Thursday, October 23, 2008

Data show how foreclosures pull down Valley home values

This article describes how foreclosures are driving home value now in the Phoenix market. If you live in an area of high foreclosure it can cost you $20-40,000 if you need to sell:

In a normal housing market, most homes to go into foreclosure are sold at trustee-sale auctions. Since last fall, about 98 percent of all homes to go into foreclosure have instead been taken back by the lender.

What lenders resell foreclosure homes for now is driving home values, particularly in neighborhoods where a higher percentage of existing-home sales are foreclosure resales.
Foreclosure resales make up at least one-fourth of all sales in a many Valley neighborhoods now. In a few areas, the rate of foreclosure resale is much higher. In the El Mirage ZIP code 85335, there were more foreclosure resales than regular resales. The overall median home price in the area is $135,000. The foreclosure resale is $133,750. In most other Valley neighborhoods, the overall median price is $20,000 to $40,000 higher than the foreclosure resale.

"These foreclosure homes need to sell for the Valley's housing market to recover," said Brett Barry, a Phoenix real-estate agent with Realty Executives. "It's a good thing they are selling, but it's not going to make you happy if you are a homeowner in a neighborhood with a lot of these properties."

He said for buyers who are patient and will work with lenders, there are great deals in foreclosure resales.

Gloria Giroux recently bought a foreclosure-resale home from Deutsche Trust Bank. She paid $560,000 for a 3,400-square-foot Carefree home on a half-acre lot that had sold for $815,000 in 2005. "The pool was green. It needed work, and it was frustrating waiting for answers on my offers from the bank," Giroux said. "But I got it, and the house behind me is almost identical and sold for $839,000 in April of this year."

Gloria seems to have made $279,000 in equity (two or three years of hard labor for most) by putting up with a little frustration from the bank.

Link to full article