There have been more foreclosure filings in the
first seven months of this year than the previous
annual record of 2,620 set in 2007. And it appears that
there is a growing trend of foreclosure lawsuits being
filed on properties in East Manatee.
According to a Bradenton Herald analysis of the July
filings, foreclosure suits were heavily concentrated in
East Manatee and Parrish, with the most filings
occurring in two Lakewood Ranch neighborhoods.
Milt Flinn, president of Lakewood Ranch Realty and a
licensed real estate broker, said he has actually seen
more short sales in Lakewood Ranch than foreclosures. A
short sale is when a bank or mortgage lender agrees to
sell a home for less than the loan balance.
Of the existing 380 real estate listings in Lakewood
Ranch, Flinn said there were approximately 30 short
sales.
"One of the reasons there might be a higher number
foreclosures in Greenbrook or Summerfield is because
they are very big neighborhoods. For example, in
Greenbrook, I think there are 1,600 homes," Flinn said.
"But what we are seeing more of are short sales. And
most of the time it is on an investment property that
somebody usually purchased when the market was really
hot in 2005."
These are homes that have sat on the market for
months and the mortgage has caught up with the owner,
Flinn said.
"They are situations where people have two houses,
not necessarily people being thrown out of their
houses," he said. "We just have some investors who went
too far out in buying property when the market was
really hot."
Other neighborhoods in Manatee County with multiple
properties being foreclosed on last month were Bayshore
Gardens with eight, Aberdeen with seven, and Greyhawk
Landing, Lexington and Mill Creek with six each.
Andrew Mooney, a bankruptcy attorney in Bradenton,
said he has between 15 to 20 people each week in his
office facing foreclosures.
"The majority of the calls that I get right now are
bankruptcies and people trying to either save their
house from foreclosure or just wanting to get rid of
the liability of an upside down mortgage," he said.
"Generally, if people want to save their home, Chapter
13 bankruptcy is available. But unfortunately because
of the nature of these mortgages, a lot of people, even
in a Chapter 13, can't work out an acceptable plan. And
it seems like it is getting worse."
John Hanlon, assistant vice president of lending at
Community Bank of Manatee, is still hopeful that the
real estate market will begin to stabilize.
"There is a little bit of a shakeout, but these
things always happen when the economy goes bad," he
said. "At some point, these properties will sell again
and that will reduce the inventory of available
properties. Once we work through this bubble of
foreclosures, then I think you will start seeing an
uptick again."