Interesting story, but the longer homes are allowed to avoid foreclosure, which artificially buoys housing prices, the longer it will take for the overall economy to recover:
The plan swept states with some of the highest foreclosure levels, including California, Nevada and Arizona, into a swelling crisis over lenders' flawed paperwork that had been mostly confined to 23 other states that require judicial review of foreclosures.More on housing at Instapundit.
Bank of America instituted a partial freeze last week in those 23 states, and three other major mortgage lenders have done the same. The bank's decision on Friday increased pressure on other lenders to extend their moratoriums nationwide as well.
An immediate effect of the action will be a temporary stay of execution for hundreds of thousands of borrowers in default. The bank said it would be brief, a mere pause while it made sure its methods were in order.
But as the furor grows over lenders' attempts to bypass legal rules in their haste to reclaim houses from delinquent owners, there is a growing expectation that foreclosures will dwindle for months as the foreclosure system is reworked.
Stan Humphries, an economist with the housing site Zillow.com, said what was initially cast as a problem of sloppy record-keeping is rapidly evolving into one that suggests the banks' procedures for recording loans might not have followed the law.
"The former scenario represents a hiccup for the market, maybe a 30- to 90-day slowdown in foreclosure initiations," Mr. Humphries said. "The latter scenario is more like hitting a wall."
The uncertainty is putting the housing market in turmoil and causing vast confusion. Bank of America, for example, said it was not halting sales of foreclosed properties to new owners, but Fannie Mae, the giant mortgage holding company, is doing exactly that with properties it bought from Bank of America.
One real estate agent in Florida said Friday that he had six deals involving former Bank of America properties that had been at least temporarily scuttled. Representatives for Fannie, which was taken over by federal regulators after it failed two years ago, did not return calls.
Real estate agents said the extent of any disruption depended on how long the moratorium lasted, how many lenders ultimately participated — and what people in default decided to do.
"If it's still January, February, March, and they're not foreclosing, you'll see a big effect," said Jim Klinge, an agent in San Diego. "It'll be a banker's holiday, free rent for everybody and a lawyers' gold mine."
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