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Home / Articles / Real Estate / Happy Herald Realty /  Florida Real Estate News
. . . . . . .
Thursday, October 4,2012

Florida Real Estate News

Incentive for Buying Florida Homes?

 

Incentive for Buying Florida Homes?

For the first time in nearly two years, Florida took a top ranking nationally for foreclosure activity, coming in second only to Illinois.

Florida overtook the western states of Arizona, California and Nevada, which had traded the first place and runner-up spots since December 2010. The last time Florida ranked second was October 2010.

A 26-percent increase in new foreclosure filings in August from the same time in 2011 helped push the Sunshine State to No. 2. The jump, which included a 35-percent increase in new filings in Palm Beach County, could be attributed to the National Mortgage Settlement.

Banks likely held off filing some of their foreclosures until the February settlement described new requirements on how to handle home repossessions. Florida’s backlog of about 377,700 foreclosure cases in the court system as of June also contributed to the ranking. It takes an average of 861 days — more than two years — to foreclose on a home in Florida.

About 25 states don’t require a court to sign off on a foreclosure.

Foreclosure activity in most nonjudicial states stayed on a downward trajectory in August, with a few exceptions; bills passed to slow the foreclosure process in some states may be leading to bigger decreases. Those states, though, were already showing decreases before this slate of legislation was passed.

Nationwide, overall foreclosure activity decreased 15 percent from August 2011 and stayed steady from July.

Bank repossessions were up 12 percent in Florida in August from last year, but down 16 percent from July. They were down on both measurements nationally and in Palm Beach County.

A Wellington foreclosure defense attorney, said he’s seen new foreclosure filings jump from about 30 per day in Palm Beach County to an average of about 65.

He believes banks are moving through their foreclosure backlog now because the $25 billion national settlement absolved them from some civil litigation.

“They are full steam ahead, adding that the new filings are cleaner. The bank lawyers are making many fewer mistakes, which means that these new cases should pass faster through the system.”

Lenders are also making an effort to complete foreclosure alternatives as part of the settlement. “My clients are receiving these on a regular basis.”

A report released Wednesday by CoreLogic found that 42 percent of Palm Beach County homeowners with mortgages owed more on those loans than their homes were worth during the second quarter of the year. That’s a decrease from 43.7 percent in the first quarter.

What that means to a full housing recovery is unclear.

A senior economist with Wells Fargo said Florida was the epicenter of the housing bubble and will simply take longer to rebound.

“Getting past the housing bust is a bigger hurdle for Florida and that’s in large part due to the way the state deals with foreclosures, but also just simply because how big the problem is. n

 

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