The days of deals on home foreclosures appear numbered, one analysis indicates.
A new look at foreclosure discounts by the real estate website Zillow found that the price difference between a foreclosed house and one sold outside of foreclosure was just 7.7 percent nationally in September.
That foreclosure discount fell from 9.1 percent in September of last year. It’s also a big difference from the days of the worst of the economic crisis, when people buying foreclosed homes could expect a discount of 23.7 percent from the price of nonforeclosures in August 2009.
Certain Midwest and East Coast cities, however, continue to have foreclosure discounts of 20 percent or more. They include Cleveland at 25.8 percent and Cincinnati at 20.2 percent. The Pittsburgh area had a discount of 27.4 percent, with Baltimore at 20 percent.
In other areas, the price difference is narrowing because home prices have fallen so much that buyers are now willing to pay market value or near market value.
“The smallest foreclosure discount is found in places where competition for homes is so high,” Zillow chief economist Stan Humphries said. “People there are willing to pay the same amount for a foreclosure re-sale that they would for a nondistressed home simply to take advantage of historic affordability.”
In the Phoenix and Las Vegas metro areas, for example, there is effectively no discount on foreclosed homes, according to the Zillow analysis.
The number of foreclosed homes on the market in some of these hard-hit areas has also dwindled considerably over the last year. In Southern California and the San Francisco Bay Area, for instance, short sales make up a bigger part of the market than foreclosed properties do, according to DataQuick, a real estate research firm. Short sales occur when a lender agrees to a sale for less than the amount owed on a mortgage.