- Twenty-nine states had foreclosure rates below the national average.
- There were 38,000 completed foreclosures in May 2016, according to CoreLogic – up 5.5 percent from April 2016, but down 6.9 percent year-over-year.
- The Miami metro's foreclosure statistics were worse off than the rest of Florida's, with a foreclosure inventory of 2.5 percent and a delinquency rate of 6.1 percent in May.
Although still double the long-term average of 0.5 percent, the national foreclosure rate continued to fall to 1 percent in May, with many states seeing better outlooks than the national average in CoreLogic’s May 2016 National Foreclosure Report.
“Twenty-nine states had foreclosure rates below the national average, and all but North Dakota experienced declines in their foreclosure rate compared to the last year,” CoreLogic Chief Economist Frank Nothaft said in a statement.
There were 38,000 completed foreclosures in May 2016, according to CoreLogic — up 5.5 percent from April 2016, but down 6.9 percent year-over-year. The seriously delinquency rate in the U.S. is also at its lowest rate in almost nine years, sitting at 2.8 percent in May.
America’s foreclosure rate is back to October 2007 levels, CoreLogic says. About 390,000 homes, or 1 percent of all homes with a mortgage, were at some stage of the foreclosure process in May — a 24.5 percent decrease from May 2015’s 517,000 homes at some stage of foreclosure.
“Delinquency and foreclosure rates continue to drop as we experience the benefits of tight underwriting, job and income growth and a steady rise in home prices,” CoreLogic CEO Anand Nallathamb said in a statement.
Foreclosures in Florida
As of May 2016, Florida’s foreclosure inventory was at 1.9 percent, and its serious delinquency rate was 4.4 percent, both of which are higher than national averages. Despite the 62,390 completed foreclosures in Florida from May 2015 to May 2016 — the most among judicial states and nearly 20,000 more than no. 2 Ohio — the state saw a 37 percent drop in foreclosure inventory during the same period.
The Miami metro’s foreclosure statistics were worse off than the rest of Florida’s, with a foreclosure inventory of 2.5 percent and a delinquency rate of 6.1 percent in May. The metro saw a drop in year-over-year foreclosure inventory of 34.4 percent — the third-highest decrease of the 10 metros studied.
CoreLogic, a real estate data company, considers a “foreclosed” property one that has been purchased at auction by either a third party or the lender. Properties in the foreclosure process have reached certain levels of delinquency with the mortgage servicer, and the mortgage servicer has initiated or is enacting foreclosure proceedings against the property owner. CoreLogic also separates states into judicial and non-judicial categories to accommodate for foreclosure timelines.