AP/ July 26, 2012, 10:07 AM

California still dominates foreclosure scene

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(AP) IRVINE, Calif. - California is still dominating the foreclosure scene.

California cities made up seven of the top 10 metro areas with the highest rates of new foreclosures in the first six months of this year, according to data to be released Thursday by RealtyTrac, which tracks foreclosure properties. That's unchanged from the same time last year.

Foreclosure activity also spiked by more than 25 percent in and around Philadelphia, Chicago and New York. The new inventory could start hitting the market in the next several months, potentially weighing further on home values.

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Stockton, Calif., located south of Sacramento, had a higher foreclosure rate than any other metro area in the U.S. in the first half of 2012. About 2.7 percent of homes - or one of every 38 - received a foreclosure filing between January and June. That rate was more than triple the national rate of 0.8 percent.

Stockton itself filed for Chapter 9 protection last month, making it the largest American city ever to declare bankruptcy. Officials were unable to reach a deal with the city's creditors to restructure hundreds of millions of dollars of debt.

Other Central Valley cities with high rates of new foreclosure filings were: Modesto, Merced, Bakersfield and Visalia-Porterville. Elsewhere in California, Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario and Vallejo-Fairfield made the list. The Atlanta, Phoenix and Las Vegas metro areas rounded out the top 10.

It's a familiar template. Eight of the cities - all except Atlanta and Visalia-Porterville - were among the top 10 on RealtyTrac's list last year.

The number of U.S. homes entering the foreclosure process for the first time increased in May and June, as banks aim to make up for time lost last year when mortgage lenders grappled with allegations that they had processed foreclosures without verifying documents. The nation's biggest lenders reached a $25 billion settlement in February with state officials. That's cleared the way for banks to address their backlog of unpaid mortgages. California saw an 18 percent spike last month in foreclosure starts, or homes placed on the foreclosure path for the first time.

Atlanta, which has the nation's sixth-highest rate, saw foreclosure activity rise 5 percent from the first half of 2011 and 3 percent from the July-December period. Of the 212 metro areas with populations of 200,000 or more, RealtyTrac said foreclosure activity rose in a little more than half (125).

But Thursday's data also showed glimmers of encouraging news. Nine of the 10 cities with the highest rates saw rates drop year-over-year. Stockton's rate fell from 3.2 percent in the first half of 2011. And Las Vegas, which topped the list last year with a rate of 5.4 percent, fell to the No. 9 spot with a rate of 2 percent.

Seattle saw a 24 percent drop in foreclosure activity in the first half of the year, the biggest decline among the nation's 20 largest metro areas. San Francisco, Detroit, Los Angeles, Boston, and San Diego all saw drops of 10 percent or more.

The greater Buffalo, N.Y., area tied with Kennewick-Richland-Pasco, Wash., and Syracuse, N.Y., for the smallest rate of new foreclosures on RealtyTrac's list. In those areas, just 0.04 percent of homes received a foreclosure filing. Utica-Rome, a neighbor to Buffalo and Syracuse, was also in the bottom 10 for foreclosure rates.

There are some 3 million U.S. homes behind on their mortgages, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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john-jay52 says:
I am in Foreclosure! All because COUNTRYWIDE overbilled me through my escrow and then told me I was late on my payments! I have been cheated by COUNTRYWIDE and now BOFA. But finally, now I have them in a LIE. They DO NOT EVEN HAVE STANDING TO FORECLOSE! I just found my NOTE through FinancialScreenshots (Google). For $15.99 I just saved myself thousands in Lawyer fees. Now, watch out for me, I am taking BOFA down. I hope this works for you too. thanks
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Versability says:
The banks have been illegally foreclosing on honest and hardworking American citizens for decades via false placement of Force-Placed Insurance premiums. The artificially inflated premiums are responsible for tripling mortgage payments, and creating negative escrow accounts, leaving many homeowners unable to even pay property taxes on their homes.

Read the firsthand account of my journey to expose the largest banking fraud in history here: http://thoughtforyourpenny.blogspot.com/2012/07/the-boy-who-cried-force-placed.html
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