Friday, August 21, 2009

Florida tops again in late mortgages

By DUANE MARSTELLER, Bradenton Herald, Friday, August 21st, 2009

Florida’s mortgage-delinquency rate remains the country’s highest, a national bankers group said in a report released Thursday.

More than one in five Florida mortgages either were at least one payment behind or in foreclosure as of June 30, almost twice the U.S. rate, the Mortgage Bankers Association said in a quarterly delinquency report.

“Florida continues to establish itself as the worst state in the union for mortgage performance,” said Jay Brinkmann, the trade group’s chief economist.
“Clearly we have not seen the bottom in Florida,” he said in a later interview.


The state led the nation with 12 percent of mortgages somewhere in the foreclosure process at the end of June. Another 10.8 percent were at least 30 days behind in payments, with nearly half of those more than 90 days overdue.
In contrast, just 4.3 percent of U.S. mortgages were in foreclosure and another 8.9 percent were delinquent but not yet in foreclosure. Still, the combined U.S. foreclosure/delinquency rate is the highest since the association began tracking it in 1972.


Observers attributed Florida’s weak showing to rising unemployment, falling home values and a higher percentage of non-primary homeowners.


“It’s getting to the point where we’re deeper into the recession, and people have hung on as long as they could possibly hang on and no longer can afford to keep paying their mortgages,” said Bob Stobaugh, a senior lender at Sentinel Mortgage Co. and president of the Gulf Coast Mortgage Bankers Association.

Some can’t pay because they’ve lost their jobs: Florida’s unemployment rate was 10.6 percent in June, the latest month for which figures were available.
For others, it’s because a foreclosure-fueled drop in home values has left them “under water” on their mortgages, Stobaugh said. Nearly half of Florida homeowners owed more than their homes are worth as of June 30, tracking service First American CoreLogic said in a recent report. Florida also is seeing more delinquencies and foreclosures involving second homes and investor-owned properties because it has more of them and foreclosure-relief efforts are focusing on primary homeowners, Stobaugh said. About 27.4 percent of single-family homes in Manatee do not have homestead exemptions, according to the Manatee County Property Appraiser’s Office.


The report said the mortgage crisis, which began with subprime loans taken out by those with spotty credit, also continued to spread. One in three new foreclosures between April and June was from a prime, fixed-rate loan, up from one in five a year earlier. Last year, subprime adjustable-rate loans caused the largest share of foreclosures.

“The rise in prime delinquencies . . . is a clear indication that employment is the driver of mortgage performance, with the worst performance coming in those areas that are combining jobs losses with large drops in home values like California and Florida,” Brinkmann said. “We won’t see a turnaround in delinquencies until we see improvements in employment, most likely the middle of next year.”

Stobaugh agreed, but wasn’t sure when that would happen. “Sooner or later this downward spiral will stop,” he said. “When, no one knows.”

McClatchy and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

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