PropertyRadar Blog

Notices Of Default Nearly Double

Written by PropertyRadar | Jan 14, 2009 8:00:00 AM

California State Senate Bill 1137 fails to reduce foreclosures

Discovery Bay, CA, January 13, 2009 - PropertyRadar, the only website that tracks every California foreclosure with daily auction updates; today issued its California Foreclosure Report for December 2008 and year-end summary. Notices of Default have rebounded from the stall caused by California State Senate Bill 1137, which temporarily slowed foreclosures by imposing new requirements on lenders. With 42,421 filings in December, Notices of Default are back to the record levels reached in the second quarter of 2008, nearly doubling the 21,557 Notices of Default recorded in November. Notice of Trustee Sale filings was relatively flat month-over-month, however, Notices of Trustee Sale have filed an average of 116 days after the Notice of Default so a rebound in the coming months is likely. California saw unprecedented foreclosure activity in 2008, with 249,940 properties sold at trustee sale auction - representing $107.8 Billion in combined loan value. Of those properties, 96.4% went back to the lender after no bid was received from a third party.

High-level findings for 2008 include:

  • There were a total of 437,955 Notices of Default filed in 2008, an increase of 56 percent over the 279,821 Notices of Default filed in 2007.
  • Notice of Trustee Sale filings increased 122.9 percent over 2007 rising from 157,273 filings in 2007 to 350,514 filings in 2008. Of the Notices of Trustee Sale filed in 2008, 16 percent remain scheduled for sale at auction, 17 percent have been canceled, and 66 percent were sold at auction.
  • Properties sold at auction increased by 158 percent by volume, and 179 percent by combined loan value. Lenders took back a total of 241,093 properties, with a combined loan value of $103.9 Billion.
  • The amount lenders discounted properties at auction from the outstanding balance increased from an average discount of 16.1 percent in January to 39.5 percent in December. In January only 3 percent of properties taken to auction were deeply discounted (bidding started at a discount of 50 percent or more from the loan balance). By December 40 percent of sales were deeply discounted.
  • The time between the filing of a Notice of Default, and the property being sold at auction on the courthouse steps increased 19 days over the course of the year, to an average of 165 days in December.

High-level findings for December include:

    • Notices of Default increased 100 percent over Notices recorded for November, to a total of 42,421 default filings, a 24.7 percent increase over December 2007.
    • Notices of Trustee Sale, which set the auction date, time, and location, were flat from November to December, with 27,497 filings. Notices of Trustee Sale for December represent a 29.8 percent year-over-year increase but are still 30 percent below the peak levels reached in July of 2008.
    • Properties taken to sale at auction increased only slightly between November and December, to 16,298 sales, a 72.6 percent increase from the same time last year. Third-party purchases at trustee sale auction decreased 12.5 percent from November 2008 but were still 156 percent above third party purchases in December 2007. Lenders took back nearly 95 percent of the 16,298 properties sold at auction, with a combined loan value of $8.95 Billion.

"The effort by the California State Legislature to reduce foreclosures has now clearly failed," says Sean O'Toole, founder of PropertyRadar. "While State Senate Bill 1137 was well-intentioned, forcing lenders to talk to homeowners won't fix this problem." While a number of lenders have announced significant loan modification programs to reduce payments to affordable levels, these plans fail to address the fact that the average foreclosure in California now has $180,000 in negative equity.

"Lowering payments may provide a temporary fix," adds O'Toole, "but lenders simply don't have sufficient reserves to lower principal balances enough to help homeowners in foreclosure escape the prison of debt their home now represents."In December, the average estimated value of a home sold at a foreclosure auction was $283,624, with an average total loan balance of $464,270. Of these, 60 percent had second mortgages for which little or no equity remained to secure their interest in the property. By not foreclosing, second mortgage holders often retain their ability to collect on loans even after their secured interest is wiped out by the foreclosure of a first mortgage. This issue often impairs the ability of first mortgage lenders to modify their loan sufficiently to help the homeowner, a simple fact that further curtails the effectiveness of SB1137.

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CALIFORNIA FORECLOSURE REPORT METHODOLOGY

Rankings are based on population per foreclosure sale.

NDF indicates the number of Notices of Default that were filed at the county, and NTS indicates filed Notices of Trustee Sale.

Sales indicate the number of properties sold at a foreclosure auction. Percentage changes are based on monthly Sales. The data presented by Property Radar is based on county records and individual sales results from daily foreclosure auctions throughout the state—not estimates or projections.