Foreclosures Drop to 3 Year Low
Foreclosure activity dropped to a three year low in February as mortgage servicing companies slowly resumed their repossession procedures. In the 26 states that have judicial foreclosure processes, where lenders temporarily called-off foreclosures as a result of faulty egal paperwork, default notices decreased 19% for the month and were down 48% from year ago figures.
Default notices, scheduled auctions of homes and bank repossessions were reported on 225,101 U.S. residential properties during the month, marking a 14% drop from January, and a 27% decline from a year ago. The drop marks the biggest year over year decrease since RealtyTrac has been keeping track of foreclosure activity in 2005.
“While a small part of February’s decrease can be attributed to it being a short month and bad weather, the bottom line is that the industry is in the midst of a major overhaul that has severely restricted its capacity to process foreclosures,” said RealtyTrac CEO James Saccacio. “We expect to see the numbers bounce back, but that will likely take several months. And monthly volume may never return to its peak in March 2010 of more than 367,000 properties receiving foreclosure filings.”
Some 63,165 properties received default notices for the first time in February, a 16% decline from the previous month and a 41% drop from a year ago as default notices hit a four year low.