Hub foreclosures go 'through roof'
By Jerry Kronenberg - Boston Herald - Friday, October 7,
2005
Bay State homeowners are beginning to feel a
hangover from the long-running real estate party, with
foreclosures doubling in Boston and parts of the North Shore.
"It's through the roof at this
point," said Jeremy Shapiro, president of
ForeclosuresMass.com, which yesterday reported that foreclosure
filings rose 95 percent in Suffolk County, which includes Boston,
and 107 percent in Essex County in August.
ForeclosuresMass.com tracks year-over-year
increases in "notices of default," the first step banks
take in seizing homes for mortgage nonpayment.
Generally, banks file these notices when
homeowners fall about three months behind on loans.
ForeclosuresMass.com's latest figures show
filings rose the most in Western Massachusetts, soaring 275
percent in Franklin County and 212.5 percent in Berkshire
County.
* Next 37 17 investors only!
But Shapiro said the small number of cases in
those areas – only about two dozen in each county –
make those gains less statistically significant.
Statewide, default filings rose 66 percent
from August 2004 levels to reach 1,128. For the entire
January-August period, total Bay State defaults are running 33
percent ahead of year-ago levels.
Shapiro blames much of the problem on higher
mortgage rates, a slower real estate market and so-called
"cash-out" refinancings. That's where homeowners
replace an old mortgage with a new, larger one and receive the
difference in cash.
Add in a job loss, medical emergency, divorce
or death in the family and many homeowners find themselves in
trouble.
"A lot of people pulled out equity with a
refinancing, (but) if they suddenly run into hardship,
there's no money left," Shapiro said. "That equity
is gone."
Want to avoid foreclosure?
Shapiro recommends that all homeowners build
up enough emergency savings to last several months.
"One question I always ask folks is:
'How many paychecks away from foreclosure are you?'
" he said.
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