9,000 Foreclosures a day! That is how many homes were lost by
families in the U.S. in October! A staggering number, and when you
think about it, very sad for the families and individuals getting
kicked out of their homes. Those 280,000 foreclosures in October were
an increase of 25 percent from a year earlier.
Arizona, our home state, ranked number two in the nation that
month with 17,507 homes foreclosed. These foreclosed homes were mostly
returned to the banks that held the mortgages, those banks then farm
them out to Asset Management Companies to get them sold through local
real estate companies. This effects our market pricing since the
number of foreclosed homes reflects future pricing of all the area
homes. Those foreclosed homes are marketed for sale at a reduced rate
to get them sold quickly. With a number of lower priced homes selling
in a particular subdivision, that lowers the pricing of all homes in
the subdivision. This logic would mean that the current pricing of
homes in our area will continue to decline until we can get the
foreclosure numbers down substantially. The good news is that Fannie
and Freddie have both put a holiday freeze on foreclosures and a number
of banks are attempting to modify current mortgages before they end up
in foreclosure (Chase for instance says it has helped about 250,000
families avoid foreclosure since July 2007).. The real issue here is
that currently the financial institutions cannot modify loans fast
enough to keep up with foreclosures. FDIC stated that only 4 percent of
the seriously delinquent mortgages are being modified each month. This
is not good news to those of us in the Phoenix market looking for a
turn around in pricing anytime soon.