Foreclosures in the Bay State!
Massachusetts Real Estate Search - Foreclosures, Pre-foreclosures and Tax Liens
Sign up to receive foreclosures by email
Massachusetts Related Articles
Cape Ann bucks foreclosure trend
By Douglas A. Moser , Staff writer
Gloucester Daily Times
In all of Massachusetts, the number of
petitions filed in Land Court to foreclose residential mortgages in the
first six months of 2007, when compared to the same time period last
year, jumped 66.5 percent, from 7,777 last year to 12,945 this year,
according to a recent study from the Warren Group.
Essex County saw an increase of 74.5 percent, from 933 last year to 1,628 this year, according to the study.
Cape
Ann communities have fared much better, with only Rockport seeing a
significant increase in foreclosure petitions. Essex had one more
petition this year over last year, and Gloucester had three more.
Manchester held steady at seven. Rockport jumped from 21 petitions last
year to 54 this year.
Between 1999 and 2005, housing prices
effectively doubled in Massachusetts, though because there was no
corresponding increase in income here, people had to borrow more and
more, said Alan Pasnick, a data analyst with the Warren Group in Boston.
"People
were getting into a buying frenzy because they thought they had to get
in while they could still afford it," Pasnik said. "You squeeze every
bit of credit out of the lending system. People and lenders started
doing crazier things."
The Warren Group, which released a study
this month on Massachusetts foreclosures, collects real estate and
other financial data, publishes two weekly industry newspapers and is
affiliated with a number of builders and bankers groups in the
Northeast.
Subprime loans, which are typically targeted at
hopeful homeowners with weaker credit ratings, have monthly payments
that increase after the first two or three years, during which time the
installments are applied only to the loan's interest.
Local
lenders said Cape Ann banks typically don't make subprime loans - money
loaned out at rates lower than average. Those loans have played a large
part in the increase of foreclosures.
"We've always been a
conservative lender," said Robert Gillis, vice president of Cape Ann
Savings Bank. "And I think the other local banks, they're pretty much
the same way. I don't think they're suffering from (a spike in)
foreclosures."
Many prospective homeowners either with a tarnished
credit history or who try to buy more expensive homes than they can
afford have been seduced by loans that offer low monthly payments for
the first two or three years, with all the money going toward interest,
and less than the historic standard of 20 percent down. Many of those
loans ask for no down payment.
Once that two- or three-year
period is over, monthly payments increase to include some of the loan's
principal. The loans also have adjustable rates, meaning the interest
rate can increase over time.
Mortgage companies and large
national banks have been bundling these mortgages together and selling
them to investors, looking for a return on the high interest charged in
the loans. The higher the risk, the higher the return to investors.
"All
this works fine as long as the housing market is going up," Pasnik
said. "Lenders are covered because it's easier for them to sell at a
price to cover the loan. It's good for borrowers, too, because when the
rates kick up, they can refinance because the value of the house went
up."
As homes began sitting for sale longer and prices stopped
increasing, homeowners are finding they cannot refinance to keep
payments low and lenders are stuck with houses on the market. Because
banks do not want to be direct owners and sellers, they tend to sell at
lower prices to rid themselves of the properties.
The national
adjustment in the home credit market has led many lenders to tighten
their restrictions and the subprime market has dried up significantly.
Many borrowers who had been able to get subprime loans now find
themselves shut out of the housing market.
"I've talked to a
couple people who got into bad loans and never should have got them in
the first place," said Marianne Curry, a loan officer at Rockport
National Bank. "And in a down market, selling is an awfully hard thing
to do to get out of a loan."
Pasnik and Gillis agreed the
combination of a smaller pool of lenders, more foreclosed houses up for
sale by banks who do not want to be property owners, and a housing
market that has been softening for the last 18 to 24 months has slowed
the home market.
But neither believes there is evidence pointing to a collapse in the market.
"Property
values have dropped about 10 percent in the area in the last couple of
years and maybe that's not a good thing, but I was around in the late
1980s and early 1990s when prices dropped a third," said Gillis. "It's
all relative. I don't see this as being catastrophic."
Local real estate agents have said they believe the housing market will turn around again in a year or two.
A look at the numbers
Foreclosure
petitions, the first step in the foreclosure process, are up around the
state, but Cape Ann has generally withstood the waves.
#Petitions filed January through June 2006#Petitions filed January through June 2007# percent change
Gloucester#37#40#8.11 percent
Rockport#21#54#157.1 percent
Manchester#7#7#0 percent
Essex#4#5#25 percent
Essex County#933#1,628#74.49 percent
Massachusetts#7,777#12,945#66.45 percent
Article Source http://www.gloucestertimes.com/punews/local_story_240130554?page=1
Featured Sponsors:
Advertise your business here!
Signup now and be featured on this page. Upload your photo and link to your website! Sign up NOW!
Related News and Articles:
Mass. foreclosure deeds jump in October
Despite decreases in a few states across the country, Mass foreclosures continue to rise, predominantly in Worchester and Springfield.
read more
Citigroup to offer help to 500,000 risky mortgage customers
Citigroup plans on ceasing all foreclosures in an attempt to help the nationwide foreclosure problem. Those facing foreclosure that will be reviewed for assistance must have the home listed as a primary residence.
read more
Only Halfway Through the Foreclosure Crisis?
While discouraging for the economy, this may mean there are still plenty of home buying opportunities available for first-time buyers and investors. Foreclosures are making up the majority of homes on the market. And foreclosure sales may be just what it takes to beef-up a lagging housing market.
read more
Windles faced foreclosure prior to alleged church theft
The story of how one Mass couple ended up as criminals and how a foreclosure was just one of many problems inflicting the family.
read more
Read past articles in the Article Archive