THIS IS WHY IT IS STILL CRITICAL TO CONSIDER A LOAN MODIFICATION OR A SHORT SALE! WE CAN HELP!
RealtyTrac
measured five key housing metrics in 919 U.S. counties and discovered the
majority are still suffering from falling average home prices, unemployment,
and higher foreclosure inventories, foreclosure starts and distressed sales.
Sixty-five
percent of U.S. housing markets studied by RealtyTrac are worse off than they
were four years ago, according to the Irvine, Calif.-based real estate research
firm. The results of the survey arrive the same day as the final presidential
debate and just weeks before the general election.
RealtyTrac
measured five key housing metrics in 919 U.S. counties and discovered the
majority are still suffering from falling average home prices, unemployment,
and higher foreclosure inventories, foreclosure starts and distressed sales.
Of those
counties studied, 580, or 65%, showed results in three of the five metrics as
being worse off when compared to 2008 levels. Only 315, or 35%, of the counties
had three of five housing metrics with improved performance over four years
time.
"The
U.S. housing market has shown strong signs of life in recent months, but many
local markets continue to struggle with high levels of negative equity as the
result of home prices that are well off their peaks. In addition, persistently
high unemployment rates are hobbling a robust real estate recovery in most
areas," said Daren Blomquist, vice president at RealtyTrac.
"While
the worst of the foreclosure problem is in the rearview mirror for a narrow
majority of counties, others are still working through rising levels of
foreclosure activity, inventory and distressed sales as they continue to clear
the wreckage left behind by a bursting housing bubble."
In the
majority of the counties studied, home prices are down and unemployment rates
are up in more than 90% of the areas. More than half have smaller foreclosure
inventories and fewer foreclosure starts than in 2008, while distressed
properties make up a smaller share of overall residential sales when compared
to four years ago.
Article
by Kerri Ann Panchuk from HousingWire.
No comments:
Post a Comment