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Showing posts sorted by relevance for query foreclosure. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query foreclosure. Sort by date Show all posts

Monday, May 19, 2008

Foreclosures Rising in Georgia



Gainesville -- Georgia remains in the top ten nationally for home foreclosures.

In April, the number of repossessed homes in the state soared 28.5% - that’s one in every 422 households, according to RealtyTrac, a national realty company specializing in foreclosed properties.

In their U.S. Foreclosure Market Report, Georgia ranks seventh for foreclosed homes nationally.
Yet there are those in Georgia who see the troubled housing market as a financial opportunity.

Paul Truelove has never invested in any kind of property other than his own home. But with the rising cost of living, he’s looking into buying foreclosed properties as a way to keep his own head above the financial waters – even if it’s at the expense of someone else.

“I wanted to find out more information about how the foreclosure process works and how I might possibly be able to make some income off of people’s distress, I guess. It’s not a good way to look at it, but it’s going to have to be done somewhere along the way, Truelove explained.”

Like Truelove, most of the people who attended a recent foreclosure seminar in Gainesville are newcomers to the world of property investing.

Including Debra and Merlin Crandall from Flowery Branch. They hope to find a cheap house they can use for their retirement.

We want to get more information. We own our home. We’re looking for maybe an investment or maybe something to retire in later on,” Debra Crandall said.

And the chances of them finding that well-priced home in northeast Georgia are very good.

According to the Web site, Foreclosure.com, over 3,300 repossessed homes are up for grabs in eight northeast Georgia counties. Over 1,600 are in Hall County alone and many of those are around Lake Lanier – a popular vacation home area.

Norton Realty in Gainesville sponsored this foreclosure seminar. They have tapped into the foreclosure market, having handled some 5,000 foreclosed properties throughout Northeast Georgia for banks and lenders.

The company offers pre-foreclosure services, such as providing a profile of the property, the market and neighborhood conditions that might affect resale values.

Norton sees these seminars as a win-win for all concerned.

The agency earns commission and fees on every repossessed property they help sell, the lenders zero in on potential buyers, and those attending the seminar find distressed properties at bargain basement prices.

Norton Realty vice president Tommy Howard taught the first class. He says foreclosure seminars are becoming very popular.

“This is the first seminar for our company but we do see them popping up around the metro Atlanta area,” Howard noted. “A lot more people want to learn more about foreclosures and what’s going on in today’s market. So it is a hot topic and a lot of people are interested, he said.”

Howard said Norton Realty plans more foreclosure seminars. And if the real estate market continues to sag, they should have no shortage of people eager to learn how to tap into the market.

Sunday, October 19, 2008

A buyer's market at the home foreclosure auction


Georgia housing forclosures, as of August, 2008. (Courtesy RealtyTrac.com)

While housing market hard times mean foreclosure for many, it also means bargains for home buyers and real estate agents.


Potential home buyer holds up sign with the catalog number of the home he's interested in, as the auctioneer, standing before a slide image of the home, rapidly calls out the fast-rising price at a home foreclosure auction at the Cobb Galleria, Atlanta, Oct. 19, 2008. (Dave Bender)


Auctioneer Mike Carr's machine-gun delivery is music to the ears of some two thousand anxious homebuyers and agents, who crowded into the Cobb Galleria Convention center Sunday morning.


Nicole Brown, a real estate investor from Dallas, Ga., at the home foreclosure auction, held at the Cobb Galleria, Atlanta, Oct. 19, 2008. (Dave Bender)


Nicole Brown, a real estate investor from Dallas, Georgia says her $73,000 bid netted her a three bedroom, two bath home:

“This was my first time with an auction; it's very overwhelming, but it's worth the trip.”
It was a trek made by potential buyers from cities and towns across the state.

Kamal Chopra of Alpharetta is looking for a house as an investment, but says it's hard to keep up with the auctioneer's rocket-fast patter:
“It's a different experience – it's too loud for me, i guess, and it's a little confusing for me, the way he's talking. but it's still very exciting, i guess – I'm enjoying it.”
Part of that enjoyment is that it's a buyer's market: Realtytrac.com reports that, as of August, Fulton County led the state foreclosure rate with one in every 267 homes on the block.


Two potential home buyers inspect a catalog of properties, as they watch the auction at the Cobb Galleria, Atlanta, Oct. 19, 2008. (Dave Bender)



Mary Quella, the vice president of the Real Estate Disposition Corporation, at a home foreclosure auction held at the Cobb Galleria, Atlanta, Oct. 19, 2008. (Dave Bender)


Mary Quella is from the Real Estate Disposition Corporation, who are holding the auction:
“We have people here that are buying homes for $30 – 40,000 dollars, that a couple years ago were going for $160,000 plus dollars.”
And at those kind of prices, Quella hopes the the series of auctions in metro Atlanta will sell off 1,100 homes.

Click here for more GPB News coverage of the housing market.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

DeKalb to fight foreclosures

DeKalb County commissioners are considering a measure to fight foreclosure in the area, home to one of the state’s highest foreclosure rates. One idea is to create an Office of Consumer Affairs to aid families facing foreclosure. Another is to urge the state lawmakers to increase the length of time between when a homeowner learns of a pending foreclosure and the actual foreclosure sale. DeKalb County has a 6.4 percent foreclosure rate. (Associated Press)

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Bills would bolster GAs Fair Lending Act

Democratic lawmakers in the state House and Senate have introduced legislation they say will curb Georgia's runaway home foreclosure rate.

Lawmakers call the state’s foreclosure rate a crisis of epidemic proportions, created they say by an industry which preys on the poor and uninformed.

Now, state Democrats in both houses have signed on to a slate of bills designed to reign in Georgia's subprime mortgage lenders.

One suggestion is to extend the deadline from 15 day to 90 days, for homeowners to respond to a foreclosure notice. Another would require lenders to inform homeowners by certified letter when a home loan has been sold.

Senator Vincent Fort is a member of the Senate Consumer Affairs Committee.

"This is the greatest foreclosure crisis, mortgage crisis since the 1930s. It’s unprecedented in the history of this country."
By mid-2007, Georgia was home to nearly a quarter million subprime mortgages. Currently, the state ranks seventh in the nation in home foreclosure rates.

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Foreclosure rate drops

Georgia’s foreclosure rate has dropped. The website RealtyTrac.com says Georgia now ranks 6th for foreclosure filings, down from 4th in August. The website says nearly 70,000 Georgia households have filed for foreclosure this year. Just over 19,000 of those homes have sold.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

DeKalb officials meet to address foreclosure problem

Metro Atlanta’s DeKalb County has one of the highest foreclosure rates in Georgia--today, county commissioners will vote on a package of measures to fight the problem. Recommendations include urging the state to increase the length of time between when a homeowner learns of foreclosure action and the actual sale. Also recommended is the creation of a county Office of Consumer Affairs to help affected families. DeKalb County has a 6.4 percent foreclosure rate.

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

ATL foreclosure rates at all-time high

Thirteen counties make up metro-Atlanta where nearly 7,000 homes will go on the auction block in November, with an estimated property value of more than one billion dollars. The number of homes in foreclosure is up almost 40 percent from just a month ago.

Equity Depot in suburban Atlanta has tracked the area's foreclosure rate for more than a decade. A company spokesperson says it's the largest month to month swing his company has seen.

In Fulton County, home to nearly 1-million people – around 2,000 properties face foreclosure. That's more than any other county in metro Atlanta. Recently, Beazer Homes -- one of the region's top builders -- has cut its prices for new homes. And experts predict an industry wide domino effect as failed sub prime loans topple home prices.

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Foreclosures plague Georgia

Georgia continues to rank poorly in foreclosure statistics. RealtyTrac.com says five states account for more than half of the nation's foreclosures, and Georgia is one of them. Foreclosures jumped 93% from July 2006 to July 2007. Nationally last month, one in every 693 American households filed for foreclosure. Georgia’s was more than twice that, with one in every 299 households filing for foreclosure. In all, Georgia saw more than 12,600 foreclosures in July.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Housing bust could to be a boom for some

First-time homebuyers could benefit from the down economy. Recent federal legislation proposes a 75-hundred tax credit for new homes purchased before 2009. And, experts say a spike in home sales could be just the economic stimulus needed to jump start Georgia's economy.

Roger Tutterow is a professor of economics at Mercer University. Addressing a group of real estate professionals in Atlanta today, Tutterow called the health of metro-Atlanta’s real estate market an economic indicator for the rest of the state.

“The housing is particularly important to the state of Georgia because we have a lot of industries in the building supply, wood products sector, that are all related to the housing industry. As goes housing goes the health of these industries, as well.”
In the meantime, Georgia remains among the top 10 states with the highest foreclosure rates. Realty-Trac … the website which tracks foreclosure rates nationwide … reports that year to date foreclosure filings in Georgia are up to nearly 53-thousand.

Monday, March 26, 2007

Georgia foreclosures down

Georgia’s foreclosure rate is showing signs of improvement. According to the foreclosures database RealtyTrac, Georgia ranked 4th in the nation for foreclosures in February. That’s down 23% from February 2006, the year Georgia ranked second in foreclosures. Still, one out of every 424 Georgia households filed for foreclosure last month. Nearly 73-hundred Georgia households were in some form of foreclosure in February. RealtyTrac says the country will continue to see rising rates of foreclosures due to spiking subprime and FHA loan interest rates.

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Lawmaker proposes giving cops foreclosed homes

The typical mortgage is 30 years. But walk a beat in Atlanta, and that house could be yours in half that time — and for just a little money down.

As a solution to metro Atlanta’s foreclosure crisis, a lawmaker plans to propose giving foreclosed, abandoned homes to county police officers, who usually can’t afford to live in the neighborhoods they’re sworn to protect.

Of course, the deal would come with a catch: officers must agree to serve 15 years on the force before they get the property deed. And the board of commissioners would have to persuade lenders holding the liens to give several shuttered homes to the county in exchange for tax breaks.

“I thought somebody should be in these homes,” said Fulton County Commissioner Robb Pitts, who plans to introduce the idea to the board. “Here’s a way to help a group of people who put their lives on the line for us on a daily basis at a relatively minor cost.”
Cities across the country are trying to find solutions to filling up houses abandoned by people who couldn’t afford their mortgages. Several are using federal money to buy foreclosed properties and sell them at cut-rate prices or interest rates. Georgia has consistently been in the top 10 in foreclosed properties, with the nation’s sixth highest foreclosure rate in November, according to RealtyTrac, a Web site that tracks foreclosures.

Pitts said he thought of the plan after looking at all the empty homes in his southwest Atlanta neighborhood. The national foreclosure epidemic presents a bittersweet opportunity, he said.
“I think we have a short window because this probably won’t be the situation four or five years from now. If we can take advantage of it now, I think we’ll have a receptive audience,” he said.
For their part, officers would have to come up with $2,500 down payment and be responsible for all taxes, insurance, utilities and maintenance. Pitts said he plans to meet as soon as next week with several “major lenders,” whom he declined to name, to discuss his plan.
“Here’s an opportunity for them to have some goodwill coming from the community in which they do business by helping with public safety,” Pitts said. “If we could get 200 (homes), that would be a good start.”
Some say the idea is a creative and original solution to a crisis.
“I’d think lenders would be very interested in stabilizing neighborhoods in which they have mortgages on other properties,” said Bruce Seaman, an economics professor at the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University.
Programs that subsidize housing for public servants are being tried in other places. Grand Prairie, Texas, is offering foreclosed properties the city acquired with federal bailout money to government or district school employees, with the city helping with the down payment and closing costs.

The “Ohio Heroes” program offers a 30-year fixed mortgage at a reduced interest rate to first-time homebuyers in that state to military, firefighters, paramedics, police and teachers.

But free homes in exchange for years of public service seems to be a new idea.

And while it sounds like it would require financial institutions to be philanthropic, that is hardly the case, Seaman said.
“How many properties can it be?” Seaman said. “The departments aren’t huge. Lending agencies being asked to participate will find this, upon reflection, a very wise move on their part.”
The Fulton County Police Department has 130 officers, 18 fewer than its target number of 148. The starting salary is $32,646 for high school graduates, and $38,000 for officers with a bachelor’s degree, so finding houses they can afford in the city is tough.

Department spokesman Lt. Darryl Halbert said the agency is excited about the proposal.
“The officers are able to obtain a home for very little down, the community gets a police officer and the department can use this as a recruiting tool,” he said.
If it’s successful, firefighters or others could later be added.
“We can’t be everything to everybody in the beginning,” Pitts said.
Moving police into the neighborhood could help reduce crime and attract buyers to other abandoned homes, Seaman said.

Pitts also still must get the idea past the commission. Chairman John Eaves declined to comment on the issue through his spokesman, Darryl Hicks, who said there is not yet a proposal to consider.

Samuel F. Daniel said he would feel much safer in his northwest Atlanta home with an officer in the neighborhood, where many homes sit dark and are havens for drugs, prostitution, burglary and other crimes.
“I would like for one to move next door to me,” said the 85-year-old veteran. “That way, he’d see a lot of things I see and can’t do nothing about. The crime would probably go further down the street somewhere.”
(AP)

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

GA foreclosures 7th in nation

Georgia ranks 7th in the nation in foreclosures. The national foreclosure tracking website RealtyTrac.com says one in every 396 Georgia households filed for foreclosure in May. That’s up 44% from May of last year. Nationwide, RealtyTrac says foreclosures are up 90% from last May. The website says foreclosure rates could continue to climb through the year.

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Feds ok $3.92 b housing grant for Ga.


(Courtesy RealtyTrac)

The US Department of Housing and Urban Development has given Georgia a $153 million grant, to help ease the foreclosure blight.

The state will get about half the sum, with nine cities and counties divvying up the remainder.

The funds are part of HUD’s $3.92 billion national Neighborhood Stabilization Program, enacted in July.

The initiative aims to brake the spreading economic damage from home foreclosures, and strengthen property values in affected neighborhoods.

The money will allow state and local authorities to buy foreclosed or abandoned homes from the banks, renovate, and then sell or rent them to mainly moderate and low-income buyers.

Click here for more GPB News coverage of the foreclosure debacle.

Saturday, October 4, 2008

Low income areas get fed foreclosure aid

Low and moderate income communities around the state at high risk for home foreclosures will soon get more than $153 million dollars from the federal government. Seventy five-million dollars will go directly from HUD to the state’s largest metro areas. The money … part of the federal Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008, signed by President Bush earlier this summer … will come in two grants.

Brian Williamson is with Georgia Department of Community Affairs.

“The funds can be used for the purchase and redevelopment of foreclosed and abandoned homes, many of which are in a deteriorated or perhaps blighted situation by being abandoned or vacant for a number of months.”
DeKalb County has the state’s highest foreclosure rate at 6 1/2 percent. DeKalb will get the largest grant at $18.5 million dollars. The balance of the $153 million will be disbursed by the state, in a plan yet to be approved by federal officials.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Funds will help foreclosure woes

Georgia is getting federal help for its foreclosure crisis. More than $153 million in newly earmarked federal funds will extend a lifeline to Georgia regions hit hardest. The money will allow leaders from Atlanta to Savannah to acquire and redevelop foreclosed properties at risk of being abandoned. Georgia was among the Top 10 in the nation for foreclosures through August, according to RealityTrac.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Housing charity benefits from foreclosure crisis

The foreclosure crisis means cheap properties for sale in communities around the country. The Georgia based housing charity called Habitat for Humanity has seized the opportunity. Some chapters have been buying up the properties, putting new families in the abandoned homes.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Help arrives for foreclosure crisis

In July Congress passed the Housing and Economic Recovery Act. Now, some of those federal funds are headed for Georgia. The act allocates 4-billion dollars in emergency funding for neighborhoods across the country. Georgia’s share of the money is 153-million dollars. Most of the money will be spent in the Atlanta area, but Macon got 4-million dollars. Macon Mayor Robert Reichert says the money is badly needed.

“It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to understand the effects of a foreclosure in your neighborhood. Imagine if you will you put your house on the market to try and sell it, and two doors down from your house is an abandoned house and because of vandalism they’ve had to board up the windows.”

Some of the money will be spent to provide down payments to qualified home buyers, while another portion will be spent to fix up blighted neighborhoods. Augusta, Columbus and Savannah also received a portion of the funds. Officials have 18 months to come up with a plan to spend the money.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Georgia 5th in foreclosures in October

Georgia had the fifth most foreclosures in October. The Atlanta Business Chronicle cites the website RealtyTrac.com in the ranking. One in every 332 Georgia households filed for foreclosure that month, totaling more than 11,300. Nationwide more than 224,000 households filed for foreclosure in October.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

10,000 Foreclosed Properties on Market in April

EquityDepot.net says more than 10,000 foreclosed properties are scheduled to be sold on courthouse steps in the Atlanta area in April.

EquityDepot.net, which tracks foreclosures, says the 10,130 figure breaks the previous record of 8,425 that were scheduled for sale in March.

In the new foreclosure numbers, Fulton County leads with 2,181 properties scheduled for sale, followed by Gwinnett, DeKalb and Cobb counties.

The Georgia Labor Department says the jobless rate in metro Atlanta is 8.7 percent, the highest rate reported since the measurement was standardized in 1976.

Foreclosure sales are held on courthouse steps the first Tuesday of each month.
---
Information from: The Atlanta Journal-Constitution,
http://www.ajc.com

(AP)

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Crossover Day for state lawmakers

Today promises to be a long one for lawmakers at the State Capitol. This 30th day of the legislative session is known as Crossover Day, where bills must pass at least the one chamber to have a chance at becoming law. Not yet agreed upon between House and Senate members are mid-year revisions to the budget for the fiscal year. Bills to be debated include those for billboard regulations and extending foreclosure notices for homeowners in trouble. Among legislation that's been passed in the Session? The two chambers passed a statewide water plan and bills for charter schools.

GPB News Team: