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Utah foreclosures up 141%
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4







The real housing bailout will take place when you folks get realistic about your asking prices and bring them back down around 2004-2005 levels. When that happens, those of us with the money will go ahead and buy your overpriced homes. Until then, we're content to rent and sleep well at night.
Oh this whole credit crisis is a lot more fun to watch when you don't own a depreciating home. Every week housing inventory increases in Salt Lake City and yet the stubborn seller refuses to realize that he's asking too much for his house. Wake up! Utah is not immune to the credit crisis. We are lagging the national trend by 18-24 months. Your home's value will fall at least 30% from it's peak.
We should bring Barry into office six months earlier so he can share his love with each of us with tax increases and more government oversight and bailouts!
As if these lending institutions like Zions and Bank of America and Countrywide wanted to see their stock prices slashed. I personally just love seeing my stocks lose 30% of their value... but I don't blame SUPPLY SIDE ECONOMICS .. I blame these moronic lenders who stopped requiring 20% down and income documentation. It's just greed and why would anyone take out a loan when they are going to be financially strapped to make the payments?
I know one thing - they're not making anymore land and at some point prices will start going up again but I don't really care.. I bought my house so I would have a roof over my head ... not to make easy money
Mr. Lee, where is your desk relative to Ms. Bulkeley's in the DN's newsroom? Give her a heads up about what you've found in re the whole debt-ridden suburbs thing.
For all of those doom and gloom folks - please ignore this but this market WILL INCREASE!!! Just wait until the lag time catches up with all the inflation on gas prices. Seriously, if you think you're home is going down 10% - you're crazy.
Inflation, inflation, inflation. It's happening everywhere! When the population starts increasing again, jobs start popping up again, homes will ABSOLUTELY follow. And when they try and build homes, the materials that they need will be too expensive to keep prices down.
Besides, like somebody once said: THEY AREN'T MAKING ANYMORE LAND.
That is just lie made up by liberals.
Everything is just fine and dandy.
How in many peoples wildest imaginations did they think they could afford houses that expensive? Yes, the lenders are part of the blame, but financially uneducated buyers is probably the bigger problem. When I went thru HS in UT finance was not required. There was one elective personal finance course offered.
Maybe we don't need financial education, we can just rely on a feeling to let us know if we are making wise financial choices... and we wonder why there are so many cases of financial fraud and bankruptcies in Utah.
If Utah foreclosures are well below the national norm (1 in 600 homes in foreclosure in Utah vs. 1 in 500 nationally) then how is the state 10th in terms of rate of forclosure. Several statistical outliers would need to be in place on the top end of the scale for this to be fact which is highly unlikely in this realm.
One of the two stated statistics is likely erroneous. Sitting well below the national average in foreclosures likely ranks the state in the 30's in terms of rate of foreclosure.
For years Utah has been at the top or near the top of bankruptcies and now, foreclosures.
Use of anti depressants is high in this state as well.
How could this be in a state like ours??
Possible explanations:
1) Low wages
2) High charitable giving
3) Large families
4) High expectations with regards to lifestyle, conduct, etc.
Possible remedies:
1) Move out of state if you want higher wages--eventually employers will have to become competitive
2) Pay on net or "increase/surplus" instead of gross (after vital expenses)--just a thought, if can be done
3) 2-4 kids is still "multiplying and replenishing" the earth, we don't live on the frontier anymore
4)Don't compare yourself to others, be happy with simple things
Well, that was politically incorrect I'm sure but I think it would help.
The new rules that require buyers to qualify at the highest rate the note could go to and to fully document income will be a welcome relief in the housing market. This idea that everyone should buys a house is one of the myths that led to this total collapse of the housing market.