Vacant Investment Protection

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Foreclosures Fall In Most U.S. Cities


Foreclosures declined in more than 84% of U.S. metro areas during the first half of the year, according to the latest report from RealtyTrac, an online marketer of foreclosed properties. But that doesn't mean these markets are staging a turnaround."These dramatic decreases indicate the foreclosure pipeline continues to be clogged in many local markets across the country," said RealtyTrac CEO, James Saccacio, whose firm reported earlier this month that the national foreclosure rate fell 29% over the past 12 months.Much of that backlog, he explained, is due to a glut of already-foreclosed properties that the banks are having a hard time selling and to the slowdown in the processing of foreclosures following the "robo-signing scandal" of 2010.As a result of the scandal, in which the banks were accused of mishandling paperwork and failing to follow proper protocols, banks are being much more careful and many filings have been delayed.The biggest decline in the number of foreclosures have come in judicial foreclosure states where defaults go through the courts and paperwork is scrutinized by judges.The RealtyTrac metro area report, according to RealtyTrac spokesman Rick Sharga, shows -- on a localized level -- just how significant the declines have been in some judicial states.Before the scandal, Florida claimed nine of the top 20 metro areas with the highest foreclosure rates during the first half of 2010. This year, there's only one, Cape Coral, which recorded 52% fewer foreclosures compared with the same period in 2010.Las Vegas -- ground zero for mortgage defaults the past few years -- continues to get bombarded with the highest rate of foreclosure filings in the land.One in every 19 homes in Sin City and the surrounding area got plastered with a foreclosure filing -- either a notice of default, a notice of sale or bank repossession -- during the first half of 2011. That was six times the national rate, according to RealtyTrac.According to recent analysis by Standard and Poor's, the financial services company, which examined RealtyTrac's metro area foreclosure data against price changes for the 20 cities in the S&P/Case-Shiller home price index, trends in home prices and foreclosures are closely tied."When compared to the peak-to-trough price declines for each of the 20 cities, prices drops and foreclosure events are correlated at 87%," said David Blitzer, S&P's chairman of index committees.Typically, that would mean a drop in foreclosures would have a positive impact on home prices, explained Sharga. But not this time."There is enough of a backlog of distressed inventory that there will be little or no short-term benefit," he said.Even if the banks repossess fewer homes, they already own so many they're trying to sell, that supplies will not tighten appreciably.The slowdown in foreclosure processing could help some borrowers buy extra time to regain their financial footing and coax a mortgage modification out of their bank. Also, said Sharga, more short sales could be approved, which can help preserve home values better than foreclosures."In the long term, though," said Sharga, "delaying foreclosures will just prolong the problem."If that happens, home values could bounce around the bottom for years, contributing little to the faltering national economic recovery.

Sunday, July 17, 2011

FDIC closes two Georgia banks  | ajc.com

FDIC closes two Georgia banks | ajc.com

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Regulators seized and sold two more struggling metro Atlanta banks Friday, the 15th and 16th failures in Georgia this year.

Stockbridge-based High Trust Bank and Atlanta-based One Georgia Bank were seized and sold to Ameris Bank of Moultrie. The banks will reopen under the new flag during normal business hours beginning Saturday, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said.

Georgia leads the nation with 67 failures since mid-2008.

High Trust had total assets of $192.5 million and deposits of $189.5 million, and One Georgia had total assets of $186.3 million and deposits of $162.1 million, according to the latest FDIC data.

The FDIC said Ameris agreed to purchase the bulk of the two banks’ assets and all of their deposits in a loss-share transaction. The regulator estimates the failures will result in a $110.4 million combined loss to its insurance fund, which protects depositors.

Ameris, one of the largest banks in South Georgia, has been an active buyer of failed institutions in this state and in Florida. Ameris has now acquired eight failed banks over the past two years.

Chris Marinac, bank analyst with FIG Partners in Atlanta, predicts “at least 10 more Georgia institutions could close this year.”

The state's banks are preparing second-quarter earnings reports, and if the quarter was a poor one, those reports “may suggest a slightly higher number,” Marinac said.

Like virtually all other Georgia banks, High Trust and One Georgia suffered heavy losses in real estate loans. But for these banks the losses were largely in commercial, not residential, real estate.

High Trust traced its roots to 1907, when it was founded as the Bank of Leary in the tiny town southwest of Albany.

In 2007, after two earlier name changes and a relocation of its headquarters to Henry County, the bank was renamed High Trust.

Prominent members of the Indian-American business community joined as investors and directors, and High Trust ramped up for growth in the hot Southside real estate market. But its growth spurt started as the global economy started its plunge into recession.

The bank lost more than $17 million from January 2009 to March 2011, according to FDIC data.

Some of those new investors and directors also had ties to two other largely Indian-American-owned institutions: Duluth-based Haven Trust Bank, which failed in December 2008, and Haven Trust Bank of Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., which failed last year.

On Thursday, the FDIC sued 15 former insiders at Haven Trust of Duluth, accusing them of gross negligence and other breaches of duty that resulted in about $40 million in losses to that bank.

Two of the named defendants in the case, brothers R.C. Patel and Mukesh “Mike” Patel, once served as vice chairman and chairman, respectively, at High Trust.

The Haven Trust defendants, through their attorney, have strongly denied wrongdoing and vowed to fight the suit.

One Georgia was founded in 2006 and operated a single office in the posh 1180 Peachtree building in Midtown Atlanta.

Insiders at One Georgia have included former Public Service Commission member and state Republican Party Chairman Billy Lovett, well-known lobbyist and former state senator Arthur “Skin” Edge IV and former Kennesaw State University President Betty Siegel.

The bank, which ultimately became a heavy lender through U.S. Department of Agriculture and Small Business Administration programs, suffered losses of $22.3 million from January 2009 to March 2011, according to FDIC data.

During the financial crisis, One Georgia received $5.5 million in federal bailout funds, none of which had been paid back as of March 31, according to a special inspector general’s report.

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Homeowner associations foreclose on residents - USATODAY.com

Homeowner associations foreclose on residents - USATODAY.com

Homeowner associations foreclose on residents

By Tamara Lush, Associated Press

The Inlet House condo complex in Fort Pierce, Fla., was once the kind of place the 55-and-older set aspired to. It was affordable. The pool and clubhouse were tidy, the lawns freshly snipped. Residents, push-carts in tow, walked to the beach, the bank, the beauty parlor, the cinema and the supermarket. In post-crash America, this was a dreamy little spot. Especially on a fixed income.

But that was Inlet House before the rats started chewing through the toilet seats in vacant units and sewage started seeping from the ceiling. Before condos that were worth $79,000 four years ago sold for as little as $3,000. And before the homeowners' association levied $6,000 assessments on everyone — and then foreclosed on seniors who couldn't pay the association bill, even if they didn't owe the bank a dime.

Normally, it's the bankers who go after delinquent homeowners. But in communities governed by the mighty homeowners' association, as the sour economy leaves more people unable to pay their fees, it's neighbor vs. neighbor.

"What the board is doing is trying to foreclose on people to force people out the door," says Mike Silvestri, 75, who stopped paying his dues at Inlet House in protest over what he considers unnecessary and unaffordable assessments.

He and others say there were cheaper ways to deal with the rat infestation and leaky sewage that led the board to order up a costly plumbing overhaul. "They are bamboozling old people. I'm old, but I'm not senile," he says.

In exchange for adhering to the rules, homeowners got safe communities with clubhouses, pools and tennis courts. But what many didn't realize when they bought their homes was that the fine print gave the association the right to foreclose — even over a few hundred dollars in unpaid dues.

All the association board has to do is alert its attorney to place a lien on the property to start the process. The home can then be auctioned by the board until the bank eventually takes ownership. Homeowners typically have no right to a hearing.

In the past, housing associations have gained infamy for dictating everything from the weight of your dog (one mandated a diet for a hound) to whether you can kiss in your driveway (not if you don't want a fine in one). Homeowners' associations have served as the behavior police, banning lemonade stands, solar panels and hanging out in the garage. One ordered a war hero to take down his flag because of a "non-conforming" pole. Another demanded that residents with brown spots on their lawns dye their grass green.

Now, past the faux regal gates, beyond the clubhouses, many property owners in associations owe more than their homes are worth. Some are struggling to pay their bills after they lose a job. Others have had their pay cut. So they've stopped paying their association dues.

To combat the rise in delinquencies, boards are switching off utilities, garnishing income and axing cable. They are yanking pool passes and banning the billiard room. And, in the most extreme cases, they are foreclosing.

"The treacherous part is that homeowners' associations are acting like a local government without restraints, and they have this extraordinary power," says Marjorie Murray, a lawyer and founder of the Center for California Homeowner Association Law.

Today, one in five U.S. homeowners is subject to the will of the homeowners' association, whose boards oversee 24.4 million homes. More than 80% of newly constructed homes in the U.S are in association communities.

And of the nation's 300,000 homeowners' associations, more than 50% now face "serious financial problems," according to a September survey by the Community Association Institute. An October survey found that 65% of homeowners' associations have delinquency rates higher than 5%, up from 19% of associations in 2005.

Associations set rules for their communities. They levy monthly dues, typically between $200 and $500, and cover the costs of services that a municipal government usually takes care of: road repair, streetlights, sewage systems. If an association's budget is strained or major repairs need to be done, the board can levy a "special assessment" on top of those dues. And when one homeowner doesn't pay those fees, all the other homeowners have to pick up the cost.

The rise in delinquencies comes as banks are taking over foreclosed homes and then leaving them vacant more often than ever. Taken together, these shortfalls are resulting in higher fees for all of the other homeowners — and massive financial angst for association boards.

Before now, associations rarely, if ever, foreclosed on homeowners. But today, encouraged by a new industry of lawyers and consultants, boards are increasingly foreclosing on people 60 days past due on association fees, says Evan McKenzie, a former homeowner association attorney who is now a University of Illinois political science professor and the author of the book "Beyond Privatopia: Rethinking Residential Private Government."

The government does not keep statistics on how often homeowners' associations initiate foreclosures. But a non-profit research group found that association-initiated foreclosures in the Houston area jumped from 500 in 1995 to 2,200 in 2007. Most association-related foreclosures in Texas do not go through the judicial process, so the group's analysis represented only a fraction of the foreclosures that housing associations have initiated.

The problems in some communities are resulting in more scrutiny. In Nevada, the FBI is investigating corruption in elections of association boards. In Utah and Arizona, legislators are trying to pass bills that would root out the use of debt-collectors who are alleged to have used thug-like tactics to strongarm residents into paying fees.

State legislatures in California, Arizona, North Carolina, Texas and Florida have taken up legislation that would clamp down on foreclosures.

Not everyone thinks the tactics are out of line, though.

"When people are not paying their assessments, they're not shortchanging some giant multinational corporation. They are taking money directly out of the pockets of their neighbors," says Andrew Fortin, head of government affairs for the trade group the Community Associations Institute.

So the neighborhood feuds are escalating. At Inlet House, one resident claims her fellow senior citizens have turned into vigilantes, vandalizing her car in retaliation for not paying her dues.

In all, 17 of the 60 units are in various stages of delinquency. Paul Gray, a fastidious budgeter, paid off his mortgage long ago and paid all but $2,500 of the Inlet House assessment. The association initiated foreclosure proceedings. A few days after he received the foreclosure notice, Gray suffered another stroke, three friends say. Now he is in a nursing home. He has since paid off the $2,500. His home, worth $89,000 in 2006, is for sale for $18,500.

In the meantime, the board, facing $172,000 in costs from non-payers, has had no choice but to raise dues by an extra $50 a month to an average of $375. Between the assessment and increased dues, some residents complain that they pay more than they would to rent a plush oceanfront spread down the street at the posh Fontainebleau condo complex. Association manager Janice Stinnett, who is also an Inlet House resident, says she isn't to blame, the non-payers are.

"It's unfair that everyone is paying extra to cover these deadbeats," she says.

The board is continuing to make the plumbing repairs that made the assessments necessary to begin with. It will soon issue another special assessment to cover the costs.

To homeowners who opposed the repairs on the grounds that they were too expensive, the entire picture adds up to a crime. Says Silvestri, "What these associations are doing is illegal. It's a fraud."

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Air conditioning theft? South Carolina passes new law.

Air conditioning theft? South Carolina passes new law.

Air conditioning theft? South Carolina passes new law.

Air conditioning units and farm irrigation systems are being targeted by thieves for their copper. South Carolina governor signs new law that prohibits recyclers from buying copper for cash.

Govenor Nikki Haley (pictured here May 5, 2011, talking to the media outside the grand ballroom of the Hyatt Regency in Greenville, S.C.) has signed into a law a measure aimed at curbing the theft of copper from air conditioning and farm irrigation systems.

Richard Shiro/AP/File