Last month the number of foreclosures  increased in this country, despite efforts by the Federal government  to help the industry. Check out the following article on the topic thanks  to Bloomberg.com. 
Mortgage delinquencies and foreclosures  rose to records in the first quarter and home-loan rates jumped to the  highest since March as the government’s effort to fix the housing  slump lost momentum.
The U.S. delinquency rate jumped to a  seasonally adjusted 9.12 percent from 7.88 percent, the biggest-ever  increase, and the share of loans entering foreclosure rose to 1.37 percent,  the Mortgage Bankers Association said today. Both figures are the highest  in records going back to 1972. Fixed rates rose to 4.91 percent, Freddie  Mac said, and an increase in bond yields earlier this week shows rates  may continue rising.
The three-year housing decline is proving  resistant to efforts by the Federal Reserve and the Obama administration  to keep homeowners current on mortgages by allowing them to refinance  or sell to buyers enticed by affordable terms. Prime fixed-rate home  loans to the most creditworthy borrowers accounted for the biggest share  of new foreclosures at 29 percent, MBA said, a sign job losses are hurting  homeowners.
“If people don’t have a paycheck  they can’t support a mortgage,” Jay Brinkmann, the MBA’s chief  economist, said in an interview. “The longer the recession lasts the  more people run through their savings reserves, leading to higher delinquencies  and higher foreclosures.”
Rates Rise
One in every eight Americans is now late  on a payment or already in foreclosure as mounting job losses cause  more homeowners to fall behind on loans, the MBA said.
 
The average rate for a 30-year loan jumped  from 4.82 percent a week earlier, Freddie Mac, the McLean, Virginia-based  mortgage buyer, said today in a statement. The rate was 5.1 percent  at the beginning of the year.
New home sales fell 34 percent in April  from the year earlier period, the Commerce Department said today. The  unemployment rate increased to 8.1 percent in the first quarter, the  highest since the end of 1983, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
 
The inventory of new foreclosures and  those already in the process of being foreclosed upon jumped to 3.85  percent, the MBA said. Half the loans now in foreclosure, adding the  new and existing defaults, are held by prime borrowers, according to  the trade group’s report. About 43 percent are subprime mortgages,  and 7.1 percent are Federal Housing Administration loans. A year ago,  subprime mortgages accounted for 54 percent of the U.S. foreclosure  inventory. Prime fixed rate mortgages accounted for 19 percent of new  foreclosures in the year earlier period.
Safest Mortgages
Prime adjustable-rate mortgages accounted  for 24 percent of new foreclosures, up from 23 percent, Brinkmann said.  The figures show that the mortgage crisis has shifted from subprime  to borrowers holding the safest type of mortgages.
 
Subprime adjustable mortgages accounted  for 27 percent of new foreclosure, falling from a share of 39 percent  a year ago, Brinkmann said.
