Foreclosure filings in the US are still climbing to record heights in the third quarter as lenders continue to sieze more properties from delinquent borrowers.
A sum of 937,840 homes received eviction notices, defaults or were auctioned or repossessed by corporate banks, a 23 percent increase from a year earlier, the Irvine, California-based seller of default data said today in a report. One out of every 136 U.S. households received a filing, the highest quarterly rate in records dating to January 2005.
“The problem is first time buyer mortgage and prime loans going into foreclosure and people being underwater and losing their jobs as well as their savings,” Richard Green, director of the Lusk Center for Real Estate at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, said in an interview. “It’s a really bad number.”
Mounting foreclosures mean U.S. home prices probably will resume falling, analysts from Amherst Securities Group LP in New York said Sept. 23. A “shadow inventory” of 7 million properties are in the foreclosure process or likely to be seized, up from 1.27 million in 2005, they said.
The pace of prime and so-called alt-A loan defaults is accelerating as subprime defaults slow, Standard & Poor’s analysts led by Diane Westerback said yesterday in a report. Prime loans are those made to borrowers with the best credit records while alt-A loans are considered riskier investments because they were often granted without documenting the borrower’s income.
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