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That could help stem home price declines and the number of homes taken back by banks, which hit a high of more than 1 million last year. Such a reprieve would only be temporary, however. "Even though foreclosure activity would look better, it would take the housing market and the economy longer to recover," Sharga said. "We might not see the market come back until 2014 or 2015." However, if banks' foreclosure paperwork issues get resolved sooner, rather than later, foreclosure activity is likely to spike again, Sharga added. Around 5 million borrowers are at least two months behind on their mortgages, and experts say more people will miss payments because of job losses and loans that exceed the value of the homes they are living in. RealtyTrac's data captures new foreclosure-related filings on a given property, not repeat filings. As a result, some 70,000 notices that mortgage servicers re-filed on properties in some stage of foreclosure were excluded from February's data. Factor in those re-filed notices, and the month's foreclosure activity comes closer to the monthly rate seen last year before the banks' foreclosure documentation problems came to light. At a state level, Nevada posted the nation's highest foreclosure rate for the 50th consecutive month in February, with one in every 119 households receiving a foreclosure notice. Arizona had the No. 2 spot, while California held the third-highest rate of foreclosure. Rounding out the top 10 states with the highest foreclosure rate in February were: Utah, Idaho, Georgia, Michigan, Florida, Colorado and Hawaii.
[Associated
Press;
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