Real Estate Disposition, LLC (REDC) announced Thursday that it will auction more than 370 Northern and Southern California bank-owned foreclosures, including 76 occupied properties, over the next two weeks. The Northern California homes will be auctioned online from June 8 through June 12, and the Southern California homes will be auctioned both live and online on June 19 and June 20.
Read More »Real Estate Veteran Named President of Employee Transfer Corporation
Frances Martinez Myers, a real estate and relocation industry veteran, was recently appointed as president of Employee Transfer Corporation, a Philadelphia-based company that facilitates the moves of corporate employees throughout the world and provides foreclosure asset management services, doing business as (dba) ETCREO.
Read More »U.S. Banks’ Foreclosure Holdings Increased 12.5% in Q1: Report
Foreclosed property held by U.S. banks increased 12.5 percent to $41.5 billion during the first quarter of this year, according to a recent analysis by SNL Financial, a financial market research firm out of Charlottesville, Virginia. The company says banks' aggregate foreclosed inventory is up from $36.9 billion at year-end 2009, and $11.7 billion in the first quarter of 2008. While still elevated, single-family homes as a percentage of total real estate being repossessed by lenders has dropped significantly over the last few months.
Read More »Clear Capital Posts Largest Home Price Increase in Nearly Four Years
National home prices in May came in 6.8 percent higher than a year earlier, according to a Clear Capital study released Thursday. It's the largest annual increase recorded by the real estate valuation firm since July 2006. May's gains followed the back-to-back 5.1 percent yearly gains achieved in March and April, and demonstrate a sustained housing recovery off of last year's lows, Clear Capital says. In addition, REO supplies have declined significantly. The present REO saturation rate of 27.8 percent compares to last year's 41.7 percent.
Read More »Commercial Defaults Hit Record for Both Investors and Banks
The economic downturn has choked off demand for commercial space, with vacancy rates rising and new occupancy limited by the duress in today's job market. At the same time, commercial real estate (CRE) values have dropped more than 40 percent in some markets. Plagued with the same trip wires that have set off a barrage of residential mortgage delinquencies - unemployment and negative equity - the CRE market, too, is seeing default volumes soar to new heights, both on loans held by banks and those owned by securities investors.
Read More »DBRS Sees Increase in Loan Liquidation Timelines
With the deterioration of the U.S. mortgage market, the credit rating agency DBRS has noticed a deep divergence in delinquency, foreclosure, and REO timelines from historical norms. As servicers have stepped up loss mitigation strategies to deal with the increase in delinquent borrowers, some loans have spent a longer-than-usual time in each delinquency bucket. The analysts at DBRS found that non-performing loans now remain in the 90 or more days delinquency column for an average of three to four months before moving to foreclosure.
Read More »Delinquencies Improving, but Total Distress Remains Elevated: LPS
The number of unpaid mortgages in the United States declined again in April, but delinquency roll rates remain high, according to an industry report released Monday by Lender Processing Services (LPS). The Florida-based analytics firm says that while signs of stabilization in the nation's mortgage delinquency and foreclosure rates may be emerging, the progress is largely neutralized by the more than 7 million loans still in distress.
Read More »From Redos to Done Deals
Professionally rehabbed REOs result in minimized sales cycles and maximized returns.
Read More »Prism Title & Closing Services Announces New Appointments
Prism Title & Closing Services recently announced the promotions of Angi Schuerman to business development and relationship manager and Karen McDonald to director of operations.
Read More »U.S. Thrifts Turn $1.8B Profit Despite Mounting Foreclosures
The nation's thrift industry posted profits of $1.82 billion in the first quarter of 2010. The Office of Thrift Supervision says the data indicates thrifts are stabilizing despite rising delinquencies and foreclosures. By definition, the thrift business involves taking deposits and originating home mortgages. The industry's non-current loans and repossessed real estate assets made up 3.27 percent of total holdings in Q1. Sixty-five percent of these troubled assets were residential mortgages, 27 percent were commercial real estate loans.
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