Foreclosure freezes spur record declines in activity: RealtyTrac

U.S. foreclosure activity dropped to its lowest level in nearly two years in November, as the country’s biggest lenders put the breaks on their proceedings amid allegations that they’d been taking over properties without properly verifying the paperwork, according to a report from RealtyTrac released today.

The country’s 262,399 foreclosure filings represent a 21 percent month-over-month and a 14 percent year-over-year decline — the largest in almost six years by both measures.

In New York City, there were 863 foreclosure filings last month, down a dramatic 41 percent from the 1,466 filings recorded in October and 56 percent from the 1,949 filings in November 2009.

Sign Up for the undefined Newsletter

By signing up, you agree to TheRealDeal Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy.

The area’s declines were so large in part because New York is among the nation’s judicial foreclosure states, which are seeing the most radical effects of lenders’ foreclosure freezes. According to the RealtyTrac, initial foreclosure filings were down 31 percent month-over-month in states that use a judicial foreclosure process, compared to a mere 9 percent month-over-month decline in states that do not.

“The added element of the judicial states is, [in addition to] the lenders being more attentive to detail in processing, the judges who are reviewing these cases… all this has caused them to step up their review,” said Daren Blomquist, a RealtyTrac spokesperson. “That’s just slowing everything down.”

Yesterday, HSBC announced that it would restart foreclosure proceedings in New York, and Bank of America plans to resume foreclosures in January. Blomquist said he expects nationwide foreclosure activity to return to its typically higher levels sometime in the first quarter of 2011.