After a surge in short sales in late 2011 and early 2012, the favored disposition method for distressed properties is shifting back toward the more traditional foreclosure auction and bank-owned sales.
During October, short sales represented 5.3% of the more than 5.6 million annualized pace of residential sales, according to data from RealtyTrac. This is a 6.3% decline from the previous month and an 11.2% drop from a year ago. The states that had the highest percentage of short sales during October were Nevada (14.2%), Florida (13.6%), Maryland (8.2%), Michigan (6.7%), and Illinois (6.2%).
Meanwhile, foreclosure auction sales to third-parties accounted for 2.5% of all sales, which is nearly double the amount from last October.
REO sales, which were 9.6% of the overall total, increased on a monthly and yearly basis too, from 8.9% and 9.4%, respectively. Markets where bank-owned sales represented at least 20% of its single-family homes, condominiums and townhomes sold include Stockton, Calif., Las Vegas, Cleveland and Riverside, Calif.
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In October 2012, only 33.9% of all residential sales were cash sales. But this October, they represent 44.2% of the monthly sales, with Florida, Nevada, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Michigan, Illinois and Ohio all having a higher percentage than the national average.
However, institutional investor purchases are down dramatically in October to 6.8% from 12.1% the prior month and 9.7% a year ago.
The national median sales price of all residential properties was $170,000 in October, RealtyTrac says, up 6% from a year earlier. Meanwhile, a foreclosure or REO housing unit sold for a median price of $110,000.










