| Foreclosures slow down for the first half of 2010 |
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| REO News | |||
| Thursday, 12 August 2010 00:00 | |||
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According to a North Miami Beach, Fla.-based firm, Foreclosures fell 5% during the first half of 2010 and the number of homes entering the foreclosure process is slowing down. Foreclosure Listings Nationwide shows a 1% increase in the second quarter from a year ago and a decline of 4% from the previous quarter. This indicates a decrease in foreclosures at least for the first half of the year. Reports show that 1.6m properties began the foreclosure process during the six months ending June 30, representing a nearly 7% decline from a year ago. Jason Gallagher, an analyst at Foreclosures Listings Nationwide explained: "We're seeing a decline in foreclosure rates not because the market is repairing itself, but because banks are providing homeowners more time to pay off their debts before a foreclosure occurs in order to slow the trend,". "This basically means we're not seeing as many new foreclosure properties. But we are seeing many existing foreclosure properties moving out of the foreclosure limbo stage into repossession by banks." "There are a huge backlog of REO and bank owned homes right now, and banks are going to be eager to get them off their hands fast," Gallagher added. "That means low prices for buyers and investors, especially in places like Nevada, California and Florida."
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| Last Updated on Friday, 13 August 2010 21:28 |
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