From
HousingWire
Foreclosure "Starts" Decline to Six Year Low
Wednesday, February 20, 2013 05:34 am
KERRI ANN PANCHUK
Foreclosure starts fell to a six-year low in January as
the state of Florida took the dubious distinction of
becoming the state with the most foreclosure filings, RealtyTrac said
Thursday.
The Irvine, Calif.-based real estate research firm said
foreclosure filings fell 28% year-over-year, declining
to 150,864 filings in January, a 7% drop from December.
U.S. foreclosure starts also fell to a 79-month low,
reaching levels not seen since June 2006.
About one out of every 869 housing units faced a
foreclosure filing in January, according to RealtyTrac
data.
The company’s vice president Daren Blomquist highlighted
a significant transition that caused the state of
California to no longer lead the nation in monthly
foreclosure filing activity.
Blomquist says the enactment of the California Homeowner
Bill of rights, which essentially bans dual tracking and
creates a private right of action for borrowers to
challenge foreclosure processes in court, shifted
foreclosure filing levels in the state. Blomquist and
other housing analysts have suggested the legislation
would end up turning California into a judicial
foreclosure state. The law first took effect in January
2013.
"As a result, the downward foreclosure trend in
California accelerated into hyper speed in January,
decisively shifting the balance of power when it comes
to the nation’s foreclosure activity," Blomquist
explained.
"For the first time since January 2007 California did
not have the most properties with foreclosure filings of
any state. Instead that dubious distinction went to
Florida, where January foreclosure activity increased on
an annual basis for the 11thtime
in the last 13 months."
The states with the highest foreclosure rates included
Florida, Illinois and Nevada. In Florida, one in every
300 housing units faced a foreclosure filing last month,
which is twice the national average. One in every 344
housing units faced a foreclosure filing in Nevada,
while Illinois data shows one in every 375 units at risk
of foreclosure.
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