Posts Tagged “Banks”

Foreclosure Activity Up 14 Percent in Second Quarter According to RealtyTrac(R) U.S. Foreclosure Market Report

Activity Increases 121 Percent From Q2 2007
95 of 100 Largest Metro Areas Post Annual Increases

IRVINE, Calif., July 25 /PRNewswire/ — RealtyTrac(R)
(http://www.realtytrac.com), the leading online marketplace for foreclosure
properties, today released its Q2 2008 U.S. Foreclosure Market Report(TM),
which shows foreclosure filings were reported on 739,714 U.S. properties
during the second quarter, a nearly 14 percent increase from the previous
quarter and a 121 percent increase from the second quarter of 2007. The
report also shows that one in every 171 U.S. households received a
foreclosure filing during the quarter.

RealtyTrac publishes the largest and most comprehensive national
database of foreclosure and bank-owned properties, with over 1.5 million
properties from over 2,200 counties across the country, and is the
foreclosure data provider to MSN Real Estate, Yahoo! Real Estate and The
Wall Street Journal’s Real Estate Journal.

“Although much of the fallout from foreclosures is being driven by
rampant activity in a few states, such as Nevada, California, Florida,
Ohio, Arizona and Michigan, most areas of the country are seeing at least
some increase in foreclosure activity,” said James J. Saccacio, chief
executive officer of RealtyTrac. “Forty-eight of 50 states and 95 out of
the nation’s 100 largest metro areas experienced year-over-year increases
in foreclosure activity in the second quarter.

“Bank repossessions, or REOs, accounted for 30 percent of total
foreclosure activity in the second quarter, up from 24 percent of the total
in the first quarter,” Saccacio continued. “This shift in the distribution
of activity indicates that there is a progression toward purging the
problem loans out of the system — at which point the housing market can
regain some sense of normalcy. Of course if another surge in defaults
occurs, which could well happen later this year, it would refill the
foreclosure pipeline and prolong the recovery.”

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CHICAGO, July 24 /PRNewswire/ — “The recent collapse in the stock prices of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is just one in a series of blows to the stability of U.S. financial markets. The threat created by the failure of these two institutions, however, could be even greater than that posed by the collapse of Bear Stearns earlier in the year,” says Adolfo Laurenti, senior economist of Mesirow Financial, in his July issue of Themes on the Global Markets available at:
http://www.mesirowfinancial.com/economics/laurenti/themes/globalmkts_0708.p
df.

In his July newsletter, Laurenti takes a closer look at the government’s involvement with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in light of the recent collapse their stock prices, predicting some grim outcomes should these two financial giants ever truly fail:

– The number of bank failures would surge and credit conditions would further tighten, as banks struggle to conserve their capital in a market where they could no longer raise capital with the sale of their mortgages.
– Pension funds for public workers would suffer heavy losses, as they invested heavily in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mack debt thinking it was almost as safe as treasuries.

– The dollar would depreciate and push oil prices even higher, as foreign governments also invested heavily in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, thinking it was similar in risk to the treasury market.

For these reasons, the “too big to fail” argument will carry the day, and we already see action by the Congress and the Treasury to step in and rescue the two mortgage giants. Unfortunately, though, the measures now moving through Congress are little more than a band-aid solution, and fail to address long-term issues in the secondary market for mortgages.

“One would hope that policymakers use the current crisis to avert a repeat in the future. We may not be that lucky. Congress is pushing to increase the regulation of financial markets without weighing the consequences of those regulations, and without forcing more accountability on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Indeed, the risk is that the government, and politics, will play too large instead of too small a role in financial markets as we struggle to deal with this crisis in an election year,”
concludes Laurenti.

The July issue of Themes on the Global Markets as well as archived issues can be found at http://www.mesirowfinancial.com.

Mesirow Financial is a diversified financial services firm headquartered in Chicago. Founded in 1937, it is an independent employee-owned firm with $30 billion in assets under management and 1,100 employees in offices across the country. With expertise in Investment Management, Investment Services, Insurance Services, Investment Banking, Consulting and Real Estate, Mesirow Financial has consistently met the financial needs of institutions, public sector entities, corporations and individuals. For more information about Mesirow Financial, visit its Web site at http://www.mesirowfinancial.com.

SOURCE Mesirow Financial

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