Foreclosure
Starts Reach 17-Month High in Nevada, 31-Month High in
Maryland
Florida Posts Top State
Foreclosure Rate, Miami Posts Top Metro Foreclosure
Rate
IRVINE, Calif. – March 14, 2013
— RealtyTrac® (www.realtytrac.com), the
leading online marketplace for foreclosure properties and real estate data,
today released its U.S. Foreclosure Market Report™ for February 2013, which
shows foreclosure filings — default notices, scheduled auctions and bank
repossessions — were reported on 154,281 U.S. properties in February,
an increase of 2 percent from the previous month but still down 25 percent from
February 2012. The report also shows one in every 849 U.S. housing units with a
foreclosure filing during the month.
“At a high level the
U.S. foreclosure inferno has been effectively contained and should be reduced
to a slow burn in the next two years,” said Daren Blomquist, vice president at
RealtyTrac. “But dangerous foreclosure flare-ups are still popping up in states
where foreclosures have been delayed by a lengthy court process or by new
legislation making it more difficult to foreclose outside of the court system. Foreclosure
starts have been steadily building in those states over the last several months
and likely will end up as bank repossessions or short sales later this
year.
“These new foreclosure hot spots include states like
Washington, where seven straight months of rising foreclosure activity pushed
the state’s foreclosure rate to fifth highest nationwide —the highest it’s ever
been in our report — and Maryland, where eight straight months of rising
foreclosure activity placed the state’s foreclosure rate among the top 10
nationwide for the first time since July 2010,” Blomquist
noted.
High-level findings from the
report:
- U.S. foreclosure
starts increased 10 percent from the previous month after three consecutive
monthly decreases, but were still down 25 percent from February 2012.
- Foreclosure starts
increased from the previous month in 32 states and were up from a year ago in
16 states, including Nevada (up 334 percent), Maryland (up 319 percent),
Washington (up 172 percent), New York (up 139 percent), and New Jersey (up 70
percent).
- U.S. bank repossessions
(REO) decreased 11 percent from the previous month and were down 29 percent
from February 2012 to the lowest level since September 2007 — a 65-month low.
- Bank repossessions
decreased from the previous month in 32 states and were down from a year ago in
41 states, including Oregon (down 78 percent), Massachusetts (down 69 percent),
Nevada (down 59 percent), Georgia (down 58 percent), and California (down 49
percent).
- Florida posted the nation’s
highest state foreclosure rate for the sixth consecutive month in February,
reporting one in every 282 housing units with a foreclosure filing during the
month.
- Florida cities
accounted for seven of the nation’s 10 highest metro foreclosure rates in
February, led by the Miami, Orlando, Ocala, Tampa and Palm Bay metro areas in
the top five spots.
Florida, Nevada,
Illinois post highest state foreclosure rates
Florida’s
foreclosure rate ranked highest among the states for the sixth month
in a row in February. One in every 282 Florida housing units had a foreclosure
filing during the month — more than three times the national average. A total
of 31,726 Florida properties had a foreclosure filing during the month, up 6
percent from the previous month and up 20 percent from February 2012 to a
16-month high.
Nevada
foreclosure starts in February increased 334 percent from a year ago
to a 17-month high, keeping the state’s foreclosure rate as the second highest
nationwide for the fifth month in a row. One in every 320 Nevada housing units
had a foreclosure filing in February, more than twice the national
average.
Despite the third straight
month-over-month decrease in foreclosure activity in February, Illinois posted
the nation’s third highest state
foreclosure rate for the second month in a row: one in every 417
housing units with a foreclosure filing. A total of 12,671 Illinois properties
had a foreclosure filing in February, down 10 percent from the previous month
and down 5 percent from February 2012.
Ohio foreclosure
activity increased 26 percent from the previous month and was up 12 percent
from a year ago, boosting the state’s foreclosure rate to the fourth highest
among the states. Ohio foreclosure activity has increased on an annual basis in
11 out of the past 13 months.
Washington foreclosure activity
increased on an annual basis for the seventh consecutive month in February,
helping to push the state’s foreclosure rate to fifth highest nationwide. February’s
No. 5 ranking was the highest foreclosure rate ranking for Washington since
RealtyTrac began issuing its report in January 2005. A total of 4,362
Washington properties had a foreclosure filing during the month, an increase of
123 percent from February 2012 and one in every 656 housing
units.
Maryland foreclosure activity increased on an annual
basis for the eighth consecutive month in February, driven largely by a 319
percent jump in foreclosure starts, lifting the state’s foreclosure rate to the
ninth highest nationwide. February was the first month since July 2010 that
Maryland’s foreclosure rate ranked among the top 10
nationwide.
Foreclosure activity was flat or decreased from a
year ago in the other four states with foreclosure rates among the top 10:
Arizona at No. 6 (one in 704 housing units with a foreclosure filing); Georgia
at No. 7 (one in 705 housing units); Utah at No. 8 (one in 713 housing units);
and Michigan at No. 10 (one in 724 housing units).
Although
California foreclosure starts rebounded 47 percent in February from an 88-month
low in January, overall foreclosure activity in the state was down from a year
ago for the 15th straight month, dropping the foreclosure rate down to No. 13
nationwide. February was the first month since December 2006 where the
California foreclosure rate was not ranked among the top 10 state foreclosure
rates nationwide.
Florida cities
account for seven of top 10 metro foreclosure rates
Reporting
one in every 219 housing units with a foreclosure filing in February, the Miami
metro area posted the nation’s highest foreclosure rate among metropolitan
statistical areas with a population of 200,000 or more.
Six
other Florida metro areas documented foreclosure rates in the top 10: Orlando
at No. 2 (one in 225 housing units with a foreclosure filing); Ocala at No. 3
(one in 243 housing units); Tampa at No. 4 (one in 253 housing units); Palm Bay
at No. 5 (one in 260 housing units); Jacksonville at No. 8 (one in 302 housing
units); and Naples at No. 9 (one in 318 housing units). Foreclosure activity
increased from a year ago in all seven Florida cities with top 10 metro
foreclosure rates.
Other cities with foreclosure rates in the
top 10 were Las Vegas at No. 6 (one in 283 housing units); Rockford, Ill., at
No. 7 (one in 291 housing units); and Chicago at No. 10 (one in 331 housing
units).
Five cities posted annual increases in foreclosure
activity among the nation’s 20 largest metropolitan areas in terms of population:
Baltimore (up 145 percent), Seattle (up 129 percent), New York (up 44 percent),
Tampa (up 24 percent), and Miami (up 20 percent).
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.