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Tag Archives: CoreLogic

Distressed Sales Share Continues Steady Decline, Falls to 9.4 Percent

REO sales accounted for 6 percent of total home sales in June, which was the lowest level since September 2007 when they made up 5.2 percent of all home sales in the country. REO sales hit their peak in January 2009, when they accounted for 27.9 percent of all home sales. According to CoreLogic, the continued shift away from REO sales is driving home price appreciation, since REO properties typically sell at a larger discount than short sales do.

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Divisiveness of Dodd-Frank is Evident Five Years After Its Passage

The controversial Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act just passed its five-year anniversary on July 21, and lawmakers and other stakeholders have never been more divided as to its effectiveness (or lack thereof) as they have been recently, according to CoreLogic's August 2015 MarketPulse released this week.

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Drop in REO Sales is Driving Continued Decline in Cash Sales Share

May 2015's cash sales share of nearly 32 percent was down by 31 percent from the peak of 46.5 percent recorded in January 2011. CoreLogic estimates that if the cash sales share continues to decline at the same rate as it did in May 2015, the cash sales share should fall back down to its pre-crisis level of 25 percent by the middle of 2017.

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Foreclosure Inventory Rate Drops to Below Pre-Recession Levels

The foreclosure inventory rate has now declined year-over-year for 44 consecutive months, including June. The 1.2 percent foreclosure inventory rate represented about 472,000 homes, down from 664,000 in June 2014. Although the national foreclosure inventory rate is back to pre-recession levels, the rate remains high in select areas hit hardest by the crisis, such as Florida and New Jersey.

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Fannie Mae’s Research Shows Perceived Negative Equity is Hurting the Housing Market

The National Housing Survey from Fannie Mae contains data that suggests that homeowners who are underestimating how much equity they have in their homes may also be underestimating in other areas, such as how large of a downpayment they could make with that equity; their chances of qualifying for a mortgage, assuming they need a large downpayment; and their opportunities for selling their house and buying another one.

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