According to reports released by the Bipartisan Policy Center, this year’s across-the-board budget reductions have led to “sequester pain.” Federal agencies award more than $500 billion a year, or roughly $1.4 billion dollars a day, to tens of thousands of contractors, with late payments, halted work and canceled solicitations accumulating, to the detriment of companies and their workers. Initial foreclosure filings for September climbed 144 percent since August in Fairfax County, Virginia; they more than doubled in Prince William, Loudoun and Fauquier counties. New Jersey’s 55 percent monthly increase in foreclosure starts is the highest in the United States. Virginia is the second-highest in the US with a 52 percent monthly increase in foreclosure starts. Virginia is likely to see another surge, and may surpass New Jersey, as an estimated 800,000 federal workers, including Defense Department inspectors and auditors who help certify invoices, were furloughed when the shutdown began at the beginning of October. Full article.
In September, the number of properties that received a foreclosure filing in NJ was 55% higher than the previous month – and 55% higher than the same time last year. Home sales for August 2013 were down 4% compared with the previous month, and down 2% compared with a year ago. The median sales price of a non-distressed home was $298,000. The median sales price of a foreclosed home was $185,000, or 38% lower than non-distressed home sales.
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To set up a free initial consultation, contact our office online or call our foreclosure hotline at 855-289-1660. Or call our office location in Philadelphia at 215-751-0100, or in New Jersey at 856-429-0970.