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Foreclosures take break but mortgage concerns resurface
Idaho Foreclosure & Real Estate News
POSTED: Monday, July 30, 2007
by Brad Carlson
Idaho trails much of the U.S. in foreclosures but is not immune from
fresh U.S. concerns about weaker home sales and suspect
creditworthiness among borrowers.
The
state saw foreclosures drop 13 percent from the first quarter to the
second, compared to a nationwide 2 percent rise, a recent report said.
But
last week, national reports stated that sales of new homes fell
significantly more than expected from May to June (6.6 percent), and
that sales of pre-owned homes dropped by 3.8 percent. Mortgage lender
Countrywide said continued weakness in the housing market, and borrower
defaults and delinquencies, dragged second-quarter earnings. Wells
Fargo said it would close its sub-prime, wholesale lending unit.
“There
are definitely markets throughout the U.S. that are in worse shape than
we are,” said Chuck Anderson, president of Northwest Mortgage in Coeur
d’Alene as well as the Idaho Association of Mortgage Brokers.
But higher payments on adjustable-rate mortgages are impacting Idaho, he said.
“You
see that everywhere (in the U.S.), where people didn’t take that time
to repair credit are now in a situation where they are going to be
stuck with these rate adjustments,” Anderson said.
Repairing credit
could have helped them qualify for a mortgage refinance, he said. But
refinancing now is tougher in general, particularly for people who
borrowed 95 percent or 100 percent of a home’s value when prices were
higher, he said.
Lenders already tightened their credit standards, Anderson said. “The market will fix itself over time. It always does.”
Idaho
homes properly priced keep selling, but it could be some time next year
before the market returns to traditional annual percentage gains in
value, he said.
Carole Brawley, Banner Bank senior mortgage loan
officer in Boise, said she remains busy but has made adjustments. She’s
doing more Idaho Housing and Finance Association loans, which offer a
lower fixed interest rate than many alternatives.
“With the current
slowdown and price reductions, more first-time homebuyers have been
able to get into the market,” she said. That segment shrank a couple of
years ago as prices escalated.
Brawley said she is doing some loans on second homes in McCall and Donnelly.
Traditional
transactions in the Boise area have been “slower, but there certainly
seems to be enough to keep my pipeline going,” she said. Some buyers
show interest in condos as a cost-effective alternative to
single-family homes.
The number of properties in some stage of
foreclosure dropped 13 percent in Idaho from the first quarter to the
second quarter, Bargain Network (bargain.com) said in a report. Idaho
posted fewer foreclosures as the second quarter wore on: 569 in April,
542 in May and 501 in June.
A nationwide 2 percent increase in
foreclosures from the first quarter to the second quarter materialized
on an increase of 6.4 percent from April to May and a drop of 11.9
percent from May to June, the report said.
Bargain Network said
quarterly data suggest foreclosures continue to rise, but at a
significantly slower rate than in the first quarter, when
adjustable-rate mortgages and the first new of sub-prime mortgage
problems contributed to a 20 percent jump.
In the second quarter,
five states accounted for more than 58 percent of foreclosures, Bargain
Network reported. Even so, national leader California posted a 7
percent decline.
Commercial foreclosures remained relatively low at
0.5 percent, the organization reported. States reporting increased
filing activity included Idaho (6.1 percent), Wyoming (4.8 percent) and
Delaware (4 percent).
Boise-based TitleOne Corp. in August 2006 opened a department that processes foreclosures for attorneys and lenders.
TitleOne Trust Officer Amy Wilcoxson said residential and commercial foreclosure activity has remained steady.
The
company expects a gradual increase in coming months, if conversations
with clients are any indication, she said. A strong economy should
soften the increase, she said.
Comprehensive statistics on Idaho
foreclosures are hard to come by because many trustees handle Idaho
foreclosures, including entities based in other states, Wilcoxson said.
Lenders in Idaho seem more reluctant than those in many states to work
with borrowers on foreclosure alternatives, she said.
A notice of foreclosure is recorded in a county and published in a newspaper.
“The
data is there to track each month. No one has found cause or a reason
to want to do that,” said Lance Olsen, with Routh Crabtree Olsen. The
Bellevue, Wash., firm is legal counsel to Northwest Trustee Services,
which processes foreclosures in Idaho.
Idaho’s foreclosure rate is relatively modest, he said.
“I
don’t see any explosive growth in Idaho the way that I have in some
other jurisdictions,” Olsen said. “The Idaho rate is staying relatively
constant.”
For more information on Idaho foreclosure rates and related articles, please view the Idaho Foreclosure home page.
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