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National foreclosure numbers drop, local numbers rise in early part of 2010 PDF Print E-mail
Written by Elizabeth Larson   
Sunday, 07 March 2010
LAKE COUNTY – While foreclosure activity appears to be decreasing around the United States in recent months, the number of people in danger of losing their homes in Lake County is growing.


The most recent reports from Irvine-based RealtyTrac show that in January foreclosure filings — default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions — were reported on 315,716 U.S. properties, a decrease of nearly 10 percent from the previous month but still 15 percent above the level reported in January 2009.


RealtyTrac reported that one in every 409 U.S. housing units received a foreclosure filing in January.


In Lake County, total foreclosure filings in January numbered 303, up 55 percent from the 195 filings reported in December 2009 and up 124 percent from the 135 filings in January 2009, the company reported.


The county's foreclosure statistics for the fourth quarter of 2009 show 476 total filings, down slightly from the third quarter of 2009, when 666 such filings were made, records show. The fourth quarter of 2008 had 393 total foreclosure filings in Lake County.


Nationwide, the January foreclosure numbers are holding to a similar pattern from a year ago, according to James J. Saccacio, chief executive officer of RealtyTrac, who noted a double-digit percentage jump in December foreclosure activity followed by a 10 percent drop in January.


“If history repeats itself we will see a surge in the numbers over the next few months as lenders foreclose on delinquent loans where neither the existing loan modification programs or the new short sale and deed-in-lieu of foreclosure alternatives works,” he said in a written statement.


RealtyTrac reported that REOs, or bank foreclosures, were down 5 percent nationwide in January from the previous month, although they were 31 percent higher than January 2009 numbers.


REOs in Lake County numbered 101 in January, 83 in December 2009 and 39 in January 2009, based on RealtyTrace statistics.


January default notices were down 12 percent nationwide from the previous month but still up 4 percent from January 2009, and scheduled foreclosure auctions were down 11 percent from the previous month but still up 15 percent from January 2009.


Lake County's January default notices totaled 107, compared to 47 in December, and 69 in January 2009, the company reported.


The county's number of notices of trustee sales rose to 95 in January, up from 65 the previous month. They numbered 27 in January 2009.


Across California, in January foreclosure activity decreased by double-digit percentages from December, the company reported.


California, Florida and Arizona posted the three highest state totals in terms of properties receiving foreclosure filings in January. RealtyTrac's report showed that together those three states accounted for more than 44 percent of the national total.


Six California cities registered foreclosure rates among the top 10 cities nationwide, according to the report: Modesto, No. 3; Stockton, No. 4; Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, No. 5; Merced, No. 6; Vallejo-Fairfield, No. 7; and Bakersfield, No. 8.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it . Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews and on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf .

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Logically we need?
written by Olmossback1, March 08, 2010
More houses for sale, and another golf course, to waste space, and water. Oh, this doesn't sound rational? You must not be one of our County Stupidvisors.
If you want to buy a house, buy one that is vacant. If you want to play golf, use one of the existing courses that is starving to death.
Reply to Olmossback1
written by Paganhummingbird, March 08, 2010
You got that right. Why do we need more Unaffordable Housing and entertainment when apparently we already have enough here. If you have money to buy a house-get one already built, like you said, or if you have the money or time to "play" - support the people who live here not out of county. Keep the money in our county and us locals may be able to live here a while longer. Building new just forces the rest of us struggling citizens out. Is that the future of Lake County-some would hope so I guess.
Numbers are misleading
written by socolake, March 08, 2010
The story reflects the number of foreclosures that have been filed in the county. There are several hundred homes in this county that are in limbo as far a foreclosure goes. Many folks have walked on their homes or continue to live in them long after they quit making their mortgages. The banks won't complete the foreclosure process for these homes as they don't want the liability of dealing with a vacant home. They will send property managers to keep the places clean and check for squatters, but the ultimate liability for many of the properties is with the former mortagee. I know of several of these types of properties going through a bankruptcy, after many months of no mortgage payments, and the bank threatining the former owner with legal action if the property insurance lapses. Many, if not all, mortgages require home owner's insurance whether the mortgage is in default or not.

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