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Mortgage default notices fewer in valley
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Jeferson Applegate/Las Vegas Review-Journal
Auctioneer and trustee sales coordinator Deborah Fontenot opens an auction for homes Thursday at 930 S. Fourth St. The number of homes sold to private parties -- primarily investors -- at trustee auction rose to 957 in April, up nearly 71 percent from a year ago, statistics show. » Buy this photo
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Jason Bean/Las Vegas Review-Journal
This home at 1829 Francisco Peak Place in Las Vegas is heading for a trustee auction. » Buy this photo
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Jeferson Applegate/Las Vegas Review-Journal
Investors attend a trustee sale for homes Thursday at 930 S. Fourth St. Notices of trustee sales fell 20 percent, to 4,390, according to Las Vegas-based LV Default, which tracks home auctions. An LV Default official says investors are getting homes at deep discounts. » Buy this photo
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Jeferson Applegate/Las Vegas Review-Journal
Investor Andy Zubio and his agents at Wilshire Financial Network regularly attend the trustee auctions for valley homes staged at Nevada Legal News, 930 S. Fourth St. » Buy this photo
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LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Updated: May 17, 2011 | 10:43 a.m.
Fewer Las Vegas homes may be headed to foreclosure as notices of default and trustee sales slowed in April.
Lenders filed notices of default on 2,574 Las Vegas homes in April, a 48.1 percent decrease from the same month a year ago, while notices of trustee sales fell 20 percent, to 4,390, according to Las Vegas-based LV Default, which tracks home auctions.
The number of homes sold to private parties -- primarily investors -- at trustee auction rose to 957 in April, up nearly 71 percent from a year ago. Investors in April spent $89 million at the auctions staged every business day at 10 a.m. at Nevada Legal News, 930 S. Fourth St.
They're getting homes at 20 percent to 40 percent of previous sales prices, said Tony Martin, of LV Default.
For example, a 3,083-square-foot home at 1829 Francisco Peak Place in upscale Summerlin with an estimated bid (or what it sold for in October 2007) of $606,670, or $197 per square-foot. The opening bid will probably be around $70 per foot, Martin said.
More than 2,600 homes were to be auctioned, but the sales were canceled in April. Meanwhile, 2,994 homes were taken back by the beneficiaries -- foreclosed on by the banks.
With 75 percent of trustee sales going back to the bank, Martin asks: Where are they?
"The interesting thing you'll notice is the housing market is dictated and puppeted by the lending institutions," Martin said. "Prices are in the hands of the banks right now. They understand that they can throttle the process at every level, starting with NODs."
Banks are able to maximize profits with a measured release of foreclosed homes, rather than further depress prices by flooding the market with foreclosures, he said.
Banks use software to analyze each subdivision within a ZIP code to determine if they want to sell a particular home at trustee auction, he said. They have manuals to choose which homes they want to save and which ones to sell based on property condition and market value.
Consumers are growing angrier as more foreclosures are projected and lenders remain unwilling to work with borrowers, said housing analyst Dennis Smith of Home Builders Research.
"It is very difficult to remain nonjudgmental when we are at ground zero of the foreclosure mess," he said. "It certainly appears that most decisions are made based only on the bottom line and not what is good for the housing market and the public."
Las Vegas won't see any recovery in the housing market until distressed homes make their way through the inventory, Smith said.
Andy Zubio, an investor with Wilshire Financial Network in Las Vegas, said auction sales benefit the community in a number of ways. Investors are buying properties that are in disrepair, rehabilitating them and turning them into rentals for families displaced from previous homes, he said.
An investor may buy a home at auction for $60,000, spend $10,000 remodeling, then sell it to a first-time homebuyer for $80,000, or at about a 15 percent profit, Zubio calculated. His company offers seller financing for homebuyers with marginal credit.
"There are many good deals, but you have to have patience," said Zubio, who goes to three or four auctions a week. "There are a lot of bidders bidding on great opportunities. My advice is to go down there with an open mind and be patient. Get to know the lay of the land and do your homework."
Las Vegas-based SalesTraq reported 1,833 bank repossessions in April, a 16 percent decrease from the same month a year ago. There were 1,973 bank dispositions, leaving an inventory of 11,546 bank-owned homes in Las Vegas. The inventory has dwindled from more than 14,000 in January 2010.
The firm showed 785 auction sales in April at a median price of $90,100; 1,973 bank-owned sales at a median of $105,500; 822 short sales, or lender-approved sales for less than the mortgage owed, at a median of $120,000; and 1,390 nondistressed sales at a median of $110,000.
Martin said the number of auction sales spiked in March and April after a federal judge overturned a lower-court decision that stopped ReconTrust from foreclosing on homes in Nevada. More than half of April's auction sales were deeds held by ReconTrust, a subsidiary of Bank of America. ReconTrust currently has 3,974 properties listed for trustee sale in Clark County.
Contact reporter Hubble Smith at hsmith@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0491.
Foreclosure filings
| Month | NOD | NTS | BB | CANX | SPP |
| April 2010 | 4,961 | 5,487 | n/a | n/a | 560 |
| May | 4,477 | 4,624 | 2,285 | 1,253 | 516 |
| June | 4,067 | 5,022 | 1,993 | 1,705 | 572 |
| July | 4,761 | 4,884 | 2,070 | 2,452 | 424 |
| August | 4,590 | 5,612 | 1,850 | 2,236 | 601 |
| September | 4,841 | 6,046 | 2,751 | 2,299 | 569 |
| October | 3,948 | 4,622 | 1,822 | 1,925 | 348 |
| November | 4,007 | 5,727 | 1,325 | 1,986 | 317 |
| December | 3,702 | 5,764 | 1,765 | 2,515 | 447 |
| January 2011 | 4,263 | 4,518 | 2,312 | 3,104 | 587 |
| February | 2,924 | 4,714 | 1,152 | 3,550 | 368 |
| March | 3,411 | 3,040 | 2,732 | 3,616 | 913 |
| April | 2,574 | 4,390 | 2,994 | 2,636 | 957 |
| NOD-Notice of Default; NTS-Notice of Trustee Sale; BB-Back to Beneficiary; CANX-Canceled; SPP-Sold to Private Party. |
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| Source: LV Default | |||||
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Tony Martin, for the record, I do not dispute any of Hubble's numbers. My point is different. According to the recent AP article, Census and other data, there are 160,000+ vacant homes in Nevada. I would go out on a limb and say that most are likely in Clark County. Just look around. Here is my point: No matter how well the Banksters and the collaborators mask the reality, the real estate recovery here, is at least 30+years away. If ever! I sincerely wish that someone in our government and/or judiciary would sound the fire alarm and help all of us find a solution. In Florida, brave attorneys defending property rights have slowed down the foreclosure filing by 57%, while Nevada's foreclosures are up 167%. I sincerely wish Tony, that you could help find a solution to Nevada's nightmare, rather than bragging about how well you've got the numbers figured out. I welcome all comments at: providencegroup@ymail.com
Larry doesn't track what we do - he's been more about new sales. We've been tracking defaults in Clark County for 20+ years. We track and create monitoring software for every stage of pre-foreclosure. Over 95% of ALL buyers at the auction use our software. Every major title company uses our software. We know more about the default business than ANYone, including Mr. Murphy.
I'll challenge anyone to dispute our numbers, since we're down there, each and every day, watching and verifying each and every transaction.
I too, welcome comments.
Tony Martin, Principal
LV Default (.com)
After 3 years of fear mongering and writing about the mountains of foreclosures in Las Vegas, you fail again. Where are 50,000 plus foreclosures that Dennis Smith keeps talking about? May be Hubble should INTRVIEW a” real” real estate analyst. His name is Larry Murphy
Hubble Smith 5/17/2011:"leaving an inventory of 11,546 bank-owned homes in Las Vegas. The inventory has dwindled from more than 14,000 in January 2010".
AP 3/27/2011:"Nevada's boom and bust leaves 167,000 empty houses By Cristina Silva, Associated Press Updated 3/27/2011"
http://www.usatoday.com/money/economy/housing/2011-03-26-nevada-real-estate.htm Which article is PROPAGANDA? Its about time to rename RJ Pravda... lol... I welcome all comments at:
providencegroup@ymail.com
@independent;
what good would that do?? to further reduce the average sales price? Agreed we should have never bailed out banks but that horse is out of the barn. But going forward the Gov needs to get out of the lending business all together ( re;Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac) except (IMO) with FHA, but remember those loans are insured so at least their is some cover for losses but we do need them in for the first time home buyers.
Banks will fail or succeed on their own and with their own lending standards, but no more bailouts.....
So let me get this straight. First we bail out these banks with our money. Then we let them hold on to their inventory of homes, so they can keep the prices artificially high? I say we ask for our money back, pronto.
@chadmason;
Sounds like an Adjustable rate mortgage as the 30 has never reached that low nor had the 15 year in the history of tracking rates...so consumers beware, Chad has broken the cardinal rule; disclosing the APR and terms of the loan, might even be a 1 year adjustable......Knowledge is power especially when you are fast and loose with the facts...
With less people now living in the valley , default notices were fewer !
"The interesting thing you'll notice is the housing market is dictated and puppeted by the lending institutions," Martin said.
Pure brilliance I tell ya!
@chadmason...this isnt a forum for free advertising...stop posting your garbage here...lvrj; cant you stop this ???