Tag Archives: default

Foreclose and Default Trends Stay Near Low – San Diego

Foreclosures and default notices in San Diego County edged up in January, but are still hovering around post-Great Recession lows.

Last month, lenders foreclosed on 149 properties in San Diego County and issued 490 default notices, which kick off the 90-day foreclosure process, real estate tracker DataQuick reported Tuesday.

While the overall trend is down, January’s default notices jumped 58 percent above January 2013’s tally of 310. They were also up from the 387 filed in December.

“That’s disconcerting and something to keep an eye on,” said Mark Goldman, a loan officer and real estate lecturer at San Diego State University.

“It’s probably too early to blame it on something like Congress deciding not to extend unemployment benefits. If that were a factor, we’d see that coming up in the next 60 days.”

A year ago, default notices dropped from 878 in December 2012 to 310 in January 2013. They were back up to 551 in February.

Andrew LePage, an analyst for San Diego-based DataQuick, said the reason for last year’s low number could have been due to the initiation of the Homeowner Bill of Rights, which mandated banks not file a default notice while a short sale or loan modification was in progress.

That also could be why the January 2013 to January 2014 year-over-year change looks high.

In foreclosures, lenders repossessed 149 homes in January, up from 136 in December.

read more at: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2014/feb/19/tp-foreclose-and-default-trends-stay-near-lows/

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San Diego – What is the median amount of time homeowners are behind on Mortgage?

The median amount of time that San Diego homeowners were behind on their primary mortgages when their lenders filed default notices was eight months, based on a report from local real estate tracker DataQuick, which captured the last quarter of 2011.

Those homeowners during that time frame owed $23,134 on a $392,000 mortgage. (Those are median figures. The median is the middle number in a data set.)

How did San Diego compare to California during 2011’s last quarter (from October to December)?

Statewide, homeowners were nine months behind on their home loans at the filing time of the default notice, the first step in the formal foreclosure process. They owed $19,949 on a $333,036 home loan, DataQuick stats show.

When did these loans originate?

In San Diego, the origination time was the second quarter of 2006, when weak underwriting standards allowed unqualified consumers to get loans. Statewide, it was the third quarter of 2006, which “has been the case for three years,” the latest DataQuick report says.

Although San Diego saw a small bump in foreclosures from November to December, they were down 16 percent when comparing the last quarter of 2011 to the same time period in 2010.

The number of trustee deeds, which signal a foreclosure, fell from 2,433 to 2,044. That drop also is mirrored in the statewide numbers, which show foreclosures falling to the second-lowest level in more than four years, DataQuick said.

Why the drop in foreclosures?

“Five years ago, almost all mortgage payment delinquencies would have triggered a default notice after a certain amount of time,” said DataQuick President John Walsh in a statement. “Strategies now include short sales, refinances, interest-rate changes, principal reduction as well as just plain waiting longer.”