Posts Tagged ‘subprime crisis background information’

Where Have All The Foreclosures Gone? (Long Time Passing)

Friday, February 15th, 2013

An edited version of this post by Roy Oppenheim was first published in US News and World Report’s Home Front Blog and is being redistributed on South Florida Law Blog with their permission.

Pete_SeegerNot long after the national mortgage settlement was announced, I warned clients that the training wheels would come off and foreclosures would ramp up again.

Now foreclosure information firm RealtyTrac has confirmed that fact in its latest report, which shows that in 2012, foreclosure filings rose in more than half of the metropolitan areas they track.

Florida, where a massive foreclosure backlog is still clogging up the courts, is leading the pack. Tampa and Miami saw the biggest increases in foreclosure activity last year, and eight of the top 20 foreclosure rates in the nation belonged to Florida towns.

But despite hard data showing that foreclosure activity is picking up again, experts have blamed a tight supply of homes for sale—including foreclosures—for sharp year-over-year increases in home prices and disappointing monthly home sales numbers.

So to paraphrase the 1960s folk singer Pete Seeger, “Where have all the foreclosures gone?”

While it has decreased, the shadow inventory–the backlog of bank-owned homes that remain off the market–is still lurking just out of our reach.

Banks never had much to lose by allowing these distressed homes to languish, and that remains true. In fact, they have a lot to lose if they put them on the market too fast. If these foreclosures were allowed to pour down instead of trickle out as they are now, banks would have to write off their losses en masse, and that simply would not benefit their balance sheets. Their capital reserves would plummet and we all know what happened the last time banks’ capital reserve took a dive.
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From Project X to Project Rent: Bank Of America To Test Lease Program

Friday, March 23rd, 2012

Banking officials, as a general rule, are old school. They are very resistant to change, and usually refuse to think outside of the box.

Over the years I’ve seen the banks hold little to no regard for the customers they serve. Their philosophy has essentially been ‘You can’t pay your mortgage, then out on your butt you go!’

Forget that they’ve screwed people, or caused the worst recession in 80 years.

Forget that homeowners often have good reasons for not being able to pay. Banks have had very little heart and even less common sense.

So I was blown away by Bank of America’s new test program, called “Mortgage to Lease”, which was unveiled this week. In a few select markets, BofA will give about 1,000 customers facing foreclosure the chance to stay in their homes by turning them into renters.

Bank of America will offer these borrowers the opportunity to have their mortgage debts forgiven, and instead of kicking them to the curb, BofA will lease these homes back to the borrower for up to 3 years for less than the market rental rate.

No more mortgage, no more property taxes or homeowners insurance! And people can stay in their homes! Imagine that!

Turning foreclosure properties into rentals is an idea I’ve long advocated. It only took Bank of America a few years to listen to me!

I was wondering why now, what finally turned Bank of America over to my way of thinking?

I could tell you that Bank of America’s small heart grew three sizes like the Grinch’s, but we all know that’s not true.
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