Foreclosures in the US continued to climb in the second quarter of 2008, experts acknowledge that the current housing slump is “without precedent” in the modern era, and the resulting stress is taking both an economic and emotional toll: a 53-year-old Massachusetts woman committed suicide July 22 only hours before her family’s home was to be put up for auction. In the three-month period April through June, some 740,000 foreclosure filings were recorded in the US, an increase of 14 percent over the first quarter and 121 percent over the same period in 2007. According to RealtyTrac, one in every 171 US households received a filing, which includes notices of default, auction sale notices and bank repossessions.

The banks took back some 220,000 homes in the second quarter (and 370,000 in the first six months of the year) and there are presently 18.6 million homes in the country standing empty, the highest number in history. The number of vacant houses has jumped nearly 7 percent in the last year. California’s Central Valley “remains ground zero” for foreclosure filings, as CNNMoney notes, with one in every 25 houses in Stockton affected, for example. Riverside-San Bernardino, east of Los Angeles, had the second highest rate with one filing for every 32 households. Las Vegas, Nevada and Bakersfield and Sacramento, California were the others among the top five regions. More

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Posted by markw, filed under Economy. Date: July 27, 2008, 8:03 pm |

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