Foreclosures in area mount, but most are repeat listings

Repostings amount to 57% of total in Travis as lenders remain slow to seize property.

Property foreclosures continue to rise in Central Texas, but a growing percentage are repeat postings by lenders who have stopped short of seizing the homes.

In Travis County, 57 percent of the 441 postings for the June 2 auction are repeats, said Bonnie Brown, vice president of Foreclosure Listing Service Inc., an Addison company that tracks foreclosures.  That was up from 49 percent in April and 37 percent in March.  The pattern was similar in other counties.

Lenders have been initiating foreclosures when borrowers missed payments but holding off on taking possession of the properties while they work with borrowers to revise mortgage terms.

In a soft real estate market, lenders are reluctant to seize houses they might not be able to sell.  Additionally, the lenders would take on costs for maintenance and insurance at a time when many are trying to reduce costs.  They repost the homes to protect their ability to seize the properties at a later date.

Overall, June postings in Travis, Williamson, Hays and Bastrop counties were up 52 percent from a year ago.  They were up by the same percentage for the first half of the year.

Related Blogs

Local home sales continue rebound

Austin-area home sales last month were the highest since September – a sign the market is stabilizing.
The Austin Board of Realtors said Wednesday that 1,601 single-family homes sold last month, with the median price of $189,000.

Although sales were down 18 percent on a year-ago basis, board Chairman Jay Gohil said that was the smallest percentage decline this year. “With each month, the gap in sales volume from 2008 to 2009 is closing,” he said. The April percentage decline was half as big as the gap in January.

There were 1,919 sales in the pipeline for May, the most since July, although they were down 19 percent from a year earlier and the median price was 1 percent higher than a year ago. Currently there is about a 6 month supply of homes for sale which is considered a balanced market between supply and demand.

With the change in the economy, it appears to me as though people want to put their money into a tangible asset – something they can see and enjoy. It appears that houses under $250,000 are selling faster while those above $350,000 are sitting longer.

Now is a good time to buy, with ample inventory to choose from, low 4.75 percent interest rates, a $8,000 first-time buyer tax credit, and some sellers reducing prices.  Call me at (512) 914-2573 andI’ll go right to work for you!