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Clark County foreclosures expected to top 30,000 this year

Home foreclosures are expected to top 30,000 in Clark County this year, compared with 11,509 in 2007, a California-based foreclosure investment firm reported.

Foreclosures.com. counted 2,974 foreclosures in November, bringing the total for the year to 28,133. The monthly number is up from 2,653 in October and more than double the 1,407 Clark County foreclosures in November 2007.


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  • Foreclosures continue to plague the Las Vegas housing market, dragging home values down and competing against tradtional home sales. About 60 percent of existing home sales in October were bank-owned homes with a median price of $166,000, Las Vegas-based SalesTraq reported.

    On a positive note, Clark County preforeclosure filings declined for the second straight month. November’s 5,830 preforeclosures are down from 6,429 in October and 6,565 in September.

    “These latest numbers are great news because preforeclosures are early signals of what’s to come,” Foreclosures.com President Alexis McGee said. “The nation’s foreclosure free fall may be subsiding. We still have a long way to go and some of the recent numbers are skewed by lender programs for homeowners that delay rather than eliminate foreclosures.”

    Efforts by the government, banks and other entities to work with strapped homeowners to avoid foreclosure are beginning to pay off, McGee said.

    SalesTraq reported 2,454 homes repossessed by banks in October, bringing the year-to-date total to 21,025, up 234 percent from a year ago.

    “Those things are going to be with us for a while,” SalesTraq founder Larry Murphy said. “The first round of foreclosures was subprime borrowers who had no business buying a house anyway, but the second round is people who had a job and were doing OK.”

    Not all preforeclosure filings, which start with a notice of default, end up in foreclosure, McGee noted. Some properties are purchased during preforeclosure, often discounted 20 percent to 40 percent below market value. The owner can walk away with something to show for any equity in the property and avoid a bad credit mark.

    Troy Kearns of Gavish Real Estate said lenders seem more willing to deal on foreclosures. He’s selling about 30 percent of his bank-owned inventory every month.

    “We’re having no problems moving them at all,” he said. “Banks are being really aggressive with pricing. In terms of a bottom, I’m sure we’re not quite there yet, but we’re hovering around it.”

    Kearns’ lowest listing -- $37,500 for a house on Euclid Avenue -- sold in one day. It was only 600 square feet and needed a little repair, he said.

    “You put a renter in there at $500 a month and you’re at 12 percent cash flow,” Kearns said.

     

    Contact reporter Hubble Smith at hsmith@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0491.

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    Report abuse

    Free Nevada wrote on December 08, 2008 11:45 PM: I feel compelled to remind the buyer-blamers here that it was California that caught Daniel Sadek making casino markers at The Wynn drawn on the escrow accounts used by his Quick Loan Funding/Platinum Coast Escrow empire --not Gaming Control or Nevada or The Wynn. You can't blame his tens of thousands of victims knowing that kind of thing was going on.

    And just to be clear, when 'Don't kill the Messenger' talks about 'YOUR state', you should know he is a known troll from Utah who rarely posts anything positive.


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    Thanks, cont. wrote on December 08, 2008 06:27 PM: Dan- I agree. The dishonest homebuyers are definitely part of the problem! I just fogot to add my thanks to them, so I do so now! I have no sympathy of the "stupid banks" (i.e., the ones who engaged in reckeless lending and threw money around to idiots), not the conservative banks.


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    We get it! wrote on December 08, 2008 06:22 PM: Yeah, what you said Grammar Police!


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    Johnnie wrote on December 08, 2008 06:15 PM: You forgot to thank all the California buyers that drove the price of houses up, up, and away. You forgot to thank all the brokers that sold homes to persons unknown to the planet earth. Banks are foreclosing on owners that can't be traced or probably never existed. You forgot to thank all the money greedy people that told the unsuspecting buyer, "Just trust me, I know what I'm doing." Or try this line, "These things are complicated just let me handle the details." And of course don't forget this famous line, "Just before your rate adjusts, just flip the damn thing. Everybody's doing it. My neighbour did and he made a killing." And last but not least is the buyer who brought the property, took out equity loan after loan as the values went up and SKIPPED THE COUNTRY!!!!!@ Has Vegas noticed the mass exit to other countries.


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    Grammar Police wrote on December 08, 2008 05:57 PM: Dan

    So you'll have the proper understanding of the next contract you read I have inserted the correct punctuation, spelling, articles and pronouns where required for the structure of your sentence. Of course it's always subject to some interpretation.

    Thank you to the idiot home buyer that didn't read his or her (their) contract, to the home owner that (the) refinanced and spent the (their) money on vacations, casinos (casino's), and living above thier means, and finally...thank you to the people that walked (walk) away from their (thier) homes with their (there) life savings and 401K's still in hand. Blame the bank...Give me a Break. Blame the people who bought a 300K home when they only make 40K a year!!!


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    Don't kill the Messenger: wrote on December 08, 2008 05:51 PM: The country just voted for a two year joke. YOUR state went blue. Wake up, wait until 2012, they will have you all on main St.(NLV). Remember all Ghettos are run by DemoRats,you moronic idiots.


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    Dan wrote on December 08, 2008 05:21 PM: Thank you to the idiot home buyer that didn't read their contract, to the home owner the refinanced and spent their money on vacations, casino's, and living above thier means, and finally...thank you to the people that walk away from thier homes with there life savings and 401K's still in hand. Blame the bank...Give me a Break. Blame the people who bought a 300K home when they only make 40K a year!!!


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    Thanks wrote on December 08, 2008 05:03 PM: Thank you BANKERS!

    Thanks for 100% financing, interest-only, no doc (liar) loans, and other BS!

    Thanks for caving into to activist groups that demanded home loans despite their risk or low income. Thanks. You should have called the police to arrest them, but yeah I know, the police are kinda wimpy too when it comes to arresting social terrorists.

    Thanks Jimmy Carter for the Community Reivestment Act. Another minority SCAM.

    And Thanks to all you good-for-nothing Social Activists.


    Report abuse

    Troy wrote on December 08, 2008 04:45 PM: And the County loves every one!

    They got a fat TRANSFER TAX when the properties sold in the last year or two. The bank has to pay another TRANSFER TAX to foreclose, and the new buyers pay another TRANSFER TAX. It a three for one. They love it!