Posts Tagged ‘Economic Issues’

Wyoming Foreclosures For Sale

Friday, March 20th, 2009

Wyoming is a great state to consider purchasing land during this mortgage crisis. It has all the ear markings of the perfect place. There is a wide diversity of property. It has properties for sale nearly in any area you would like to buy and of most any style and within most price ranges. The properties tend to run on the inexpensive side of the fence and there is a fairly decent supply of new properties entering the market on a regular basis and a somewhat low real estate tax. When you couple that with the fact that it has things to bring people here like the Yellowstone National Park or the Ski Lodges at Jackson Hole, you really can’t lose because your ability to re-sell is almost guaranteed.

If you are in the market there are nice urban areas near the major cities where you can find a subdivision with nice quiet homes in them of recent construction. You can find well-established homes in some of the smaller cities that are spread across the open range. Three are ski chalets over looking the mountains in and around Jackson Hole and you can find a pretty decent amount of acreage land for sale as well. Like I said, you almost can’t go wrong here.

There should be no shortage of people ready to buy your property once the market solidifies and banks again begin to loan cash to folks to purchase homes again more freely.

When you add all of those factors together and look at the possibilities that there are here in Wyoming, the question in your mind should not be should I buy here, it should be why wouldn’t I buy property here at this point in time.

Wyoming is a great place to visit and now it is also a great place to own.

South Carolina Foreclosures

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

South Carolina Foreclosures

At a time when the national rate of foreclosures is at an all time high and a month where they average 0.240 percent across the nation, the state of South Carolina managed to come in at roughly one third of that at 0.092 percent. Not great compared to the 0.027 percent from the same month in 2007 but when you compare it to the 0.259 percent in Georgia, the folks here are pretty happy and proud of it.

The rate of new foreclosures here has actually dropped every month from September through the month of December. That is phenomenal compared to the rest of the country and the experts agree that they should continue to drop slowly each month or, at the very worst, stay level with the numbers from the month before.

How is it possible you ask? I mean the state of South Carolina has well over ten percent unemployment and yet they are continuing to drop in the amount of new foreclosures each month. Exactly what are they doing well that is allowing that to happen?

A lot of factors combine to make this phenomenon occur. First of all, the unemployment level is due to jobs where the people were not in danger of losing the house. They owned the property and the home on it free and clear so the only thing they would need to worry about would be keeping the utilities paid and food on the table. So the loss of a job had little to no effect on the ability to pay a mortgage since they were non-existent.

It is expected that the rate of unemployment will rise well into the double-digit range and as mentioned above, the foreclosure rate will fall. For the folks of South Carolina, that is the silver lining in the cloud.

Montana Foreclosures

Monday, March 16th, 2009

Montana Foreclosures

There are a lot of wide-open spaces in the state of Montana. You can see forever, as the saying goes. In fact, if you are looking at examining the foreclosure market here, you are going to have to look almost as hard as you can and a lot harder than most other states. In

December Montana Foreclosures rate was a 0.009 percent . Yes folks, you read that right 0.009 percent. That means that during the month of December, which was a hard month for the rest of the country a total of – hang on to your hat here – 38 new properties fell into the foreclosure system in the state of Montana.

That is unheard of at a time when neighboring Idaho was getting almost 1,600 new foreclosures over the same period. We can’t say that it was due to unemployment there because the jobless rate for the same period was almost a full five and one half percent,

So what is the state of Montana doing right that the rest of the country is doing wrong?

That’s pretty simple actually. A quick check of the public records reveal that a good portion of the land in Montana is not under mortgage but rather is owned free and clear and have been paid off and privately owned for years. Couple that with the fact that Montana land owners tend to own large amounts of land as ranches and that would explain the secret.

The foreclosure crisis is almost nonexistent in the state of Montana and it is not expected to change much as the crisis continues, even if it is a long and prolonged issue, which is not expected to happen, the numbers in Montana should remain level or even drop a little due to the reasons outlined above.