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Zooming property foreclosures undercut housing industry hopes: seizures so far this year up 403% to $452 million.


Zooming property foreclosures undercut housing industry hopes

Sunny reports earlier this month that the Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850.  housing market is finally beginning to rebound were partially eclipsed last week by new statistics that show local property foreclosures are soaring.

Lenders seized 1,593 properties, worth an aggregate $452.4 million, in Los Angeles County during the first four months of this year, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 TRW TRW The Real World (TV reality show)
TRW The Right Way
TRW Tactical Reconnaissance Wing
TRW The Retriever Weekly (University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD)
TRW Thompson Ramo Wooldridge Inc
 Real Estate Services. That represents a 136 percent jump in the number of local properties seized and a 403 percent leap in the aggregate value, compared with the same period a year ago.

"We're seeing a whole new area of foreclosures right now," explained Lola Levoy, president of Beverly Hills Beverly Hills, city (1990 pop. 31,971), Los Angeles co., S Calif., completely surrounded by the city of Los Angeles; inc. 1914. The largely residential city is home to many motion-picture and television personalities.  Escrow. "We always get foreclosures on commercial properties and flashy high-end homes, but this is different. We're now seeing white-collar yuppy homes being foreclosed on - people who were making $250,000 a year and suddenly found themselves out of work for six or eight months, or longer."

And the gray clouds are likely to darken dark·en  
v. dark·ened, dark·en·ing, dark·ens

v.tr.
1.
a. To make dark or darker.

b. To give a darker hue to.

2. To fill with sadness; make gloomy.

3.
.

Notices of default, which foreshadow fore·shad·ow  
tr.v. fore·shad·owed, fore·shad·ow·ing, fore·shad·ows
To present an indication or a suggestion of beforehand; presage.



fore·shad
 property foreclosures, continue to be filed at above-normal levels in Los Angeles County. About 90 notices of default are being filed each day in L.A. County, reported Judy Frumkin, owner of Redloc Info Systems Inc., a local real estate information company.

That represents a significant improvement from the 150 notices that were being filed daily here late last year. But the pace still is noticeably higher than L.A. County's "normal" rate of about 70 such filings a day.

Only about 50 notices of default were being filed in L.A. County on an average a day during the go-go year of 1988.

"There was an abrupt and dramatic rise in notices of default on single-family residences beginning late last year," said Jonathan Gray, a banking analyst with Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., New York-based securities firm. "It takes about three months for such notices to go into foreclosure. So that's what That's What is one of the more idiosyncratic releases by solo steel-string guitar artist Leo Kottke. It is distinctive in it's jazzy nature and "talking" songs ("Buzzby" and "Husbandry").  we're seeing now. And we'll continue to see those (foreclosure) numbers rising sharply for at least several more months."

The foreclosure explosion seems to be a regionwide phenomenon, rather than a local one. In San Diego San Diego (săn dēā`gō), city (1990 pop. 1,110,549), seat of San Diego co., S Calif., on San Diego Bay; inc. 1850. San Diego includes the unincorporated communities of La Jolla and Spring Valley. Coronado is across the bay.  County, for example, 133 properties worth $45.5 million were seized by lenders in April, compared with just 67 properties worth $5 million in April 1990.

Riverside County is expected to be crushed by foreclosures in the months to come. About 45 notices of default are now being filed each day in that county, four times the pace of filings in 1988.

"Riverside homes are a lot cheaper," Frumkin explained. "People got into those houses with VA or FHA loans, with no money down. So when they lose their jobs and don't have any equity invested, they just walk away and let the house go back to the lender."

The result is that lenders are ending up with burgeoning portfolios of Southland homes.

Beverly Hills-based Great Western Financial Corp., for example, recently reported that its nonperforming California residential mortgages rose 43 percent in the first quarter of 1991, compared with the previous quarter. That lender's bad California home loans jumped from $165 million to $236 million in just three months.

Sam Lyons, senior vice president of mortgage banking for Great Western, downplayed the recent surge in local home loan delinquencies and foreclosures, and insisted that Great Western remains bullish on the California housing market.

"We don't detect any strong underlying weakness in the California economy," he said. "Sure, people don't like the congestion The condition of a network when there is not enough bandwidth to support the current traffic load.

congestion - When the offered load of a data communication path exceeds the capacity.
, high prices and crime here. But the jobs are still in Los Angeles, and jobs ultimately determine where people will move."

Recent trends indicate, however, that L.A.'s job horizon is also filling with dark clouds.

Los Angeles County's unemployment rate rose to 7.2 percent last month, up from 6.9 percent in March - and a far cry from April 1990's 5.4 percent jobless rate.

"The trend is not favorable," conceded Jack Kyser, chief economist The Chief Economist is a single position job class having primary responsibility for the development, coordination, and production of economic and financial analysis. It is distinguished from the other economist positions by the broader scope of responsibility encompassing the  for the Economic Development Corp. of Los Angeles County. "We're forecasting the unemployment rate for L.A. County is easily going to average 7.5 percent this year."

That would be considerably higher than any monthly unemployment figure posted so far this year, which means the jobless rate is likely to rise significantly in coming months.

"The L.A. economy is going to remain in a recession until at least the end of this year," Kyser predicted. "And 1992's recovery will not be a vigorous one."

The culprit appears to be widespread and continuing consolidation of the construction, aerospace and durable goods durable goods

Goods, such as appliances and automobiles, that have a useful life over a number of periods. Firms that produce durable goods are often subject to wide fluctuations in sales and profits. Also called consumer durables.
 manufacturing sectors of the local economy.

Also, sizable layoffs are taking place in state government offices around the Southland, as state legislators grapple with a huge budget deficit.

The foreclosure explosion could worsen further in the months to come, as laid-off workers exhaust their unemployment benefits.

The Southland's economic outlook, while somewhat bleak, is not expected to reach the depths of other depressed U.S. regions, sources said. But that will not preclude severe repercussions repercussions nplrépercussions fpl

repercussions nplAuswirkungen pl 
 in the local real estate market.

"Southern California's economy doesn't have to turn into a Texas or New England New England, name applied to the region comprising six states of the NE United States—Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. The region is thought to have been so named by Capt.  to give its real estate some very serious problems over the next 12 to 18 months, which we believe will happen," said Gerard Cassidy, senior vice president of equity research at the New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 investment house of Tucker, Anthony Inc. "Loans were made to developers assuming the area's fast rate of growth would continue, and now foreclosures are starting to mount."

Making matters worse, anecdotal evidence anecdotal evidence,
n information obtained from personal accounts, examples, and observations. Usually not considered scientifically valid but may indicate areas for further investigation and research.
 began surfacing last week that the surge in local home sales following the U.S. military victory in the Persian Gulf Persian Gulf, arm of the Arabian Sea, 90,000 sq mi (233,100 sq km), between the Arabian peninsula and Iran, extending c.600 mi (970 km) from the Shatt al Arab delta to the Strait of Hormuz, which links it with the Gulf of Oman.  may have been an aberration, rather than the beginning of any long-term recovery.

"There was a nice little upswing in February, March and April, but it's clearly flattened out since then," said William Stevenson William Stevenson may refer to several notable men:
  • William Stevenson (judge) (b.1934), Canadian Supreme Court justice
  • William Stevenson (poet)
  • William Stevenson (athlete) (1900-1985), US Olympic athlete, lawyer, and ambassador
, president of the Santa Monica-based real estate marketing firm Kennedy-Wilson Inc. "This state has some serious problems. And as long as they remain, real estate here is going to reflect it."

One bright spot continues to be low-priced entry-level homes in some pockets of Los Angeles County. Sales in the Antelope and San Gabriel valleys, for example, have been particularly strong lately, reported the Meyers Group, another local real estate information company.

"Sales are also up in the San Fernando Valley San Fernando Valley

Valley, southern California, U.S. Northwest of central Los Angeles, the valley is bounded by the San Gabriel, Santa Susana, and Santa Monica mountains and the Simi Hills.
, but so are listings," explained Steve Smiley See emoticon.

smiley - emoticon
, Meyers Group manager. "People have heard the market is picking up again, and are putting their houses back on the market."

But Levoy of Beverly Hills Escrow warned that most of those hopeful home-sellers will most likely be disappointed.

"The minute we hear a little good news, we try to get ecstatic about it," Levoy sighed. "People (home-sellers and realtors) tell you all this rose-colored-glasses stuff because they want it to be true. But go to any shopping mall and watch how many people walk out with packages. Go to a bank and watch how many people put money in compared to how many take money out. There are parts of this country that are coming out of the recession, but Los Angeles isn't one of them."

Not yet.

Table : L.A. County property foreclosures soar
                                   Value of
                   No. of         foreclosures
Period             foreclosures    (millions)
April 1991            486           $186.5
March 1991            453            101.7
April 1990            155             25.2
Jan.-April 1991      1,593           452.4
Jan.-April 1990       676             89.9


Source: TRW Real Estate Services
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Title Annotation:Los Angeles Metropolitan Area
Author:Stremfel, Michael
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Date:May 27, 1991
Words:1245
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