A Nerd's Eye View

May Foreclosure Activity



Kelly Bennett just reported on the increase in foreclosure filings last month. Let's have a look at how recent foreclosure activity stacks up against that of the early-1990s housing downturn.

In the graph to the right, the blue line displays the monthly number of Notices of Default, which occur when delinquent borrowers officially enter the foreclosure process. The red line denotes Notices of Trustee Sale, which take place when banks actually take over errant borrowers' homes. San Diego has grown since the 1990s, so in order to perform a fair comparison, both numbers have been adjusted for growth in San Diego's labor force.

(Nerd note: labor force was used instead of population or housing supply because the latter are not available, to my knowledge, in a monthly data series to conveniently align with the monthly NOD and NOT numbers. May's labor force was estimated by applying April's year-over-year rate of change to last May's figure, but that doesn't matter too much because labor force is a much slow-moving series that the bulk of any monthly change is caused by the number of NODs or NOTs.)

OK, non-nerds can safely start reading again. What the graph tells demonstrates is very clear: the rate of foreclosure activity is as bad as or worse than it was during almost all of the prior housing bust.

Despite this fact, various analysts continue to assert that San Diego's foreclosure rate is low. To which I ask: low compared to what?

-- RICH TOSCANO



A Nerd's Eye View

Rich Toscano is a financial advisor with Pacific Capital Associates*;
he also writes about San Diego real estate at Piggington's Econo-Almanac. Contact him at rtoscano@pcasd.com.

Hoop It Up:

 

More details on National City's hoop dreams.

Thursday, June 28 -- 5:53 pm

20-Gallon Challenge:

 

Water Authority asks for conservation to combat effects of dry year.

Thursday, June 28 -- 3:57 pm

School District: $600M Maintenance Backlog:

 

San Diego Unified lays out plan for making a down payment on facilities upgrades.

Thursday, June 28 -- 11:49 am


Sponsored By

MOST POPULAR STORIES:

SURVIVAL IN SAN DIEGO

County's Assessed Value Nears $400B :

 

County assessor releases newest assessments for property values.

Thursday, June 28 -- 5:04 pm

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

The Mayor's Lousy Advice:

 

Though what Sanders has sought to do may be exactly what a mayor would otherwise be expected to do, he will be seen by the public as part of the continuing conspiracy

Thursday, June 28 -- 3:26 pm

CAFÉ SAN DIEGO

Scratching Each Others Backs :

 

If you choose to live in a metropolitan area, you have to accept the fact that your tax dollars are going to support activities and areas that you do not use.

Thursday, June 28 -- 6:28 pm

COMMENTARY: SLOP

Roundup:

 

The Nimitz in India and how rhetoric can change in six weeks.

Thursday, June 28 -- 1:04 pm

COMMENTARY: RICH TOSCANO

It's Not a Subprime Problem :

 

The foreclosure crisis isn't about credit scores -- it's about high-risk loans.

Thursday, June 28 -- 11:46 am

Sponsored by

SEDC Responds to Mayor's Inquiry:

 

Memo details bonuses and additional compensation of all employees.

Friday, July 18, 2008 -- 6:37 pm

Board Member Blasts Smith:

 

'The culture of SEDC over the years has been to manipulate, cajole, ignore and intimidate the board into utter and complete silence.'

Friday, July 18, 2008 -- 5:32 pm

Smith Not Resigning:

 

SEDC president resists the call for her to step down.

Friday, July 18, 2008 -- 5:08 pm

Sponsored By

SURVIVAL IN SAN DIEGO

Another Jump for Unemployment Rate:

 

County jobless rate nears 6 percent.

Friday, July 18, 2008 -- 12:29 pm

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Penchant for Secrecy:

 

San Diego Unified School District legal counsel Jose Gonzales must have been in a hurry to start his vacation.

Friday, July 18, 2008 -- 3:27 pm

CAFÉ SAN DIEGO

No Problem with Defined Benefit:

 

The risks inherent and unavoidable with these plans are manageable.

Friday, July 18, 2008 -- 12:46 pm

COMMENTARY: SLOP

Resign? Yeah, Right:

 

Why resign when you can get paid $200,000-$300,000 for being fired?

Friday, July 18, 2008 -- 11:20 pm

COMMENTARY: RICH TOSCANO

Employment Goes More Negative:

 

Housing weakness spilled over into the rest of the economy in June.

Friday, July 18, 2008 -- 4:31 pm

MOST POPULAR STORIES:

Sponsored by


Home About Us Contact Us Copyright Privacy Policy Site Sponsorship
Copyright © 2008 voiceofsandiego.org. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use Privacy Statement