The
residential shadow inventory of
distressed homes continues to shrink according CoreLogic's monthly report for
October. The improvement is across all metrics; number of units, months supply,
dollar volume and transition rates.
The
inventory as of October was 2.29
million units or a7.2 month
supply at the current absorption rate. The number of units in the
inventory represented a 12.3 percent decrease from October 2011 when the
inventory consisted of 2.62 million units, an 8.6 month supply. The volume of
the inventory in October was $376 billion, down from $3.99 billion a year
earlier. In September the inventory stood at 2.31 million units or a 7.7 month
supply.
The shadow
inventory represents the number of properties that are seriously delinquent, in
foreclosure, or in bank inventories (REO) but not listed on Multiple Listing
Services. CoreLogic uses the rates of transition of properties from delinquency
to foreclosure and foreclosure to REO to identify the currently distressed
unlisted properties most likely to become REO properties. Properties that are
not yet delinquent but may become delinquent in the future are not included in
the estimate of the current shadow inventory.
Of the 2.3
million properties currently in the shadow inventory 1.04 million units are
seriously delinquent (3.3 months' supply), 903,000 are in some stage of
foreclosure (2.8 months' supply) and 354,000 are already in REO (1.1 months'
supply).
Roll rates
from current to 90 days delinquent have decreased from 0.50 percent in October
2011 to 0.46 percent in October 2012. Rates from 90+ days to foreclosure are
down from 6.74 percent to 6.17 percent but rates for transitions from
foreclosure to current increased slightly from 0.81 percent to 0.83 percent.
"The
size of the shadow inventory continues to shrink from peak levels in terms of
numbers of units and the dollars they represent," said Anand Nallathambi, president and CEO
of CoreLogic. "We expect a gradual and progressive contraction in the
shadow inventory in 2013 as investors
continue to snap up foreclosed and REO properties and the broader
recovery in housing market fundamentals takes hold."
"Almost
half of the properties in the shadow are delinquent and not yet
foreclosed," said Mark Fleming,
chief economist for CoreLogic. "Given the long foreclosure timelines in
many states, the current shadow inventory stock represents little immediate
threat to a significant swing in housing market supply. Investor demand will
help to absorb the already foreclosed and REO properties in the shadow
inventory in 2013."
Forty-five
percent of the inventory in held in five states, Florida, California, Illinois,
New York and New Jersey down from 51.3 percent one year earlier. Over the three
months ending in October 2012, serious delinquencies, which are the main driver
of the shadow inventory, declined the most in Arizona (13.3 percent),
California (9.7 percent), Michigan (6.8 percent), Colorado (6.8 percent) and
Wyoming (5.9 percent).
by Jann Swanson Mortgage News Daily
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