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Foreclosures are getting faster at JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo. The two big banks trimmed their foreclosure timelines by as much as 100 days in the third quarter of 2011, helping to work through major backlogs of foreclosed loans, according to a Moody’s Investors Service report. But while foreclosure sales are getting speedier, the report warns that there’s still a long way to go in working through large inventories of REOs that are continuing to slam the nation’s banks.

Chase averaged 264 days from referral to foreclosure sale in the third quarter for subprime mortgages — a big drop from the 412 days it averaged three months prior to that. Chase boasted the shortest time of any of the big five mortgage servicers. Wells Fargo also greatly reduced its foreclosure timeline to 314 days from 454 days compared to the previous quarter.

Please contact the Csira Group for questions relating to foreclosures and short sales at (949) 509-7700.

Proof that Rates are Low

December 13, 2011

Fed Chair, Ben Bernanke, knows a good interest rate when he sees it. The Fed chair has refinanced the mortgage on his three-bedroom, attached town home in Washington, D.C. twice since 2009.

Most recently Bernanke refinanced on his home in September shortly after the Fed announced “Operation Twist,” which was a rare move by the Fed to publicly vow to keep long-term interest rates low for the next two years. (…)

1 in 5 Mortgages Underwater

December 7, 2011

More than one in five American home mortgages are underwater.

An estimated 10.7-million households, or 22.1% of all homes with mortgages, had more debt on the properties than they were worth in the third quarter, according to Santa Ana research firm CoreLogic. This is a slight decline from the 10.9 million properties that were underwater in the second quarter.

“Although slightly down, negative equity remains very high and renders many borrowers vulnerable when negative economic shocks occur, such as job loss or illness,” CoreLogic chief economist Mark Fleming said in a statement. “The nearly $700-billion mortgage debt overhang has touched many corners of the market, and this overhang is holding back the recovery of the housing market and broader economy.” (…)

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