordable loans.
In the RealtyTrac report, metropolitan areas in
In
In today's market, about 50 to 60 percent of borrowers nationally who receive foreclosure filings are now likely to lose their homes, said Rick Sharga, RealtyTrac's vice president of marketing, compared with a typical rate of about 40 percent.
"For more and more homeowners who are getting into foreclosure," Sharga said, "there is a much higher likelihood that they are ultimately going to lose the properties to the bank."


