Number of foreclosures fell in February


Associated Press

LOS ANGELES

The number of U.S. homes receiving a foreclosure- related notice fell to a 36-month low last month as lenders delayed taking action against homeowners amid heightened scrutiny over banks’ handling of home repossessions.

Some 255,101 properties received at least one of the notices in February, down 14 percent from January and 27 percent versus the same month last year, foreclosure listing firm RealtyTrac Inc. said Thursday.

The firm tracks notices for defaults, scheduled home auctions and home repossessions — warnings that can lead up to a home eventually being lost to foreclosure. While severe winter weather was likely a contributing factor, the sharp drop-off primarily was due to lenders taking a more measured approach to their foreclosure processes since the industry came under fire last year.

State and federal officials launched investigations last fall into foreclosure procedures used by mortgage servicers and lenders after evidence surfaced that some major banks pushed through hundreds of foreclosures a day without giving many borrowers a fair shot at keeping their homes.

Several large banks, including Bank of America, Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase, have been in talks to settle a probe launched by 50 state attorneys general over their handling of foreclosures. Many lenders temporarily froze foreclosures last October while they reviewed and, in some cases, re-filed foreclosure documents. That process has continued this year, but in less-than-speedy fashion due to backed-up court dockets and other procedural road bumps.