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Tuesday, August 23, 2005

Study: Foreclosures Costly to City

by Calculated Risk on 8/23/2005 12:32:00 AM

The Denver Business Journal reports on a new study by University of Colorado-Denver graduate student Christi Icenogle showing that foreclosed properties are costly to a city. After reviewing the direct costs to the city, the article points out that the combination of "loose" financing and slow appreciation has apparently led to higher foreclosure rates in Denver:

Foreclosure rates have been increasing in Denver, [Zachary Urban, Brothers Redevelopment Inc., a housing counseling nonprofit] said, partly because of adjustable rate mortgages with increasing payments over time, and partly because of job losses. He foresees foreclosures continuing to rise as interest-only loans come home to roost.

Phil Heter, broker/owner of Arvada-based Heter & Co., said he's also been seeing foreclosures increasing, and thinks it's because of loose qualifications on home financing.

"Most of it is 100 percent financing," said Heter, whose Web site is REODenver.com. With no money down and low appreciation, the owners may have little, no, or negative equity in the house and "have a tendency to walk," he said.

In metro Denver, looking at basic homes for first-time homeowners, Heter estimated appreciation was 1 percent last year, and "that's being generous."

Lower appreciation tends to make foreclosure rates higher because the lack of increase in value makes it tougher to sell the home for more than the amount owed.
When housing slows, this could become a widespread problem.

A related problem for local governments, discussed at the The Housing Bubble, is that revenues have been increasing rapidly for cities in boom areas. But the local governments are, in the opinion of Scott Ellis, Brevard County, Florida Clerk of Courts:
"... dangerously sinking much of the newfound windfall into recurring expenses, mainly raises and additional employees. When the real estate bubble pops, the tax rolls will march backwards ... there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth by the time next tax year rolls around."
When housing slows, it appears costs will be rising and revenues falling for cities and local governments.