DS News - Digital Archives

January, 2013

DSNews delivers stories, ideas, links, companies, people, events, and videos impacting the mortgage default servicing industry.

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ยป default servicing in print and online @ dsnews.com 09.2012 Everyone wants a housing recovery and some even say it's happening, but can the recovery last under a house divided? STATE OF THE INDUSTRY As we pull out of the depths of the crisis, it's time to face the inevitable changes and bring to light the new 'normal' for housing in America. SAVE IT OR SCRAP IT? Time may be up for the age-old (and oft-maligned) mortgage interest deduction as the ticktock of impending tax reform grows louder. STORM CHASERS Real estate agents are committed to advancing the housing recovery and shrinking the industry's ominous inventory of distressed properties. VISIT US ONLINE @ DSNEWS.COM DS News is the only publication in the country solely dedicated to providing default servicing professionals with news and content focused on their industry. SUBSCRIBE NOW! Call 214.525.6734 or connect with us online at DSNews.com. PRO TECK EXAMINES RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN LTV RATIOS AND FORECLOSURE Pro Teck Valuation Services released the results of a preliminary study in late November examining distressed real estate for three ZIP codes in Connecticut, New Jersey, and New York. The company observed 5,021 properties that entered what Pro Teck labeled "Stage 1 of distress" between April 2005 and July 2012. Pro Teck defines Stage 1 of distress as any property with a value equal to less than 95 percent of its outstanding loan balance. According to Pro Teck's analysis, the median amount of time properties spent in distress was three years. However, more than 20 percent of properties remained distressed for more than five years. The situation for many distressed properties Pro Teck observed was exacerbated by declining home prices. The average home value among the properties included in the study was $270,000, as estimated by an automated valuation model. After becoming distressed, a property's value fell more than 25 percent on average, Pro Teck found. The company also concluded that the probability of foreclosure peaked during either the second or third year of distress. Loan-to-value (LTV) ratio is "a key driver" in the transition to foreclosure, with higher LTVs aligning with higher probabilities of foreclosure, according to Pro Teck. Based on its distressed real estate study, the company says in the first year of negative equity, properties with an LTV of 125 percent had just under a 15 percent chance of going into foreclosure. Properties with an LTV of 200 percent had just over a 40 percent chance of falling into foreclosure. Pro Teck also found that while probabilities varied between the three ZIP codes, the relationship between time spent in distress and probability of foreclosure remained relatively constant in all three observed locations. When Pro Teck examined the probability of foreclosure based on LTV ratio, results suggested a much stronger relationship between the two variables in the Connecticut and New Jersey ZIP codes versus New York. Pro Teck explained variations in foreclosure laws could impact the relationship, as well as "the years and the circumstances in which these various properties entered the inventory." The overall outcome of the 5,000-plus properties studied as of July 2012 was 4 percent ended in foreclosure, 5 percent exited as a short sale or regular sale, and 89 percent still remained in inventory as a property in negative equity. Pro Teck intends to continue to study the transition from negative equity to REO status in more depth and across more markets. 37

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