Foreclosure Pets of the Week: Paco & Poobah
People aren't the only ones affected by the current foreclosure crisis. The number of pets at local shelters has doubled. In some cases, pets are simply being abandoned, sometimes even left indoors without food or water.
For every five foreclosed homes at least one animal is left behind...
Please consider the following great pets available for adoption from our friends at Peggy Adams Animal Rescue League:
4 year old neutered male Pointer mix dog
My name is Paco and I am a 63 pound Pointer mixed breed. I've had such a life full of woe. I started my journey to West Palm Beach from a small town in Mississippi with other stops in between. I wasn't taken care of and the only company I had was lots and lots of other dogs. There was so many of us that I had no one to make me feel special. I got food sometimes, but never met a caring human. Thanks to all the wonderful people that rescued me and my other friends, we are here waiting for the right caring, loving, patient person to come give us something we never had before. A life where we can go out together and in time meet new people and see amazing things. I am comfortable with other dogs and play dates would be wonderful for me. My number one wish is for a safe, warm home that I can call my own forever and ever. I will benefit from structured training lessons which are offered right here at Peggy Adams Animal Rescue League, which offers ongoing classes for the both of us.
1 year old spayed female cat
This young lady is the Grand Poobah! She likes a life of luxury and will curl up in the sunshine and find the most coziest spot to lay herself down. Of course she expects her human to wait on her! When she feels like getting out of bed she will give herself a bath, take a stroll around her domain, check out a few curiosities here and there, stretch her legs a little, maybe have a snack and will retire for a cat nap. Oh, she plays too, but sometimes it's from a lying down position. Poobah is a good, gentle kitty with an easy demeanor. She does need several things to grow up and stay a happy cat, such as being kept inside, regular vet care, toys, nutritious food, clean water, gentle handling and most importantly lots of love and attention! Cats live 15 to 20 years on average. We ask that you consider carefully that you can make a lifetime commitment to this pet. When bringing a new cat in the house gentle introductions and a little time is always recommended.
Our friends at Woof Gang Bakery in Abacoa, Jupiter are happy to provide anyone who adopts a dog from Peggy Adams Rescue League a wonderful welcome dog basket containing a dog bed, collar, leash, etc... Please bring your new four legged friend to Woof Gang Bakery to retrieve it.
Courtney Barnes, Franchise Owner
Woof Gang Bakery
5500 Military Trail
Suite 12
Jupiter, FL 33458
561-630-5800
abacoa@woofgangbakery.com
http://www.facebook.com/woofgangbakeryabacoa
For information on adopting, please contact Peggy Adams Rescue League at 561-686-3663. If you want to help but can't adopt permanently, please consider fostering, or make a donation.
******************************************************
Peggy Berkoff & Andrea DiRico
North County Properties & Investments
19510 US Highway 1, Tequesta, FL 33469
561-427-0470 office, 561-427-0522 fax
Peggy 561-301-2243 cell/text, PBerkoff@NCPflorida.com
Andrea 561-543-8715 cell/text, ADiRico@NCPflorida.com
Search MLS in real time just like we do right from your iPhone, no registration necessary...Visit http://www.NCPflorida.com for details or scan our free MLS search app to your mobile device right off this screen:

Enter Code 9575
Featured Community: Jupiter Country Club, Jupiter, FL
Jupiter Country Club is an exclusive community in West Jupiter featuring luxury single-family homes and townhomes nestled among an 18-hole Greg Norman Signature golf course. Every home site has picturesque golf and/or lake views. Featuring innovative designs and the thoughtful attention to detail for which Toll Brothers is known nationwide, this private, gated community also provides residents with a clubhouse, resort-style pool, separate tennis and fitness facility, and an array of other recreational amenities. Its magnificent location, adjacent to Florida's Turnpike and Indiantown Road, just minutes from the Gardens Mall and the Palm Beaches, is ideal.
We have the most comprehensive community resource center in our office which includes site plans, detailed original brochures, floor plans and much more, for virtually every community in the Jupiter/Tequesta area. This extensive library of information is available to our clients anytime, just contact us.
See Property Listings For Sale in Jupiter Country Club Jupiter, FL
******************************************************
Peggy Berkoff & Andrea DiRico
North County Properties & Investments
19510 US Highway 1, Tequesta, FL 33469
561-427-0470 office, 561-427-0522 fax
Peggy 561-301-2243 cell/text, PBerkoff@NCPflorida.com
Andrea 561-543-8715 cell/text, ADiRico@NCPflorida.com
Search MLS in real time just like we do right from your iPhone, no registration necessary...Visit http://www.NCPflorida.com for details or scan our free MLS search app to your mobile device right off this screen:

Enter Code 9575
Why are foreclosures at their lowest level since 2009?
The number of homes receiving a foreclosure filing — from notice of default to repossession — hit a 49-month low in December, as legal issues, documentation delays and weak housing demand all served to stall the processing of mortgage delinquencies.
Foreclosure filings were reported on 205,024 U.S. properties in December, a 20% decrease from the year before, a 9% decrease from the previous month and the lowest total since November 2007, according to foreclosure-data firm RealtyTrac.
It's not that the housing market and economy are getting that much better; it's just taking lenders 24% longer to foreclose on a home than it did before the robo-signing scandal made headlines in the third quarter of last year, said Daren Blomquist, RealtyTrac's director of marketing communications.
"This (slowdown) has persisted much longer than we thought," Blomquist said.
Given the low numbers processed in 2011, he said he expects a much bigger wave of foreclosures to hit the market this year, though fewer than the peak in 2010.
Some industry watchers, such as Mark Fleming, chief economist of data and analytics firm CoreLogic, say last year's slowdown is as much about managing losses in the face of weak housing demand as it is about procedural concerns.
"We are running well below what should be a suitable rate," Fleming said, even considering document reviews and typical holiday slowdown. That suggests a conscious decision to put on the brakes.
"There is an art of the timing of these processes and minimizing losses," Fleming said. "There's no point in pushing these things through if there's no one there to buy them."
Real-estate agents say they're concerned that so many distressed properties are just sitting there, waiting to hit the market en masse this year.
"We know those (distressed) properties are there; the servicers are just holding them," said agent LuAnn Lamb of ReMax Results in Salt Lake City.
However, there was at least one indication that lenders and servicers were beginning to move on the huge backlog of distressed inventory. While default notices and auctions were down 23% and 24% respectively year-over-year in December, the number of bank repossessions — or real-estate-owned properties, REOs — increased 10% from the previous month. That's a promising uptick, but is still 12% below the December 2010 number.
In the fourth quarter of last year, filings were reported on 586,133 U.S. properties, RealtyTrac said, a 27% decrease from the same period in 2010 and a 4% decrease from the third quarter of 2011.
The delays in the wake of last year's robo-signing scandal dropped the number of homes receiving a foreclosure filing to 1.9 million in 2011, a 34% decline from 2010, when activity peaked.
With just 1.45% of U.S. housing units, or one in 69 homes, receiving a filing last year, foreclosure activity was back down to its lowest annual level since 2007.
U.S. properties foreclosed in the fourth quarter took an average of 348 days to complete the process, up from 336 days in the third quarter and 305 days in the fourth quarter of 2010.
The longest timelines were in judicial-foreclosure states such as New York, New Jersey and Florida, where foreclosures are handled by the court system.
New York properties took the longest to complete the process at 1,019 days. New Jersey came in a close second, taking 964 days, and Florida was third at 806 days.
Compare those numbers with Texas, where the foreclosure process took a mere 90 days, on average.
Nevada continued to lead the nation in foreclosure activity in the fourth quarter last year, with 16,728 properties or one in every 68 households receiving a filing. But this number was 53% lower than the same period a year earlier, and a 35% drop from the third quarter. Things there were bogged down by a new state law requiring an additional affidavit from lenders before starting the foreclosure process.
California came in second, with 152,467 properties with filings in the quarter, or one for every 88 households. This represented a 13% drop from the fourth quarter of 2010, and an almost negligible drop from the third quarter at 0.4%.
Arizona had the third-highest rate of foreclosure activity in the fourth quarter with 28,182 properties receiving a filing, or one in every 98 households, a 30% decline from 2010 and a 5% drop from the previous quarter.
Other states with 2011 foreclosure rates among the 10 highest were Michigan, Florida, Illinois, Colorado and Idaho.
The city with the highest foreclosure rate was Las Vegas, where 7.4% of its housing units, or one in every 14 homes received a foreclosure filing in 2011.
Ten of the top 20 metro area foreclosure rates last year were in California — from Bakersfield, Modesto and Stockton in its Central Valley, to the Riverside-San Bernardino area southeast of Los Angeles.
Other cities in the top 20 included Phoenix; Atlanta; Salt Lake City; Boise, Idaho; and Cape Coral-Fort Myers, Fla. All 20 metros showed a decrease in activity from 2010, and all but Atlanta posted a decrease from 2009.
Will the slowdown slow down a recovery?
Just how long it will take the existing supply of 1.4 million distressed properties to trickle out onto the market is anyone's guess.
Under pressure by lawmakers and other government officials, new programs are being developed by federal agencies to sell or rent foreclosures in bulk. And more lenders are agreeing to short sales, whittling down the so-called shadow inventory.
But the underlying foreclosure problem should continue to weigh on the housing recovery in the years ahead, given the weak housing demand, sputtering economy and the huge number of homeowners who are underwater.
"The fundamental problems that are driving the foreclosures have not gone away," Blomquist said. Those problems include high unemployment and sliding values. Indeed, the percentage of delinquent loans has remained relatively the same — at 8.15% in November 2011, according to Lender Processing Services.
Just as distressing are the 12 million properties that RealtyTrac estimates are "underwater" or worth less than their mortgage and could be spit out onto the market as owners walk away or decide to pursue short sales.
Fleming said he doesn't expect a spike in so-called strategic defaults in the year ahead, or any big flood of foreclosures to hit the market all at once, though he does expect more foreclosures to hit the market in 2012.
Even so, he said he expects home prices in most markets to flatten by the end of the year, rather than continuing to edge down.
"The healthier non-REO segment of the market has had a relatively good year of stable home prices nationally. It could turn potentially positive next year," he said.
Florida was down 64.78% from 2009 and 62.5% from 2010.
******************************************************
Peggy Berkoff & Andrea DiRico
North County Properties & Investments
19510 US Highway 1, Tequesta, FL 33469
561-427-0470 office, 561-427-0522 fax
Peggy 561-301-2243 cell/text, PBerkoff@NCPflorida.com
Andrea 561-543-8715 cell/text, ADiRico@NCPflorida.com
Search MLS in real time just like we do right from your iPhone, no registration necessary...Visit http://www.NCPflorida.com for details or scan our free MLS search app to your mobile device right off this screen:

Enter Code 9575
Recent Sales – Tequesta, FL Condos
Recent Sales Last 90 Days - Tequesta Condos
Notes on the column headers... BR = Bedrooms, BA = Bathrooms, "2.1" bathrooms means 2 1/2, GA = Garage, "S" = Sale
| Subdivision | Liv SF | BR | BA | GA | Pool | S Price | S Date |
| Broadview Condo | 1250 | 2 | 2 | N | $ 234,900 | 10/31/11 | |
| Broadview Condo | 1250 | 2 | 2 | N | $ 205,000 | 11/30/11 | |
| La Mar Condominium | 1527 | 2 | 2 | N | $ 220,000 | 11/28/11 | |
| Lighthouse Cove At Tequesta | 1200 | 2 | 2 | 1 | N | $ 171,000 | 12/1/11 |
| Little Club | 891 | 2 | 2 | N | $ 46,000 | 12/15/11 | |
| Regency | 1144 | 2 | 2 | N | $ 300,000 | 11/1/11 | |
| Sandpointe Bay Condo | 1639 | 2 | 2.1 | N | $ 185,000 | 11/30/11 | |
| Sandpointe Bay Condo | 1639 | 2 | 2.1 | N | $ 325,000 | 11/22/11 | |
| Tequesta Cove | 1283 | 2 | 2 | N | $ 210,000 | 10/12/11 | |
| Tequesta Garden Condo 03 | 910 | 2 | 2 | N | $ 76,000 | 9/30/11 | |
| Tequesta Gardens | 1000 | 2 | 2 | N | $ 87,000 | 11/15/11 | |
| Tequesta Towers | 1600 | 3 | 2 | 1 | N | $ 385,000 | 10/19/11 |
| Tequesta Trace Condo | 1036 | 2 | 2 | 1 | N | $ 130,000 | 11/30/11 |
| Tequesta Trace Condo | 1776 | 3 | 2.1 | N | $ 125,500 | 11/30/11 | |
| Turtle Creek Condo | 1900 | 3 | 2.1 | N | $ 125,000 | 1/6/12 |
The source of this information is exclusively the Multiple Listing Service (MLS).
******************************************************
Peggy Berkoff & Andrea DiRico
North County Properties & Investments
19510 US Highway 1, Tequesta, FL 33469
561-427-0470 office, 561-427-0522 fax
Peggy 561-301-2243 cell/text, PBerkoff@NCPflorida.com
Andrea 561-543-8715 cell/text, ADiRico@NCPflorida.com
Search MLS in real time just like we do right from your iPhone, no registration necessary...Visit http://www.NCPflorida.com for details or scan our free MLS search app to your mobile device right off this screen:

Enter Code 9575

