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Foreclosure Specialists Looking Elsewhere Amid Drop in California

Scarcity of sites to sell leads some to look out of state, where there still is an abundance of listings.

California

March 24, 2003|Jesus Sanchez, Times Staff Writer

INDIAN WELLS — Where else would the vultures gather but the desert?

It has been a tough couple of years for the folks who make their living selling foreclosed properties. With Southern California's real estate market booming, there has been a scarcity of bank-owned properties to sell.


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But at an industry gathering here last week, signs of trouble on the housing front were looking like a cattle carcass on the horizon to the industry that prospers during tough times.

"I think [business] is likely to come back," said Shari Varnoos, a Sherman Oaks Remax agent who specializes in selling foreclosed properties.

Varnoos was among the 900 bankers and brokers -- nearly 300 more than last year -- who flocked to this desert resort for the annual Real Estate Owned Managers Assn. conference, the nation's largest gathering of specialists who sell repossessed properties. Nearly half came from out of state to learn how to capitalize on the large jump in foreclosures that have hit other parts of the country.

Nationwide, foreclosures are running twice as high as in California, where the rate of loans in foreclosure was 0.49% at the end of last year's third quarter, the most recent figures available from the National Mortgage Bankers Assn.

In some of the hardest-hit states, such as Ohio and Indiana, the foreclosure rates were nearly five times as high as California's.

Ronald Julien, an agent from Baton Rouge, La., said 90% of the more than 50 properties he sold last year were bank-owned, up from 20% three years ago.

"We're having record-high foreclosures," said Julien, who blamed rising unemployment and stagnant real estate values for the loan problems. "It's crazy."

But in California, foreclosures have dropped dramatically from the early and mid-1990s, when the state's real estate market was stuck in a severe slump. Last year, foreclosure proceedings began on 78,784 properties, down from a peak of 162,597 in 1996, according to DataQuick Information Systems. Only 20% of the homeowners in foreclosure last year actually lost their properties. The rest were able to make up back payments or sell their homes before the foreclosure process was completed.

Although foreclosures are relatively scarce in California, the state remains home to a small foreclosure industry, with hundreds of real estate owned, or REO, veterans who gained experience handling the huge volumes of bank-owned properties during the early and mid-1990s.

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