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South Florida Leads the Country in Rentals

150x104 South Florida Leads the Country in Rentals

Image by Getty Images via @daylife

According to a study this week from Harvard University, South Florida leads the nation in renter households spending more than half of their incomes on housing.

About 34% of households in Palm Beach, Broward and Miami-Dade counties spent more than half of their gross pay on rent and utilities in 2009, the most recent year for which statistics are available. That’s up from 26% a decade earlier, when South Florida also topped the list.

Susie Chung, a researcher at Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies thinks that incomes for South Florida renters aren’t high enough to support the area’s rental rates. Other major cities like Boston and New York offer higher incomes so that renters can more easily afford housing costs, she said.

The Center for Housing Policy in Washington, D.C., came to a similar conclusion earlier this year. Its study based on 2009 figures showed that South Florida renters and homeowners face the nation’s biggest burden in monthly housing costs.

Officials say that renters and homeowners should aim to spend less than a third of their incomes on housing.

 South Florida Leads the Country in Rentals

DISCOVER THE NEW WORLD OF HUD

743 DISCOVER THE NEW WORLD OF HUD

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South Florida Home Prices Dip in August

300px Cshpi peak.svg South Florida Home Prices Dip in August

Change of the Case-Shiller Home Price Index re...

According to Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller Home Price Index, after several months of modest increases, South Florida home prices fell in August.

Prices in Palm Beach, Broward and Miami-Dade counties dipped 0.3%  in August from July and 1% from a year ago.

Nationally, August home prices declined in 15 of 20 metro areas. David M. Blitzer, chairman of the Index Committee at Standard & Poor’s, called it a “disappointing report” that shows the housing market continues to “bounce along the recent lows.”

The index measures prices of the same house over time, rather than recording median prices for homes sold in a month, as the Florida Realtors trade group does.

Data for September released Monday showed that the median price in Broward increased 7% from a year ago. Palm Beach County’s median was down 7% from last year.

Analysts conclude that recent prolonged foreclosure freezes by major lenders could hurt prices here and elsewhere in the long run.

 South Florida Home Prices Dip in August

BREAKING NEWS: Bank of America and GMAC will Resume Foreclosures in Florida

150x104 BREAKING NEWS: Bank of America and GMAC will Resume Foreclosures in Florida

Bank of America and Ally Financial‘s GMAC Mortgage have finally begun to lift their freezes on more than 100,000 foreclosure cases in Florida , stating they are not finding flaws in their paperwork.

Yesterday, Bank of America issued a statement saying that it expects to begin going back next week to courts in the 23 states where foreclosures are a judicial process, including Florida. According to spokesman Dan Frahm, the lender is preparing to re-submit documents in 102,000 foreclosure cases already underway.

Also yesterday, Ally Financial spokesman James Olecki confirmed that GMAC is re-submitting documents in some foreclosure cases including at least one in Florida “as each of those files is reviewed and remediated when needed.”

Among major lenders, Bank of America had called a halt to all foreclosure sales nationwide. It also, along with GMAC, JPMorganChase and PNC Financial Services, initiated reviews in the 23 judicial foreclosure states. Bank of America later extended its review nationwide. Wells Fargo did not undertake a review of its procedures. Major lenders in September began announcing halts to all or parts of their foreclosure processes, after revelations — in sworn statements submitted in lawsuits in which homeowners are fighting foreclosures — showing that employees or representatives failed to verify mortgage paperwork before submitting foreclosure cases to courts.

The so-called “robo-signers” said, under oath, that they handled thousands of documents each month without knowing whether they were accurate, as required by court procedure.

The GMAC and Chase documents surfaced in Palm Beach County cases that are still going through the courts.

On Monday, Bank of America stated its “initial assessment findings have shown the basis for our foreclosure decisions is accurate.”

GMAC’s Olecki stated: “Again, we have been in the midst of a review for approximately two months and have found no evidence of any inappropriate foreclosures to date.”

A spokesman for JPMorgan Chase repeated the bank’s intention to review about 115,000 foreclosure files and delay foreclosure sales.

Yesterday’s developments won’t speed the foreclosure process in Florida’s overburdened courts, said Alexander Fernandez, director of homeownership preservation for Neighborhood Housing Services of South Florida. He noted there are more than 50,000 cases in Broward County alone that are still pending. And renewed cases, he said, would probably go to the back of the line.

 BREAKING NEWS: Bank of America and GMAC will Resume Foreclosures in Florida

Florida Contains 17% of U.S. Foreclosures

300px Sign of the Times Foreclosure Florida Contains 17% of U.S. Foreclosures

According to to a recent report done by RealtyTrac, Florida foreclosure activity decreased, year-over-year, for the fifth straight month in August. However, the state’s foreclosure rate still ranked second highest among all states. 1 in every 155 Florida housing units received a foreclosure filing in August. That’s 2.5 times the national average.

Florida accounted for nearly 17% of the national total, with 56,877 properties receiving a foreclosure filing. That’s up 10% from the previous month, but down 9% from a year ago.

The report also noted that Florida default notices fell 46%  from August 2009, but rose 2% from the previous month, ending five straight months of month-over-month decreases in Florida default notices.

RealtyTrac CEO James J. Saccacio stated in a press release:

The trend lines of decreasing default notices and increasing bank repossessions converged in August, with virtually the same number of new default notices and bank repossessions for the month – a clear indication that the clogged foreclosure pipeline is being carefully managed on both ends by lenders and servicers. On the front end, seriously delinquent loans are rolling into foreclosure at an unusually slow rate, while on the back end the dammed-up inventory of properties already in foreclosure is moving to REO in steady stream rather than a flood – presumably to prevent further erosion of home prices.”

Two metropolitan areas in Florida have  foreclosure rates in the top 10: Cape Coral-Fort Myers, was #3, with one in every 104 housing units receiving a foreclosure filing; and Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach, were at #5, with one in every 111 housing units filing for foreclosure.

 Florida Contains 17% of U.S. Foreclosures

July Sales Down 12.4% From Last Month

300px US DeptOfCommerce Seal.svg July Sales Down 12.4% From Last Month
Image via Wikipedia

Sales of new homes unexpectedly sank 12.4% in July from the prior month, showing continued weakness in the housing market absent government stimulus.

Yesterday, the Commerce Department said that sales of new, single-family houses in July were sold at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 276,000 units. That is 32.4% below the July 2009 estimate.

The government report claims that sales of previously owned homes dove in July, falling 27.2% over the prior month and igniting fresh concerns over the economic recovery.

The new-home sales numbers — registered when a consumer signs a purchase contract on a home, as opposed to existing sales numbers that are measured when a deal closes escrow — give the most current snapshot of buyer interest in the market absent the popular $8,000 federal tax credit for shoppers.

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News had expected some modest improvement after new-home sales plunged in May and then bounced back in June.

Dan Greenhaus, chief economic strategist for New York brokerage Miller Tabak + Co., wrote in a research note:

“The fallout from the first-time home-buyers credit continues, but in a perverse way, this is a good thing. Investors are getting their first ‘organic’ look at the housing market in nearly one year.”

The median sales price of new houses sold in July 2010 was $204,000 while the seasonally adjusted estimate of new-home inventory at the end of July was 210,000, representing a supply of 9.1 months worth of supply at the current pace.

First Blog

www.g-sig.com

This is the first blog for our real estate news section on www.g-sig.com. Our web developers are propagating over the domain name this morning when they wake up on the west coast. The site has the end user in mind, we didn’t put a lot of information about the broker’s or agent’s information on the web site. Our visitors, you, don’t really care about who we are so much as what we can offer you.

With this in mind we have added the following features. We have a search feature where you can search for any property on the MLS in South Florida, this includes Palm Beach County, Broward County, and Miami Dade counties. You can access a quick property search on the home page, or a comprehensive MLS search with an area map on the “MLS Search” page. Any property that is currently listed in the area will appear on this search, this includes all foreclosures and REOs.

You can also see a list of all of our foreclosure, REO, listings on the “Featured Properties” page, this will show you a map with our active listings. All of our current active listings are REO’s, we have many REO’s we are managing but are not currently listed. Unfortunately bank will not look at any offers on assets that are not currently listed. They have a system and the properties first must be foreclosed, valued, passed through quality control, evicted, trashed out, sales cleaned, secured, and only then can they be listed.

We have added a buy today section and a sell today section. They both are pretty self explanatory, there are a lot of great tips for buying and selling that any first time home buyer or seller should read. Its important to know that when you are putting an offer in on a bank owned foreclosure that you will need either a proof of funds, if paying cash, or a pre qualification letter if paying with a loan. To assist with this we have added a loan application form in the in buy today section so you can get your pre qualification letter to meet the requirements of submitting an offer on a foreclosure property.

Posted by: David Cohen

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