Florida’s foreclosure markets continued to improve in 2013, falling by more than a third from last year in October.
October was a very solid month for Florida’s foreclosure markets, which saw considerable improvement from last year, according to the latest National Foreclosure Report from CoreLogic.
For October, Florida’s foreclosure inventory was 7.1 percent, a number that, though still the highest in the nation, represents a 34 percent decline from Oct. 2012. Similarly, there were a mammoth 114,588 foreclosures completed in the last 12 months, easily the most in the nation (for comparison’s sake, that double of second-place Michigan!).
Florida is not quite out of the woods yet, though – 11.6 percent of the area’s housing stock is still seriously delinquent, which is still the highest in the nation.
National Progress on the Foreclosure Front
Nationally, the foreclosure numbers were similarly positive in CoreLogic’s report:
- Two million mortgages, or 5.1 percent of all mortgage properties, are still seriously delinquent, but that’s the lowest rate since Nov. 2008.
- The foreclosure inventory is down 28 percent year to date, while the 48,000 completed foreclosures in October represent a 30 percent year-over-year decline.
- As of October, roughly 879,000 homes were in some stage of foreclosure, compared with 1.3 million a year ago (that’s a decline of 31 percent!).
- Finally, inventory also fell 2.9 percent from September to October.
Mark Fleming, the chief economist for CoreLogic, said that October’s numbers represent solid progress for the housing market, though there remains considerable room for improvement.
“Year over year, the foreclosure inventory, as a percentage of all homes with a mortgage, has declined almost a full percentage point to 2.2 percent,” Fleming said. “This is good news for the housing and mortgage finance markets, but the rate remains elevated relative to the pre-crisis level of about 0.6 percent. There are almost 900,000 properties still in foreclosure, but a normal level would be only a quarter of the current stock.”