Archive for the 'Foreclosures' Category
Housing Foreclosures Rise Again In The Chicago Area
December 22nd, 2011 categories: Chicago Info/News, Economic Recovery, For Homeowners, For Sellers, Foreclosures, Housing Market
The number of housing foreclosures fell throughout the United States. But locally in the Chicago area, housing foreclosures actually rose.
According to a recent feature story in the Chicago Tribune, the number of homes in the foreclosure process rose 20 percent in November in Cook County when compared to one month earlier. The Tribune said that much of this increase stemmed from a jump of 57 percent in the number of homes in the county that were sent to court-ordered auctions.
Citing data from online foreclosure company RealtyTrac, the Tribune reported that foreclosure filings were reported on more than 224,000 properties across the United States in November. That’s a drop of 3 percent from October.
No matter how you look at the numbers there are too many housing foreclosures in Chicago and the United States. This is unfortunate because foreclosure has such a devastating effect on families.
If you’re struggling to pay your mortgage bills each month, call your mortgage lender immediately. The sooner you call your lender, the better your chances of working out a new payment arrangement, a reduction in your mortgage loan’s interest rate or some other way to avoid losing your home through foreclosure.
I understand that this is no easy thing, calling your mortgage lender and explaining that you’re struggling to pay your monthly housing bills. But lenders will often work with you to find some solution to your mortgage woes.
Foreclosures remain the number-one deterrent to a housing market rebound, both in Chicago and across the nation. Foreclosures make it more difficult for sellers to get the prices they want for their homes. Buyers would rather pay $50,000 less for a similar home down the street that’s gone through the foreclosure process.
If you don’t want to become the latest foreclosure statistic, call your lender. Ignoring your mortgage problems won’t help them go away.
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Is Turning Chicago Foreclosures Into Rentals A Viable Solution?
December 15th, 2011 categories: Chicago Real Estate News, Economic Recovery, Foreclosures, Housing Market, Renting in Chicago
Homeowners trying to sell their residences don’t need to be told that there are too many foreclosures in Chicago neighborhoods. The high number of distressed properties is making it more difficult for them to sell their own residences at reasonable prices.
Think of it this way: Buyers are more than happy to spend $50,000 less on a foreclosed home or a short sale that sits three doors down from sellers trying to sell their similar residence the traditional way. Simply put, distressed homes sell for less, driving down the value of surrounding residences.
The Chicago Sun-Times, though, recently ran a feature story on an interesting new trend regarding foreclosure properties: According to the story, more of them are becoming rentals.
According to the Sun-Times story, more than one in 10 Chicago houses is now vacant. To help fill these empty spaces, the city and several nonprofit agencies are renting out a growing number of these properties. These groups are also offering buyers financial incentives to purchase these properties.
The Sun-Times story cites the efforts of the Neighborhood Stabilization Program run by the city and Mercy Portfolio Services. The program has received $169 million from the federal government in Recovery Act dollars, and so far has used some of these funds to pay for 51 demolitions and the purchase of 161 residential properties. The purchases are the interesting part of the equation: The residential properties total 819 housing units in 22 different Chicago neighborhoods. The Sun-Times reports that 75 percent of these housing units are for rent.
Foreclosures will continue to glut the Chicago housing market for years to come. There are just too many distressed properties on the market today. It’s good to see, though, the city and nonprofit agencies working together on creative ways in which to deal with them.
No one program will completely ease the burden that foreclosures and short sales place on the Chicago housing market. But the more programs that do attack this problem, the better.
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Foreclosures fall in Illinois
June 17th, 2010 categories: Chicago Real Estate News, Economic Recovery, Foreclosures, Housing Market
RealtyTrac.com has been the bearer of bad news lately. The online foreclosure data site has each month during the housing slump, it seems, provided us with the news that housing foreclosures are steadily rising.
This month, though, RealtyTrac actually brought some good news for Chicago: The number of housing foreclosures in Illinois fell in May, according to the company.
Residential foreclosures dropped more than 20 percent in May when compared with April, according to RealtyTrac. This means that slightly more than 15,000 state housing units, or one in every 350, received a foreclosure notice in the month.
A foreclosure notice, by the way, doesn’t have to be an actual foreclosure. It could be a bank notice, scheduled auction or bank repossession.
Granted, this is still far too many foreclosures. But Illinois saw a bigger drop in foreclosures than did the country as a whole. RealtyTrac.com reported that the United States in general saw a 3 percent drop in housing foreclosures in May.
Overall, though, Illinois housing foreclosures were still up 38 percent from where they stood in May of 2009. And across the country, one in every 400 homes – nearly 323,000 households – received foreclosure notices in May. That’s up 0.5 percent from the same month one year earlier.
I’m happy to see the foreclosure numbers go down. Few things hurt the overall economy of an area, whether it’s Chicago or the entire country, like housing foreclosures. Think about it: When a family loses its house that family is obviously devastated, both emotionally and financially. A housing foreclosure stays on the credit reports of former homeowners for seven years, making it extremely difficult for these consumers to borrow money at reasonable rates during this time.
But housing foreclosures also burden banks and lenders. These financial institutions don’t want to take back these homes. That’s not how they make their money. They don’t want to have to sell these homes at lower prices.
Finally, foreclosures hurt neighborhoods, too. It’s difficult for sellers to attract good offers for their residences when there’s a foreclosure two doors down going for $50,000 less.
So let’s hope that RealtyTrac’s latest bit of good news isn’t a blip. Let’s hope it’s a trend, one that will help the housing market and the economy recover at a faster pace.
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Beware of Foreclosure Scams
May 17th, 2010 categories: Economic Recovery, For Homeowners, Foreclosures, Housing Market
It’s easy to panic when you’re falling behind on your mortgage payments. No one wants to lose a home to foreclosure. It’s a frightening thought.
But don’t let your fears of foreclosure override your common sense: If an outside company calls you and promises that it can rescue you from foreclosure, hang up the phone. The odds are good it’s either a scammer or a company that will charge you a significant amount of money for something that you can do on your own for free.
The Web site of the Illinois Association of REALTORS® recently posted a story from the Better Business Bureau branch that serves Chicago and Northern Illinois warning homeowners of a growing number of foreclosure-related scam artists. Foreclosure information is accessible to the public. This has led to big business among companies claiming to offer foreclosure-prevention services.
The scam works like this: An individual or company contacts homeowners whose homes are facing foreclosure. They’ll promise to either negotiate a mortgage loan modification or stop the foreclosure. Of course, they’ll require a hefty fee for their service.
Some of these callers will take the money from desperate homeowners and then do absolutely nothing. Even those companies that do perform foreclosure-prevention services don’t actually do anything that homeowners can’t do on their own for free.
If you’re facing foreclosure, or even if you’re worried that you might fall behind on your mortgage payments, you should always call your mortgage lender directly. Don’t work with an outside company. Call your lender, explain your financial situation and ask for help.
Remember, mortgage lenders and banks don’t want your home to fall into foreclosure. They don’t want to try to sell your residence. That’s not their business. The odds are good that your lender will try to work something out to prevent you from losing your home.
If you work with an outside foreclosure-prevention company? You’ll just be throwing more money away.
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Foreclosures Don’t Only Impact Homeowners
May 10th, 2010 categories: Chicago Info/News, Economic Recovery, Foreclosures, Housing Market, Renting in Chicago
When you think of residential foreclosures, it’s natural to think of families thrown out of their homes. It’s not a pleasant picture.
But you might be surprised to learn that the foreclosure crisis has actually impacted renters in Chicago more than it has city homeowners. The Chicago Sun-Times recently wrote a story about this surprising situation, quoting a report from the Lawyers’ Committee for Better Housing that more than 125 multi-family buildings in Chicago fell into foreclosure each week in 2009.
The Lawyers’ Committee report said that 20,691 rental units were impacted by foreclosure in 2009. For the year, Chicago saw 6,560 multi-family building foreclosures. That’s more than the 4,000 single-family homes and condominiums that fell into foreclosure during the same year.
Foreclosure can be a nightmare for renters, too. We’ve all read news stories highlighting landlords who fail to tell their renters that they’ve fallen behind in their mortgage payments. When the building falls into foreclosure, these renters suddenly have no place to live. Imagine that shock: One morning you wake up with a roof over your head. The next, your home is yanked away through no fault of your own.
And that is just part of the problem that renters often face when their landlords lose their buildings to foreclosure. The Sun-Times story says that some landlords begin to neglect their buildings once they fear that they are in danger of foreclosure. The tenants of these buildings, of course, are the ones who suffer when landlords avoid fixing the lights in common areas, keeping the lawns trimmed or fixing broken windows. Many lenders won’t take responsibility for the upkeep of these buildings, either.
The Sun-Times story is an interesting one. We’ve all become accustomed to thinking of foreclosures as a problem for homeowners. But the story shows that in Chicago, as in the rest of the nation, foreclosure really is everyone’s problem. And until the housing foreclosure rate in the country drops, you can’t expect housing prices to fully rebound from the residential slump.
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