This week saw another blow to the beleaguered US housing market with the release of foreclosure statistics for the second quarter of 2008 (April, May, June). In that period 739,714(1) foreclosure filings were recorded. This is a jump of 14% over Q1 2008, and up 121% over the same period in 2007. This means that one in 171 homes received a filing. 220,000 homes were actually repossessed by banks in that period.
There’s no question that the housing implosion is not only continuing with little sign of relief, but that it is accelerating at a nearly unimaginable rate. It’s reached a point where congress has finally decided to step in to try and hold back the flood, to give home owners more time, and to try and prop up financial institutions as hundreds of thousands of borrowers default on their loans every month.
This, combined with out-of-control fuel prices pushing the cost of virtually everything else up, is creating a perfect economic storm that could threaten everyone, even those who are on sound financial footing at the moment.
Things are definitely looking grim.