New California foreclosure actions posted a sharp plunge in the first
quarter to levels not seen since the last housing boom.
Lenders filed 18,567 mortgage default notices on California houses and
condominiums during the first three months of the year. That was a 51.4% drop
from the previous quarter and a 67.0% drop from the first quarter of 2012,
according to real estate firm DataQuick.
The filing of a notice of default is the first step in California's formal
foreclosure process.
The firm reported the numbers Tuesday. It attributed the drop to rising home
prices, a stronger economy and government interventions designed to curtail
foreclosures.
In particular, a series of new laws backed by state Atty. Gen. Kamala D. Harris
that place new regulations on foreclosure practices appears to have played a big
role in the sharp reduction, DataQuick reported.
"It appears last quarter's drop was especially sharp because of a package of new
state foreclosure laws -- the 'Homeowner Bill of Rights' -- that took effect
Jan. 1," John Walsh, DataQuick president, said in a news release. "Default
notices fell off a cliff in January, then edged up."
Once lenders adjust to the new regulations, the numbers could pick up again,
Walsh noted.
Default notices remained more prevalent in California's cheaper neighborhoods,
according to DataQuick. And most of the loans going into default were between
2005 and 2007.
Among the state's biggest counties, loans were least likely to go into default
in the affluent San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara and Marin counties. Loans
were most likely to go into default in the less-affluent Riverside, San
Bernardino, Solano and San Joaquin counties.
The number of homes taken back by lenders through the foreclosure process also
fell dramatically last quarter. The total number of trustees deeds filed on
homes fell 35.7% from the previous quarter and 55.1% from the first quarter of
2012. A lender records a trustees deed on a property after it's been foreclosed
upon.
___
(c)2013 the Los Angeles Times
Distributed by MCT Information Services
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Calif. Foreclosures Plunge With New Laws
April 23, 2013
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