Second Quarter
Foreclosure Starts Increase Annually For First Time Since Q4
2009
California Foreclosure Starts
Jump in June, Giving It Highest State Foreclosure Rate
IRVINE,
Calif. – July 12, 2012 – RealtyTrac® (www.realtytrac.com), the
leading online marketplace for foreclosure properties, today released its
Midyear 2012 Foreclosure Market Report, which shows a total of 1,045,801 U.S.
properties with foreclosure filings — default notices, auction sale notices and
bank
repossessions — in the first half of 2012, a 2 percent increase from
the previous six months but still down 11 percent from the first half of 2011.
The report also shows that 0.79 percent of all U.S. housing
units (one in 126) had at least one foreclosure filing in the first six months
of the year.
High-level findings from the
report
- First-half foreclosure
activity did increase from a year ago in 20 states, including Indiana (32
percent), Pennsylvania (24 percent), South Carolina (23 percent), Connecticut
(23 percent), Florida (23 percent), and Illinois (22
percent).

- Overall foreclosure
activity was down in the second quarter, driven primarily by a drop in bank
repossessions (REOs), but 311,010 properties started the foreclosure process
during the quarter, a 9 percent increase from the previous quarter and a 6
percent increase from the second quarter of 2011 — the first year-over-year
increase in quarterly foreclosure starts since the fourth quarter of
2009.
- A
total of 31 states posted year-over-year increases in foreclosure starts in the
second quarter — 17 judicial foreclosure states and 14 non-judicial foreclosure
states.
- Overall foreclosure activity
in June decreased on a year-over-year basis for the 21st consecutive month, but
foreclosure starts for the month increased annually for the second consecutive
month.
- An 18 percent year-over-year increase
in California foreclosure starts in June helped boost that state’s foreclosure
rate to highest nationwide for the month. It was the first month California’s
foreclosure rate ranked No. 1 since RealtyTrac began issuing its report in
January 2005.
“Additional scrutiny on how lenders
and servicers process foreclosures, along with aggressive foreclosure
prevention efforts by the federal government and several state governments,
continue to keep a lid on the foreclosure problem at a national level,” said
Brandon Moore, CEO of RealtyTrac. “Still, foreclosure starts began boiling over
in more markets in the first half of the year, particularly in the second
quarter, when rising foreclosure starts spread from primarily judicial
foreclosure states in the first quarter to more than half of all non-judicial
foreclosure states in the second quarter.
“Lenders and
servicers are slowly but surely catching up with the backlog of delinquent
loans that under normal circumstances would have started the foreclosure
process last year, and that catching up is why the average time to complete the
foreclosure process started to level off or decrease in some states in the
second quarter,” Moore added. “The increases in foreclosure starts in the first
half of the year will likely translate into more short sales and bank
repossessions in the second half of the year and into next year.”
Nevada, Arizona,
Georgia post top state foreclosure rates in first half of 2012
Despite a 61 percent year-over-year drop in foreclosure activity,
Nevada
posted the nation’s highest foreclosure rate in the first half of 2012: 1.76
percent of all housing units with a foreclosure filing (one in 57). A total of
20,618 Nevada properties had at least one foreclosure filing during the first
half of 2012, down 43 percent from the previous six months. Nevada
foreclosure starts increased 61 percent from the first quarter to the second
quarter, indicating lenders there are beginning to adjust to a new law that
took effect in October 2011 and requires additional documentation to initiate
the foreclosure process.
Arizona
foreclosure activity in the first half of 2012 decreased 37 percent
from the same time period in 2011, but the state still documented the nation’s
second highest foreclosure rate: 1.73 percent of housing units with a
foreclosure filing (one in 58). A total of 49,157 Arizona properties had at
least one foreclosure filing during the six-month period, down 6 percent from
the previous six months. Second quarter foreclosure starts in Arizona increased
11 percent from the first quarter of 2012, but were still down 14 percent from
the second quarter of 2011.
Georgia
foreclosure starts in the second quarter increased 5 percent from the
previous quarter and were up 23 percent from a year ago, helping the state post
the nation’s third highest foreclosure rate in the first half of the year.
During the first six months of 2012, a total of 65,342 Georgia properties had
at least one foreclosure filing, a foreclosure rate of 1.60 percent of housing
units (one in 63).
California
registered the nation’s fourth highest state foreclosure rate in the first half
of 2012, with 1.56 percent of housing units with a foreclosure filing, and
Florida
registered the nation’s fifth highest state foreclosure rate, with 1.55 percent
of housing units with a foreclosure filing.
Other states with
foreclosure rates among the 10 highest nationwide in the first half of 2012
were Illinois (1.40 percent of housing units with foreclosure filing), Michigan
(1.02 percent), Colorado (0.97 percent), Ohio (0.94 percent), and Utah (0.93
percent).
Foreclosure process lengthens
nationwide, down in some key states
U.S. properties
foreclosed in the second quarter were in the foreclosure process an average of
378 days from the initial foreclosure notice to the completed foreclosure, up
from 370 days in the first quarter and a record high going back to the first
quarter of 2007.
Although the average time to
foreclose increased nationwide, it was down in some of the states with the
longest foreclosure timelines. The average time to foreclose in New York
decreased from 1,056 days in the first quarter to 1,001 days in the second quarter,
a 5 percent drop — although the state still maintained the longest time to
foreclose nationwide.
The average time to foreclose
decreased 3 percent in New Jersey, the state with the second longest
foreclosure process, and was down 1 percent in Pennsylvania, the state with the
seventh longest time to foreclose.
Bank-owned (REO)
properties that sold in the second quarter took an average of 195 days to sell
from the time they were foreclosed, up from 178 days in the first quarter. REO
properties took the longest to sell in New York, at 430 days, followed by
Arkansas at 357 days and New Jersey at 354 days.
U.S. properties in the foreclosure process that
sold in the second quarter (typically short sales) took an average of 319 days
to sell from the time they entered the foreclosure process, up from 306 days in
the first quarter. Pre-foreclosure sales took the longest in New York, at 788
days on average, followed by New Jersey at 753 days and Connecticut at 630
days.
Report
methodology
The RealtyTrac Midyear 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 first
six months of the year. Some foreclosure filings entered into the database
during the six-month period 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 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 midyear and quarterly reports, if more than one foreclosure document is
received for a property during the six-month period or quarter, only the most
recent filing is counted in the report. The midyear, 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.
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.
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Media
Contacts:
Jennifer von Pohlmann
949.502.8300, ext.
139
jennifer.vonpohlmann@realtytrac.com
Ginny Walker
949.502.8300,
ext. 268
ginny.walker@realtytrac.com
Order Custom
Data:
Data Sales
Department
800.913.0439
datasales@realtytrac.com