U.S. foreclosure filings were
down 23 percent in March from a year earlier, providing more evidence that the
housing market is stabilizing.
First quarter foreclosure numbers were at the
lowest point since the second quarter of 2007, according to the latest data
from RealtyTrac. A total of 442,117 filing were reported, down 12 percent from
the previous quarter and 23 percent lower than the first quarter of 2012.
More Numbers on Foreclosures:
•
Foreclosure starts increased 2
percent from February to March, the second straight monthly increase following
three consecutive monthly decreases. There were a total of 73,113 foreclosure
starts nationwide in March, which is still down 28 percent from a year ago.
•
Foreclosure starts in March
increased from the previous month in 23 states and were up annually in 12
states, led by New York (200 percent increase), Maryland (193 percent increase)
and Washington (154 percent increase).
•
Lenders repossessed 43,597
properties nationwide in March, the lowest since September 2007. U.S. bank
repossessions (REOs) in March decreased 3 percent from February and were down
21 percent from a year ago.
•
A total of 34 states reported
annual decreases in REO activity in March, including Oregon (down 72 percent),
Utah (down 71 percent), Massachusetts (down 61 percent), Michigan (down 56
percent), and Nevada (down 55 percent).
•
States bucking the national
downward trend in REOs included Arkansas (up 121 percent annually in March),
Maryland (up 114 percent), Washington (up 88 percent), Pennsylvania (up 41
percent), and Ohio (up 39 percent).
•
Properties repossessed by lenders
in the first quarter took an average of 477 days to complete the foreclosure
process, up from 414 days in the previous quarter and a record high since
RealtyTrac began tracking this metric in the first quarter of 2007.
•
The average time to foreclose in
the first quarter increased from the previous quarter in 39 states, led by
Oregon (up 61 percent), Arkansas (up 42 percent), Texas (up 40 percent),
Tennessee (up 37 percent), and Michigan (up 22 percent) -- all non-judicial
foreclosure states.
Source: World Property Channel
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