, which assembles foreclosure data on a state and national basis, notes that one in every 483 U.S. households received a foreclosure filing during the month of May. This is the highest monthly foreclosure rate since they began tracking foreclosures in January 2005.
Here's the breakdown:
⢠Lenders took possession of 73,794 houses in May -- 158% greater than the 28,548 REOs in May 2007
⢠1.2 million foreclosed single-family homes will enter the market
⢠Foreclosures will account for 30% of national home sales in 2008
⢠Bank repossessions (REOs) accounted for 28% of total foreclosure activity
⢠Default notices increased 35% year over year
⢠The 3 highest foreclosure rates by state are Nevada (1 in every 118 households), and California (1 in every 183) Arizona's (1 out of 201) in May 2008
⢠Auction notices were up 13% year over year (but decreased 3% from the previous month)
⢠Foreclosed properties typically sell for ~20% less than comparable homes
⢠Foreclosed properties depress local home prices by 6%
Wow, those are pretty robust numbers. Based on the foreclosure data alone, it appears that Housing is accelerating to the downside -- we are nowhere near a sustainable bottom yet . . .
http://seekingalpha.com/article/81259-foreclosures-rise-158-from-may-2007?source=d_email
Here's the breakdown:
⢠Lenders took possession of 73,794 houses in May -- 158% greater than the 28,548 REOs in May 2007
⢠1.2 million foreclosed single-family homes will enter the market
⢠Foreclosures will account for 30% of national home sales in 2008
⢠Bank repossessions (REOs) accounted for 28% of total foreclosure activity
⢠Default notices increased 35% year over year
⢠The 3 highest foreclosure rates by state are Nevada (1 in every 118 households), and California (1 in every 183) Arizona's (1 out of 201) in May 2008
⢠Auction notices were up 13% year over year (but decreased 3% from the previous month)
⢠Foreclosed properties typically sell for ~20% less than comparable homes
⢠Foreclosed properties depress local home prices by 6%
Wow, those are pretty robust numbers. Based on the foreclosure data alone, it appears that Housing is accelerating to the downside -- we are nowhere near a sustainable bottom yet . . .
http://seekingalpha.com/article/81259-foreclosures-rise-158-from-may-2007?source=d_email