Foreclosure Activity Increases in 25
States, Led by New Jersey, Florida, Illinois
Median Home Prices Rise in 25
States, Lifting 1.6 Million Out of Negative Equity
IRVINE, Calif. – Jan. 17,
2013 – RealtyTrac® (www.realtytrac.com),
the leading online marketplace for foreclosure properties, today
released its Year-End 2012 U.S. Foreclosure Market Report™, which shows a
total of 2,304,941 foreclosure filings — default notices, scheduled
auctions and bank
repossessions — were reported on 1,836,634 U.S. properties in
2012, down 3 percent from 2011 and down 36 percent from the peak of 2.9
million properties with foreclosure filings in 2010.
The report also shows that 1.39 percent of
U.S. housing units (one in every 72) had at least one foreclosure filing
during the year, down from 1.45 percent of housing units in 2011 and
down from 2.23 percent of housing units in 2010.
Other
high-level findings from the report:
-
Foreclosure activity in 2012 increased from 2011 in 25 states — 20 of
which primarily use the longer judicial foreclosure process — including
New Jersey (55 percent increase), Florida (53 percent increase),
Connecticut (48 percent increase), Indiana (46 percent increase),
Illinois (33 percent increase) and New York (31 percent increase).
-
Foreclosure activity in 2012 decreased from 2011 in 25 states — 19 of
which primarily use the more streamlined non-judicial foreclosure
process — including Nevada (57 percent decrease), Utah (40 percent
decrease), Oregon (40 percent decrease), Arizona (33 percent decrease),
California (25 percent decrease) and Michigan (23 percent
decrease).
- Florida posted the
nation’s highest state foreclosure rate in 2012, with 3.11 percent of
housing units (one in 32) receiving a foreclosure filing during the
year. Other states with top 5 foreclosure rates were Nevada (2.70
percent), Arizona (2.69 percent), Georgia (2.58 percent), and Illinois
(2.58 percent).
-
December foreclosure activity dropped 10 percent from the previous month
to the lowest level since April 2007, a 68-month low, and fourth
quarter foreclosure activity was at the lowest quarterly level since the
third quarter of 2007 despite a 9 percent quarterly increase in bank
repossessions.
- The average
time to complete a foreclosure nationwide in the fourth quarter
increased 8 percent from the previous quarter to a record-high 414 days.
- Lower foreclosure
inventory gave sellers the upper hand and helped median sales prices in
the first 10 months of 2012 to increase from the same time period in
2011 in 25 states. Median sales prices nationwide during the first 10
months of 2012 on average were 99 percent of median list prices.
- In January 2013, 10.9 million
homeowners nationwide — representing 26 percent of all outstanding
homes with a mortgage — were seriously underwater, meaning they owed at
least 25 percent more on their home than what it was worth. That was
down from 12.5 million homeowners representing 28 percent of all homes
with a mortgage a year earlier in January
2012.
“2012 was the year of the judicial
foreclosure, with foreclosure activity increasing from 2011 in 20 of the
26 states that primarily use the judicial process, and a judicial state
— Florida — posting the nation’s highest state foreclosure rate for the
first time since the housing crisis began,” said Daren Blomquist, vice
president at RealtyTrac. “Meanwhile foreclosure activity continued to
decline in 19 of the 24 states that use the more streamlined
non-judicial foreclosure process, but there could be a backlog of
delayed foreclosures building up in some of those states as well as the
result of recent state legislation and court rulings that raise the bar
for lenders to foreclose.
“That could mean that
although we are comfortably past the peak of the foreclosure problem
nationally, 2013 is likely to be book-ended by two discrete jumps in
foreclosure activity,” Blomquist added. “We expect to see
continued increases in judicial foreclosure states near the beginning of
the year as lenders finish catching up with the backlogs in those
states, and another set of increases in some non-judicial states near
the end of the year as lenders adjust to the new laws and process some
deferred foreclosures in those states.”
December activity hits 68-month low, bank
repossessions increase in fourth
quarter
Foreclosure filings were reported on
162,511 U.S. properties in December, a 10 percent decrease from the
previous month and down 21 percent from December 2011. December’s total
was the lowest monthly total since April 2007 — a 68-month low. All
three types of foreclosure filings — default
notices (NOD, LIS), scheduled foreclosure
auctions (NTS, NFS), and bank repossessions (REO) decreased
both on a monthly and annual basis in
December.
Foreclosure filings were reported on 503,462
U.S. properties during the fourth quarter, a 5 percent decrease from
the previous quarter — despite a 9 percent quarter-over-quarter increase
in bank repossessions — and a 14 percent decrease from the fourth
quarter of 2011. The fourth quarter total was the lowest quarterly total
since the third quarter of 2007, when 448,145 U.S. properties received
foreclosure filings.
Florida, Nevada,
Arizona post top state foreclosure rates
More
than 3 percent of Florida
housing units (3.11 percent, or one in 32) had at least one foreclosure
filing in 2012, giving it the nation’s highest state foreclosure rate
for the year. A total of 279,230 Florida properties had a foreclosure
filing during the year, a 53 percent increase from 2011 but still 42
percent below the more than 485,000 Florida properties with foreclosure
filings in 2010.
After five consecutive years with the
highest state foreclosure rate, Nevada
dropped to No. 2 on the list in 2012 thanks to a 57 percent drop in
foreclosure activity from 2011. A total of 31,658 Nevada properties had a
foreclosure filing during the year, 2.70 percent of all housing units
in the state (one in every 37).
Arizona
foreclosure activity in 2012 decreased 33 percent from 2011
and was down 51 percent from 2010, lowering the state’s foreclosure rate
to the third highest in the nation following three consecutive years
with the second highest rate. A total of 76,487 Arizona properties had
foreclosure filings during the year, 2.69 percent of all housing units
in the state (one in 37).
Georgia
posted the nation’s fourth highest state foreclosure rate, with 2.58
percent of housing units (one in 39) receiving at least one foreclosure
filing in 2012, and Illinois posted the nation’s fifth highest state
foreclosure rate, also with 2.58 percent of housing units (one in 39)
receiving at least one foreclosure filing during the
year.
Other states with foreclosure rates among the
nation’s 10 highest were California (2.33 percent), Ohio (1.75 percent),
Michigan (1.69 percent), South Carolina (1.66 percent), and Colorado
(1.64 percent).
Foreclosure inventory
rises from low point in May, still 31 percent below
peak
As of the end of the year, more than 1.5
million homes were in some stage of foreclosure or bank-owned, up 9
percent from the end of 2011, but still 31 percent below the peak of 2.2
million at the end of 2010. Foreclosure inventory had dropped to a
57-month low of 1.3 million in May 2012, but has since risen off that
57-month low.

Florida
accounted for the biggest share of foreclosure inventory of any state
with 305,766 properties in some stage of foreclosure or bank owned (20
percent of the national total), followed by California with 212,172 (14
percent), Illinois with 135,858 (9 percent), Ohio with 76,015 (5
percent), and New York with 69,044 (5
percent).
Lenders with the most inventory of
bank-owned (REO) properties were the government-backed entities of
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD) with a combined 26 percent of all REO inventory,
followed by Bank of America with 8 percent, Wells Fargo with 6 percent,
US BankCorp with 4 percent and Chase with 4
percent.
Of the properties in some stage of
foreclosure or bank owned at the end of 2012, an estimated 37 percent
had a market value between $100,000 and $200,000, while an estimated 27
percent had a market value between $50,000 and $100,000, and an
estimated 15 percent had a market value between $200,000 and
$300,000.
Median home prices up in 25
states, 1.6 million fewer homeowners
underwater
Lower foreclosure inventory during
the year may have helped home prices to hit bottom and start rising in
many markets during the year. Median home prices during the first 10
months of 2012 rose compared to the same time period in 2011 in 25
states and in 16 of the nation’s 20 largest metro areas.
Nationwide the average monthly median home price
during the first 10 months of 2012 was $164,712 — nearly identical to
the average monthly median home price of $164,960 during the same time
period in 2011. The average monthly list price during the first 12
months of 2012 was $166,110, showing that sellers on average were
getting 99 percent of their asking price during the
year.
“The influx of foreclosure activity in 2012 in
many local markets should translate into more foreclosure inventory
available for sale in 2013 in those markets,” Blomquist noted. “That is
good news for buyers and investors, but could result in some short-term
weakness in home prices as the often-discounted foreclosure sales weigh
down overall home values.”
Rising home prices helped
boost home values in 2012, thereby lifting many homeowners across the
country out of negative equity compared to a year ago. About 10.9
million homeowners nationwide — representing 26 percent of all
homeowners with a mortgage — owed at least 25 percent more on their
combined mortgages than what their homes were worth as of January 2013,
down from 12.5 million seriously underwater homeowners representing 28
percent of all homeowners with a mortgage in January
2012.
Average days to foreclose
nationwide jumps to 414
U.S. properties
foreclosed in the fourth quarter took an average of 414 days to complete
the foreclosure process, up from 382 days in the third quarter and up
from 348 days in the fourth quarter of 2011. It was the longest time to
complete the foreclosure process since RealtyTrac began tracking the
metric in the first quarter of 2007.
New York had the
longest average time to foreclose, at 1,089 — up from 1,072 days in the
third quarter and up from 1,019 days in the fourth quarter of 2011 —
followed by New Jersey at 987 days — up from 931 days in the third
quarter and up from 964 days in the fourth quarter of
2011.
The average time to foreclose in Florida
decreased for the second straight quarter but was still the third
highest in the country at 853 days, followed by Hawaii at 781 days and
Illinois at 697 days.
The average time to foreclose in
Texas increased 17 percent from the previous quarter and was up 26
percent from a year ago, but the state still documented the shortest
average time to complete a foreclosure, at 113
days.
Other states with the shortest foreclosure
timelines in the fourth quarter were Delaware (145 days), Virginia (146
days), Alabama (163 days), Maine (168 days) and Georgia (170
days).
Top metro foreclosure
rates
Despite a 25 percent decrease in
foreclosure activity from 2011, Stockton, Calif., posted the nation’s
highest foreclosure rate in 2012 among metropolitan statistical areas
with a population of 200,000 or more: 3.98 percent of housing units (one
in 25) with a foreclosure filing during the year.
Six
other California cities ranked in the top 20 highest metro foreclosure
rates for the year, including Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario at No. 2
(3.86 percent of housing units with a foreclosure filing), Modesto at
No. 3 (3.82 percent), and Vallejo-Fairfield at No. 4 (3.73 percent). All
seven California metro areas in the top 20 posted decreasing
foreclosure activity from 2011.
Florida cities
accounted for eight of the top 20 highest metro foreclosure rates in
2012, led by Miami at No. 5 (3.71 percent of housing units with a
foreclosure filing), Palm Bay-Melbourne-Titusville at No. 6 (3.60
percent), and Orlando at No. 8 (3.46 percent). Seven out of the eight
Florida metro areas in the top 20 documented an increase in foreclosure
activity for the year.
Other metro areas with
foreclosure rates in the top 20 were Atlanta at No. 7 (3.51 percent of
housing units with a foreclosure filing), Chicago at No. 9 (3.31
percent), Rockford, Ill., at No. 10 (3.28 percent), Las Vegas at No. 16
(3.10 percent), and Phoenix at No. 17 (3.09
percent).
Report
methodology
The RealtyTrac Year-End U.S.
Foreclosure Market Report provides a count of the total number of
properties with at least one foreclosure filing entered into the
RealtyTrac database during the year. Some foreclosure filings entered
into the database during the year may have been recorded in the previous
year. Data is collected from more than 2,200 counties nationwide, and
those counties account for more than 90 percent of the U.S. population.
RealtyTrac’s report incorporates documents filed in all three phases of
foreclosure: Default — Notice
of Default (NOD) and Lis
Pendens (LIS); Auction — Notice of Trustee
Sale and Notice of Foreclosure Sale (NTS and NFS); and Real
Estate Owned, or REO
properties (that have been foreclosed on and repurchased by a
bank). For the annual and quarterly reports, if more than one type of
foreclosure document is received for a property during the year or
quarter, only the most recent filing is counted in the report. The
annual, quarterly and monthly reports all check if the same type of
document was filed against a property previously. If so, and if that
previous filing occurred within the estimated foreclosure timeframe for
the state where the property is located, the report does not count the
property in the current year, quarter or month.