Foreclosure
Activity Dips Nationally, But 21 States and DC Post Annual
Increases
Judicial Activity Up 24
Percent Annually, Non-Judicial Activity Down 23
Percent
IRVINE, Calif. – March 15,
2012 — RealtyTrac® (www.realtytrac.com), the
leading online marketplace for foreclosure properties, today released its U.S.
Foreclosure Market Report™ for February 2012, which shows foreclosure filings —
default notices, scheduled auctions and bank
repossessions — were reported on 206,900 U.S. properties in February.
That was a 2 percent decrease from the previous month and was down 8 percent
from February 2011 — the lowest annual decrease since October 2010. The report
also shows one in every 637 U.S. housing units with a foreclosure filing during
the month.
“February’s numbers point to a gradually rising
foreclosure tide as some of the barriers that have been holding back
foreclosures are removed,” said Brandon Moore, CEO of RealtyTrac. “Although
national foreclosure activity was pushed lower by decreases in a handful of
larger states, 21 states posted annual increases in foreclosure activity, the
most states with annual increases since November 2010.
“The
foreclosure and mortgage settlement filed in court earlier this week will help
pave the way to a properly functioning foreclosure process by providing a clear
roadmap for necessary foreclosures,” Moore continued. “That should result in
more states posting annual increases in the coming months. Not surprisingly,
many of the biggest annual increases in February were in states with the more
bureaucratic judicial foreclosure process, which resulted in a larger backlog
of foreclosures built up over the last 18 months in those states.”
February
foreclosure activity in the 26 states with a judicial foreclosure
process increased 2 percent from January and was up 24 percent from February
2011, while activity in the 24 states with a non-judicial foreclosure process
decreased 5 percent from January and was down 23 percent from February
2011.

Half of largest metro
areas post annual increases in foreclosure activity
Ten
of the nation’s 20 largest metro areas by population documented year-over-year
increases in foreclosure activity in February, led by the Florida cities of
Tampa (64 percent increase) and Miami (53 percent increase).
The 10 metro areas with increases were all on the East Coast
or in the Midwest, while most of the metro areas with year-over-year decreases
in foreclosure activity were in the West, led by Seattle (59 percent decrease)
and Phoenix (43 percent decrease).
The metro areas with the
highest foreclosure rates among the 20 largest were Riverside-San Bernardino in
California (one in 166 housing units), Atlanta (one in 244), Phoenix (one in
259), Miami (one in 264) and Chicago (one in 302).
|
Metro
| Feb 2012 Properties with
Foreclosure Filings |
1/every X Housing
Units | %Chg from Jan 12
| %Chg from Feb 11
|
| Atlanta
| 8,859
| 244
|
2.46
| -4.50
|
|
Baltimore
|
698
| 1,622
| 32.45
| 41.01
|
|
Boston
| 1,342
|
1,403
|
-15.70
| 20.47
|
| Chicago
|
12,587
| 302
|
-8.46
| 43.23
|
|
Dallas
| 3,457
|
724
| 4.06
|
-13.85
|
| Detroit
| 5,687
| 332
|
-17.11
| -27.66
|
|
Houston
|
3,351
| 689
|
9.62
|
1.42
|
|
Los
Angeles | 12,731
|
353
| -8.88
|
-17.89
|
| Miami
| 9,333
| 264
| 9.92
| 52.75
|
| Minneapolis
|
2,335
| 580
| -13.84
|
23.28
|
|
New
York |
2,189
| 3,439
| -11.38
| -40.50
|
|
Philadelphia
|
2,940
| 828
|
-6.10
|
47.15
|
|
Phoenix
| 6,951
| 259
| 4.35
| -42.88
|
| Riverside-San
Bernardino |
9,057
| 166
|
-1.14
|
-10.89
|
|
San
Diego | 3,403
|
342
| -10.40
|
-8.84
|
| San
Francisco |
4,489
| 388
| -1.25
|
-7.94
|
|
Seattle
|
1,191
|
1,229
| -16.54
| -58.75
|
|
St.
Louis |
1,866
| 669
|
20.54
| 17.58
|
|
Tampa
| 4,295
|
315
| 37.53
|
64.12
|
| Washington
| 1,848
|
1,198
| 2.50
|
6.57
|
Foreclosure activity by
type
Default
notices (NOD, LIS) were filed for the first time on a total of 58,886
U.S. properties in February, up 1 percent from the previous month but still
down 7 percent from February 2011.
Default notices increased
at least 20 percent on a year-over-year basis in a dozen states, all states
primarily employing a judicial or quasi-judicial foreclosure process. Those
states included Hawaii (321 percent increase), Maryland (157 percent increase),
Connecticut (64 percent increase), South Carolina (58 percent increase),
Indiana (37 percent increase), Pennsylvania (35 percent increase), Florida (33
percent increase), and Massachusetts (20 percent
increase).
Default notices were still down on a
year-over-year basis in several states, including Nevada (89 percent decrease),
Michigan (72 percent decrease), New York (44 percent decrease), Iowa (28
percent decrease), Kentucky (25 percent decrease), and California (11 percent
decrease). State legislation impacted the default numbers in Nevada, where a
law requiring lenders to file an extra affidavit before initiating the
foreclosure process took effect in October 2011, and in Michigan, where a 2009
law that required notices of default to be publicly recorded recently expired.
In addition, state attorneys general in New York, California and Nevada have
filed lawsuits against major lenders in recent months.
Foreclosure
auctions (NTS, NFS) were scheduled for the first time on 84,180 U.S.
properties in February, down 2 percent from January and down 13 percent from
February 2011.
Scheduled auctions increased at least 25
percent on a year-over-year basis in 13 states, including Kentucky (190 percent
increase), Illinois (170 percent increase), Iowa (98 percent increase),
Pennsylvania (95 percent increase), Indiana (92 percent increase), Minnesota
(88 percent increase), Maryland (66 percent increase), South Carolina (27
percent increase), and Oklahoma (25 percent increase).
Lenders
repossessed (REO) a total of 63,834 U.S. properties in February, a 4 percent
decrease from January and down 1 percent from February
2011.
REO activity increased at least 20 percent on a
year-over-year basis in 17 states, including Massachusetts (114 percent
increase), North Carolina (95 percent increase), Florida (90 percent increase),
South Carolina (87 percent increase), Georgia (76 percent increase),
Connecticut (66 percent increase), New York (48 percent increase), and Illinois
(42 percent increase).
Nevada, California,
Arizona post top state foreclosure rates
Foreclosure
activity in Nevada reached a 58-month low in February, but the state
still posted the nation’s highest state foreclosure rate for the 62nd straight
month. One in every 278 Nevada housing units had a foreclosure filing during
the month, more than twice the national average.
California
posted the nation’s second highest state foreclosure rate in February although
the state’s foreclosure activity hit a 51-month low. A total of 48,422
California properties had a foreclosure filing during the month, one in every
283 housing units.
Arizona
foreclosure activity increased on a monthly basis for the second
month in a row boosted by a 33 percent jump in scheduled foreclosure auctions.
One in every 312 Arizona housing units had a foreclosure filing during the month,
the nation’s third highest state foreclosure rate.
One in
every 331 Georgia housing units had a foreclosure filing in February, the
nation’s fourth highest state foreclosure rate, and one in every 341 Florida
housing units had a foreclosure filing during the month, the nation’s fifth
highest state foreclosure rate. Florida default notices increased on a
year-over-year basis for the fourth straight month in February, and overall
Florida foreclosure activity was up on an annual basis for the second straight
month.
Other states with foreclosure rates ranking among the
top 10 were Illinois (one in 398 housing units), Michigan (one in 433), South
Carolina (one in 489), Ohio (one in 543) and Wisconsin (one in
596).
Report
methodology
The RealtyTrac 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 month —
broken out by type of filing. Some foreclosure filings entered into the
database during the month may have been recorded in previous months. 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’s 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).
The report does not count a property again if it receives the same type of
foreclosure filing multiple times within the estimated foreclosure timeframe
for the state where the property is located.
Report
License
The RealtyTrac U.S.
Foreclosure Market Report is the result of a proprietary evaluation of
information compiled by RealtyTrac; the report and any of the information in
whole or in part can only be quoted, copied, published, re-published, distributed
and/or re-distributed or used in any manner if the user specifically references
RealtyTrac as the source for said report and/or any of the information set
forth within the
report.
Order
Customized Reports
Detailed and historical foreclosure
data used to create the above report may be purchased through the
RealtyTrac Data Licensing Department at 949.502.8300 Ext. 158. Aggregate data
is available at the state, metro, county and zip code levels dating back to 2005,
and address-level foreclosure records are also available
historically.
About RealtyTrac
Inc.
RealtyTrac (www.realtytrac.com) is the
leading online marketplace of foreclosure properties, with more than 1.5
million default, auction and bank-owned listings from over 2,200 U.S. counties,
along with detailed property, loan and home sales data. Hosting millions of
unique monthly visitors, RealtyTrac provides innovative technology solutions
and practical education resources to facilitate buying, selling and investing
in real estate. RealtyTrac’s foreclosure data has also been used by the Federal
Reserve, FBI, U.S. Senate Joint Economic Committee and Banking Committee, U.S.
Treasury Department, and numerous state housing and banking departments,
private companies and academic institutions to help evaluate foreclosure trends
and address policy issues related to foreclosures.
###
Media
Contacts:
Jennifer von Pohlmann
949.502.8300, ext.
139
jennifer.vonpohlmann@realtytrac.com
Order Custom
Data:
Data Sales
Department
800.913.0439
datasales@realtytrac.com