Wednesday, May 06, 2009

Foreclosures: More movin' on up!

From Bloomberg: Rich Americans Default on Luxury Homes Like Subprime Victims (ht Lance)
Chuck Dayton put down a quarter of the $950,000 purchase price when he bought his house in Newport Beach, California, in 2004. ... Dayton, 43, went into default four months ago because he couldn’t afford payments on the three-bedroom home, located within a block of the Pacific Ocean.
...
Dayton said he financed the purchase of his home, 40 miles south of Los Angeles in Orange County, with a payment-option adjustable-rate mortgage now serviced by JPMorgan’s Washington Mutual.
...
Dayton refinanced in February 2007 with a $1 million loan from Washington Mutual ... He also took out two private mortgages and now has a balance of $106,000 on those loans ... Dayton went into default on Jan. 29 and owes $46,584 in delinquent payments and penalties, according to First American CoreLogic ...

The number of U.S. homes valued at more than $729,750, the jumbo-loan limit in the most affluent areas, entering the foreclosure process jumped 127 percent during the first 10 weeks of this year from the same period of 2008, data compiled by RealtyTrac Inc. of Irvine, California, show. The rate rose 72 percent for homes valued at less than $417,000 and 78 percent for all homes
The next wave of defaults is building ... this time in the mid-to-high range.

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