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Report: California foreclosures drop in December

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Foreclosure activity in California took a steep dive in December, a report out this week shows, but the decline has more to do with holiday forbearance than economic improvement.

Notices of default dropped 17.5% compared with November and 32.5% on a daily average basis, according to the report by ForeclosureRadar.com.

The drop in foreclosures appears to reflect an easing in activity by banks and other lenders hoping to avoid delivering disheartening news to troubled buyers and shutting people out of their homes during the holiday season, said the website, which is based in Discovery Bay, Calif.

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Mortgage titans Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac suspended foreclosures for part of last month through Jan. 3, and Citigroup Inc. also said it would suspend some foreclosures and evictions for part of last month through Jan. 17.

“The dramatic drop in foreclosure activity may have been a Christmas gift to homeowners,” Sean O’Toole, chief executive of ForeclosureRadar.com, said in a statement. “Given rising mortgage delinquencies, it is becoming increasingly clear that foreclosure activity no longer fully represents market realities.”

Foreclosure sales were canceled at an increasing rate in December, but only by 3.5% on an average daily basis. That was much smaller than anticipated by analysts at ForeclosureRadar.com, given the push by the Obama administration to make trial loan modifications under its Home Affordable Modification Program permanent.

-- Alejandro Lazo

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